Sold to voters as a $13.2 million fix for teachers — now ballooning to $20.5 million with no limits, no oversight, and plenty of union perks.
When the Nassau County School District asked voters to approve a one-mill property tax, the story was simple and emotional:
“We need $13.2 million for teacher salaries.”
That’s what they told you. That’s what was advertised.
But a few short years later, the truth has caught up — and the numbers are jaw-dropping.
This year, that same “teacher” millage is bringing in $20.5 million — not $13.2 million.
That’s a 55% jump from what voters were sold.
And here’s the kicker: this tax automatically rises with property values, with no limits.
No new vote, no accountability, no transparency. Just an ever-growing cash pipeline straight to the district’s coffers.
💰 Who’s Really Benefiting?
While teachers were the face of the campaign, they aren’t the only ones seeing the windfall.
According to the NESPA (Non-Instructional Employees) pay schedule for next year:
- A new custodian will receive nearly $5,800 from the millage.
- A department secretary — who just happens to be the NESPA President — will pocket over $8,100.
Meanwhile, last year’s pay data shows that department secretaries earned nearly as much as 18-year veteran teachers — and hundreds more than teachers with 12 years of classroom experience.
That’s not what taxpayers were told this money was for. And it didn’t happen by accident — it was ratified by the School Board.
📈 A Tax That Grows Itself
This “temporary” one-mill tax was designed to expire — but it’s become a permanent money machine that grows automatically with rising property values.
And Nassau County isn’t alone. Across Florida, school districts have used the same tactic:
- Pass a “small” millage for “teachers.”
- Watch revenues explode as values rise.
- Use the extra funds for union contracts, not classrooms.
🎭 The Playbook for 2026
When this millage expires in 2026, expect the same performance all over again.
There will be crying and wailing that schools will “lose $25 million,” that “teachers will quit,” and that “students will suffer.”
All designed to panic taxpayers into voting for another referendum.
⚠️ The Bottom Line
This isn’t about classrooms. It’s about cash flow.
The unions are thriving. The Board is complicit.
And taxpayers were misled — plain and simple.
A tax sold as $13.2 million has quietly turned into a $20.5 million slush fund.
That’s not education. That’s public corruption.