The $1.4-million School
District 101 Maintenance and Operations levy
fell by a margin of 158 votes today with 2,128
voters going to the polls, with 1,143 voting no
to 985 voting yes.
Only three of seven
precincts supported the levy. Voters in the
Valley View precinct favored the measure 197 yes
to 143 no, North Bonners Ferry 228 to 181, and
Naples 169 to 144. Bonners Ferry precinct voters
voted 60 no to 47 yes, it fell in Copeland
precinct 149 to 65, in Kootenai 115 to 110 and
in Moyie Springs, which lost its elementary
school last year, 351 to 169.
According to Superintendent
Dr. Don Bartling, the board will be meeting as
early as next week to determine where to go
following the loss. Under Idaho law, they could
run the levy again May 17 for the same or a
lesser amount.
"It's going to be up to the
board," Dr. Bartling said after seeing the final
results. "They could choose to re-run it and try
to do more to educate the public. If not, there
will have to be drastic cuts, and the board will
have to determine where those cuts will be."
Most likely first to go
will be extracurricular activities, including
Badger athletics.
No music, drama or choir. No Foreign Language
Society, National Honor Society, business club,
pep club, student council, yearbook staff,
cheerleading or dance. No class plays or drill
team. No student council.
"We lost $850,000 in state funding last year and
around $550,000 the year before that," Dr.
Bartling said. "Teachers haven't had a raise in
two years, and in fact they're making less this
year than they did last year. We'll have fewer
teachers next year."
Had it passed, a property owner with an assessed
value of $100,000 would have paid $81 per year,
up from the $50 a year they're currently paying
on the M&O levy set to expire.
Responses to the levy results on the News
Bonners Ferry facebook page were in the main
shocked at the news.
"As
you know, I grew up in Boundary County,
graduated from BFHS, left to continue my
education in Washington, worked at the corporate
level, did my time and moved back to Boundary
County to have and raise a family cuz it was
great," wrote Lori Plato. "Now I question, what
have I done to our daughter's future?
It
is really sad that people won't support our
children's education. In a few years the
community will be complaining that our schools
are not producing "educated future leaders".
Duh! I wonder why."
"Scary future for
Bonners Ferry," wrote Brett Brown. "I pay more
for garbage than for schools. Pretty sad!"
I was born in bf and
thought it was a great community to raise my
family but now with all this I'm doubting it,"
Deanna Allured wrote. "I think I may be moving
this summer."
|