11 Aralık 2013 Çarşamba

Large districts gearing up for bonds, levies

At least three of the state’s ten greatest college districts are getting ready to request voters to approve a supplemental levy or bond concern in 2014.



linda clark

Linda Clark



On Tuesday evening, the Nampa College Board unanimously authorized action to run a supplemental levy in 2014.


The Bonneville and Twin Falls districts have already agreed to run bond issues in March.


A number of other districts are expected to run a supplemental levy or bond troubles subsequent 12 months. Linda Clark, superintendent of the Meridian Joint School District has mentioned for months that the state’s largest college district will likely seek out a bond situation in 2014. The district not too long ago performed an email survey to gauge voter help for a attainable bond problem.


Here’s an early search at what is planned for following 12 months.




  • Bonneville: District leaders will run a $ 93 million bond issue on March eleven. Faced with enrollment increases across the district, officials say they need to have the money to construct a new large school, middle school and elementary college all at the very same time.


  • Nampa: With the two-12 months supplemental set to expire in June, trustees agreed Tuesday to run one more supplemental some time in 2014. They have not set a dollar amount or election date. The existing supplemental generates $ 1.six million per 12 months, and Interim Superintendent Pete Koehler has previously spoken in favor of operating the supplemental in March. Koehler also stressed this levy should not be baffled with this year’s levy and bond restructuring, developed to erase the district’s $ five.three million deficit. Officials say their needs include restoring staffs, rebuilding their fund balance and escalating teacher-pupil get in touch with time. A community meeting is tentatively scheduled for Dec. 17, district spokeswoman Allison Westfall mentioned.


  • Twin Falls: The district will seek a nearly $ 74 million bond problem in March to build two new elementary schools and a middle school to meet enrollment increases, the Twin Falls Occasions-News reported. If authorized, the bond would run for 25 many years and also fund improvements to Twin Falls and Canyon Ridge substantial schools.


Underneath a latest Idaho law, only four dates per year are open for school elections. For 2014, these dates are March 11, May possibly 20, Aug. 26 and Nov. 4.


Any district wishing to run a supplemental or bond in March need to approve a resolution calling for the election and notify the county by Jan. 17, 60 days prior to the election.


Passage of a bond situation is no slam dunk. In Idaho Falls, school officials failed twice at working bond concerns and had to decrease the expense of their projects just before voters accredited a third measure in March 2012.


In neighboring Bonneville, the influential, newly elected mayor of Ammon, Dana Kirkham, asked many challenging inquiries about the bond issue’s tax implications for the duration of a neighborhood meeting last week.


Kirkham, who did not indicate regardless of whether she would publicly back Bonneville’s proposed bond, mentioned there is misinformation spreading in the community and a huge outreach campaign will be needed to secure passage.


“There is undoubtedly a demographic that is not interested in any enhance in their taxes for education,” Kirkham mentioned Dec. 4. “If this is going to operate, it will be because you received people individuals enthusiastic about it and they get out to vote.”



Chuck Shackett

Chuck Shackett



Bonneville Superintendent Chuck Shackett mentioned a bond committee has currently commenced surveying residents and spreading the word. With out a bond in 2014, Shackett predicted his district would need to seem at substantial modifications, such as altering the calendar or routine, dropping the ninth grade class from substantial college down to middle school and employing more moveable trailers as classrooms.


“We’re bursting at the seams,” Shackett advised Idaho Training News.


Based mostly on the most current enrollment records available, Nampa is the third greatest district in the state, whilst Bonneville ranks fifth and Twin Falls ranks eighth.



Large districts gearing up for bonds, levies

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