Tuesday will provide a moment of
truth for Wayne County as voters decide whether to
approve an $18 million school construction bond to pay for new schools and
improvements at another.
Superintendent Lynn Hurt is hopeful
despite similar bonds failing twice previously.
Wayne County School Superintendent Lynn Hurt successfully
pitched school construction funding in front of the state School Building
Authority in March.
“You never know until you go the
polls. You never know what’s going to happen,” she said, “When you run one of
these…we’ll just have to see. I’m feeling fairly positive.”
The bond would build a new
Ceredo-Kenova Elementary and a new Crum Elementary. Part of the money would
also go toward six new classrooms and a secure entry at Wayne High School .
The total cost of the project is $42 million. Eighteen-million would come from
voters. Another $18 million was approved through the state School Building
Authority last month. The final $ 6 million would come from an improvement fund
the county and school system started last year.
The last two attempts at a bond
failed miserably. That was in part because voters refused to get behind the
projects that would only benefit certain areas of the county. However, Hurt
said people are finally getting the message.
“(This time) communities are coming
together and working together to inform voters. They’ve helped us with as much
information as they can get out,” she said.
If the bond fails for a third time,
Hurt said the county must devise another plan. Most likely students at Crum
would remain in their existing building despite its condition. Wayne High
School would have to continue without new
classrooms, and students at Ceredo-Kenova would be dispersed to other schools.