The Orono School District's $39.4 million bond referendum scheduled for Feb. 12 has sparked controversy among residents in recent weeks because of the timing and amount of the request.
Orono school board members authorized the referendum during their Nov. 8 board meeting, two days after Nov. 6 elections in which most area districts held their referendums.
The neighboring districts of Westonka and Delano had weighed in on levy and bond referendums during those elections, with Westonka voters approving an operating levy while Delano voters rejected two of three spending proposals.
"It just sounds very suspicious how they're doing this," said Medina resident Bill Velch, who's attended recent community meetings about city and school taxes. School officials said the timing of the request is not an attempt to sneak it by residents.
Orono Assistant Superintendent Neal Lawson said the district's independent facilities task force began meeting in July and finished its work in mid-October, and that ruled out putting the question on the November ballot.
"They weren't ready to present all of the information that we needed," he said.
Systems need to be updated
Orono officials said the additional money they are seeking would pay for interior and exterior improvements at Orono High, Schumann Elementary and Orono Intermediate schools.