Neighbors on opposite sides of the street and opposite sides of the issue are made their voices heard Tuesday as they voted on the Lansing Unified School District 469 bond issue aimed at addressing aging infrastructure. The voters said no to both school bond issues on the ballot. Question 1 went down to defeat with 1,579 no votes and 1,095 yes votes. Approval of the bonds would have meant $30 million toward improvements, including HVAC systems, roofs, parking lots and tennis courts, with no mill levy increase. Question 2 also failed at the polls with 1,779 no votes and only 890 yes votes. Money from that bond would have put $5 million toward sports field improvements and would raise the mill levy by .746 mills, costing the owner of a $400,000 home around $34 a year about $2.86 a month. Superintendent Marty Kobza told KSHB 41’s Leavenworth County reporter Rachel Henderson earlier in the day the district’s infrastructure has reached a breaking point.
Read more: KSHB News