Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FORT SMITH voting on millage increase.

- DAVE HUGHES

FORT SMITH — Voting is underway on a proposal that would increase the Fort Smith School District’s millage by 5.558 mills to finance a five-year, $120 million improvemen­t plan.

Early voting began Monday at four locations in Fort Smith and will continue until 5 p.m. May 21, the day before the primary.

If approved, the school tax increase would be the first in Fort Smith since 1987 and would raise the millage from 36.5 mills to 42.058 mills.

The district calculates the increase would add about $111 to the annual tax bill of a person with a house appraised at $100,000, which is assessed at $20,000. A mill is a taxing unit equal to onetenth of a cent. Each mill is charged against each dollar of assessed value and produces $1 of property tax for each $1,000 valuation.

School Board President Susan McFerran said the millage increase was important to provide better safety and security for students and staff. Other improvemen­ts in the plan not only would provide a better education for students but would also make Fort Smith more attractive for businesses and industries, she said.

“I get so excited about it, if I was a cheerleade­r, I’d do a cheer for it right now,” said McFerran, adding that she voted Monday morning and took her mother with her.

There is opposition to the proposed increase. Fort Smith real estate appraiser

Jack Swink said a new tech center for noncollege career training was a good idea, but it should be supported more by the businesses and industries that will benefit from it. Instead, Swink said, the proposal calls for taxpayers to shoulder the cost.

He said Fort Smith citizens already are burdened with among the highest utility costs in the state, noting that residents are paying for wastewater system improvemen­ts mandated by the federal government that are estimated to cost $480 million over 12 years.

“Taxpayers are loaded down in Fort Smith,” he said.

At the top of the list of school improvemen­ts is $5.5 million for safety and security. That will pay for controlled access systems for every campus, security entry storefront­s at all elementary schools that aren’t currently equipped, exterior lighting improvemen­ts at all campuses, and interior and exterior Americans with Disabiliti­es Act improvemen­ts at all campuses.

Plans to add walls to open classroom space at Barling, Cook, Morrison and Woods elementary schools also are considered security improvemen­ts. Currently, open spaces that contain two to four classrooms don’t have doors that can be locked.

The two high schools would be expanded and remodeled to accommodat­e ninth-graders. The schools would each get a new or expanded cafeteria, and each campus would get two new tornado shelters. Improvemen­ts to Southside High School are estimated to cost more than $22.2 million, while improvemen­ts to Northside High School would cost nearly $21.2 million.

Plans also call for each high school to get new 2,500-seat, multipurpo­se competitio­n gymnasiums and locker rooms that would cost $15.8 million for Southside and $13.5 million for Northside.

Darby and Ramsey junior high schools would be renovated at an estimated cost of $12.7 million.

More than $13.7 million would go toward developing a career and technology center with specialize­d lab spaces and classrooms for studies in subjects such as health care, informatio­n technology and manufactur­ing.

All student computer devices would be put on a replacemen­t cycle that would cost $825,000 annually.

The School Board also approved a recommenda­tion by a citizens committee that drew up the improvemen­t plan to shift the student population. Ninth-graders would move from junior high school to the high school, and sixth-graders would move from elementary school to newly created middle schools with seventh- and eighth-graders.

The shifts would create more room in the elementary schools and eliminate the need to transfer 450 students a day from their attendance areas because of the lack of space.

Polling places are the Sebastian County Courthouse, Room G8, 35 S. Sixth St.; the Ben Geren Regional Park tornado shelter, 7200 Zero St.; Creekmore Park Community Center, 3301 S. M St.; and Harvest Time, 3100 Briarcliff Ave.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States