Edmond Public Schools previews $140 million bond package, sets Feb. 10 election date
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Summary
District presenters outlined a two-proposition bond totaling $140 million, described projects to finish Post Oak Elementary and Horizon Middle School, and reviewed voter deadlines and district demographics ahead of the Feb. 10 vote.
Edmond Public Schools officials outlined a two‑proposition bond proposal totaling $140 million and urged voters to review details ahead of the Feb. 10 election.
A presenter for the district said Proposition 1 would be $136,400,000 and Proposition 2 was stated as "3.6," which the presenter grouped with Proposition 1 as a $140,000,000 package. The presenter said the district has prepared an information hub at edmundschools.net/bond with project lists, polling locations and absentee‑ballot instructions.
The presenter framed the proposal around district growth and needs: the district serves about 25,000 students across roughly 30 (soon to be 32) schools and employs about 3,200 people. The presenter said more than 100 languages are spoken in district classrooms, about 33% of students qualify for free and reduced lunch, and roughly 16% receive special education services—statistics the presenter used to justify additional classroom and facility capacity.
Officials described major capital items included in the bond. The package would fund phase 2 of Post Oak Elementary and additional classroom pods for Post Oak, and complete Horizon Middle School, both at the southeast corner of Air Depot and Covell. The presenter said phase 1 of Post Oak is scheduled to open this August and phase 1 of Horizon is planned for August 2028; if voters approve the bond, the district will complete remaining construction work.
Election logistics announced by the presenter include polls open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 10; a voter registration deadline of Jan. 16; and an absentee‑ballot request deadline of Jan. 26. The presenter also stated that Oklahoma and Logan counties will offer early voting and pointed listeners to the state election board link on the bond webpage for instructions.
The presenter noted that Oklahoma state law requires transportation funding to be separated from other infrastructure and technology items, which is why the proposals are divided into two propositions. The district encouraged residents and community groups to attend one of the scheduled outreach presentations over the next several weeks.
The district did not present a line‑item budget or a breakdown of debt service and tax implications in the remarks provided; those details are posted on the bond webpage, according to the presenter. The board did not take a vote on the bond during this meeting. The presenter and Dr. Delich closed the presentation by inviting the public to review materials online and attend upcoming information sessions.

