Schools
Learn About $41 Million Bond Referendum Tonight at Johnston Library
Johnston school district voters can learn more about an upcoming bond referendum at a public meeting tonight. Meanwhile, one school board member says the scope of the project is too big.

Voters in the Johnston school district will go to the polls June 25 to decide the fate of a $41 million bond referendum. Have your questions answered at tonight's public forum at the Johnston Public Library.
The public form at 6 tonight at theΒ Johnston Public LibraryΒ offers Johnston school district voters another chance to learn more about the upcoming $41 million bond referendum, says the school district website.
The final public informationΒ meeting dates and locations are:
- Public Meeting #4 β Johnston Public Library, May 30, 6 p.m.
- Public Meeting #5 β Summit Middle School, June 11, 6 p.m.
Meanwhile, school board member John Dutcher wrote in an opinion piece, "Though I do support construction of a new high school, I am not in support of the $112 million district facilities plan as presented, nor the amount of the bond referendum," ... "In my review of the data, no support can be found for adding any additional elementary classroom capacity to our districtβs facilities in the near future. Β The projections by grade never show us surpassing a kindergarten enrollment of 500 through 2022. Overcrowding at Horizon and Beaver Creek can be eased by redrawing elementary boundaries (a process which will begin this fall anyway) and migrating more students to Wallace, which is under capacity; to the newly-renovated and expanded Lawson, which is under capacity; and Timber Ridge, which despite never having reached capacity is receiving an addition of six more classrooms this summer."
Read Dutcher's opinion piece here.
Supporters are using internet sites to spread the word. There is aΒ Bond 2013 siteΒ set up with numbers, architect drawings and more. A recentΒ feature onΒ the site isΒ more than two dozen YouTube videosΒ that feature former U.S. Teacher of the Year Sarah Brown Wessling, Beaver Creek Elementary Principal Eric Toot, school district executive director of financial servicesΒ Jan Miller-Hook,Β Johnston parent Courtney Chabot Dreyer and others making the case for passage.
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Topics of the short videos include:
- How are portable classrooms current affecting students?
- If the bond decreased, why are estimated taxes unchanged?
- How are high school environments changing?
- How is overcrowding affecting Beaver Creek staff?
- Why I love Johnston as a place to work and learn.
The revised facilities plan includes:
- New 10-12 high school north of 62nd Avenue and west of 100th Street β $81 million β completed in 2016
- Renovation to existing high school to house 8th and 9th grade students β $4 million β completed in 2016
- Renovation of the existing middle school on 62nd Avenue to house elementary students by moving Wallace Elementary to that building, along with district preschool. β $16 million β completed in 2017
- Furniture Fixtures and Equipment β $6 million
- Renovation of the existing Wallace Elementary to meet district needs β $5 million β completed in 2018
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