Dayton Daily News

Schools would be split by grades

Troy district voters to have voice on bond issue in November.

- By Nancy Bowman Contributi­ng Writer

Two new Troy elementary schools that would be constructe­d if voters approve a bond issue in November would be divided into a Pre-K through grade two building and a grade three through grade six building, according to the Troy City Schools Board of Education.

“We would have all students in each grade in one building,” board President Doug Trostle during a board discussion of the bond issue and a recently formed levy task force.

The district now has nine buildings: six elementary buildings, a sixth-grade building, a junior high and high school. While exploring options earlier this year, the board discussed two elementary buildings housing prekinderg­arten through grade 6 in each building. The buildings would have the younger children in one section and the older students in the other under that scenario.

A preference for the scenario of younger students in one building and older ones in the other was made clear during the initial meeting of the levy task force earlier this month, according to comments during last week’s school board Monday meeting.

Board member Joyce Reives said it was “nice” to be able to tell district residents of the prekinderg­arten through grade 2 and third through six grade building configurat­ions but added more specifics cannot be announced until funding is approved by voters.

“The community is clamoring for informatio­n, but we have to move along at the pace we can go,” Reives said.

That’s because the district is working with the Ohio School Facilities Commission on a building project that requires the district to follow a OSFC design process, Superinten­dent Eric Herman said. The district funding plan includes 33 percent state funding.

The board in August approved purchase, if the bond issue passes, of 58.67 acres of land off Ohio 55 and Nashville Road just west of the city limits in Concord Twp. for $733,375. The district would seek to annex the land to the city.

The district is asking voters to approve a 4.61-mill, 30-year bond issue. The estimated cost of the constructi­on project is $63.3 million, with a local share of $47.9 million. The current estimates show the elementary building local costs at $42.4 million. The balance would be for updates at the high school including air conditioni­ng in the library and cafeteria, replacemen­t boilers, increased electrical service and air conditioni­ng in individual rooms.

The board Monday also heard briefly about the recently formed levy campaign task force that will be chaired by local businessme­n Ron Musilli and Brock Heath.

Informatio­n on the levy is available on the schools’ web site at under The Future of Learning section.

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