Keene ISD Superintendent Lays Out Reasons for Failed Bond and Plans to Refile Split Propositions
Loading...
Summary
Keene ISD Superintendent Reece Stevens reviewed a failed $25 million bond, explained how I&S vs. M&O funding works, presented proposed projects (elementary classrooms, storm-shelter cafeteria, junior-high classroom conversions, gymnotorium) and said the district will return to voters with two propositions; key dates for calling the bond and voter registration were provided.
Keene ISD Superintendent Reece Stevens presented a lengthy overview of the district’s demographics, the reasons a recent $25 million bond failed and the district’s plan to return to voters with two split propositions.
Stevens said the prior bond failed on a roughly 2-to-1 margin in a low-turnout election and that survey responses identified a perceived tax increase (the bond proposal included a tax impact) and lack of information as leading reasons for defeat. He explained how school funding separates maintenance-and-operations (M&O) from interest-and-sinking (I&S) buckets, noted construction costs and why renovation versus new construction differs in cost, and described proposed projects: converting the elementary cafeteria into classrooms and building a new cafeteria-storm shelter, repurposing the junior-high gym into classrooms and band hall, and building a gymnotorium for athletics and performing arts.
Stevens said a new strategy will present two propositions so voters can choose parts of the package independently, and he described voter-registration outreach and early-voting dates. He emphasized the district’s growth projections and constraints on how much bonding capacity remains under state formulas.
Stevens repeatedly urged public engagement, said the district will provide a website and materials to explain the proposals, and asked for council and community support in informing residents about the upcoming election timetable.

