(Calif.) With a key committee vote set for today on legislation that would place a $ 9 billion,
statewide school facilities bond on the November ballot, one group backing the proposal is already nearly a third of the way toward reaching its campaign finance goal of $ 1.6 million.
(Calif.) With a key committee vote set for today on legislation that would place a $ 9 billion, statewide
school facilities bond on the November ballot, one group backing the proposal is already nearly a third of the way to reaching their campaign finance goal of $ 1.6 million.
As part of the $ 2.8 billion
school facilities bond for San Diego Unified School District, Proposition Z, the district will be allocating $ 350 million of funds specifically for charter school facilities projects.
As of 2015, the LAO reports, the state still owes more than $ 50 billion in principal and interest on K - 12
school facility bonds going back to 1988.
San Diego Unified School District Passage of Proposition Z - Local School Facilities Bond In November of 2012, the San Diego Unified School District in partnership with CCSA and the charter community passed a $ 2.8 billion
dollar school facilities bond.
Administrators, facilities managers and school housing advocates, however, are fighting to keep the program alive and have a qualified a new, $ 9 billion statewide
school facilities bond measure for the November 2016 election ballot.
Proposition 300 Would direct earnings from public lands that are above the 2000 - 01 level to be deposited in the state classroom - site fund, to be used for such things as class - size reduction, teacher raises, and
school facility bond...
Our partners in
the school facility bond cartel are paying for this campaign because they really care about your kids too.
Concurrent to approval of SB 114 by the Senate Education Committee, the Secretary of State's office announced that proponents of a separate initiative calling for a $ 9 billion
school facilities bond to go on the same ballot were cleared to begin collecting the signatures needed to put that measure before voters.
Tuesday's vote on the bill put all 14 Republican senators squarely in - line with Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown, who opposes
a school facilities bond because the borrowing costs would add to the $ 2.5 billion in annual debt service the state already pays for prior facilities bonds.