Commission rejects $15M LED lighting package but approves two school renovation draws

Williamson County Board of County Commissioners · February 9, 2026

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Summary

Commissioners declined an intent-to-fund $15M LED athletic-field lighting package (Resolution 2-26-2) after budget concerns and ROI questions; they approved funding draws for Grassland Middle School (2-26-3) and Hillsborough K-8 (2-26-4) to continue renovations and asbestos remediation.

On Feb. 9 Williamson County commissioners considered several school capital items. After questioning about timing, TVA rebates and payback periods, the commission rejected an intent-to-fund resolution for a countywide LED sports-field lighting upgrade (Resolution 2-26-2). The school system estimated potential TVA rebates near $1 million and operational savings around $250,000 per year, but budget committees questioned the short-term return and overall capital timing and voted the measure down (final tally recorded 5 yes, 18 no).

By contrast, the commission approved two school renovation funding draws. Grassland Middle School (Resolution 2-26-3) was approved to continue phased renovations including secure administrative entry upgrades, floor and ceiling replacements, door and hardware replacement and plumbing fixtures (vote recorded 21 yes, 1 no, 1 abstain). Hillsborough K–8 (Resolution 2-26-4) was approved for additional funding to continue remediation and renovations, with asbestos remediation specifically cited as part of the work; the vote passed with recorded majority support (recorded 21 yes, 1 no, 1 abstain).

Why it matters: Commissioners weighed capital needs against constrained budgets. Schools described operational and safety improvements that drive renovations (secure entrances, aging infrastructure replacement), while county budget committee members urged phasing and attention to long-term ROI when considering large countywide projects.

Outcome and next steps: The LED lighting resolution failed; county and school leaders said they will consider phased approaches or partial funding that target the most urgent fields first. Superintendent Jason Golden said the school system will prioritize projects if commissioners approve partial funding and will continue to seek available rebates and cost savings.