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April 07, 2000 - Image 19

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2000-04-07

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Only those residents served
y the West Bloomfield schools
ill be eligible to vote in
onday's election, and only
hey will pay the increased mill-
ige resulting from passage of
he bond.
Although no firm numbers are
vailable, many district families
Lre Jewish. And many of those
rlping to educate the public
bout the bond drive are Jewish.
ether or not this has any
nfluence on the vote, the district
s a whole has a history of back-
ng school bond proposals.
"This community has always
een very supportive of the
chool district," says Fran
enowitz, a member of West
loomfield's school board for
4 years. "Not only do we have
arental support, but 70 per-
ent of our voters do not have
hildren in the schools and we
ave their support as well."
Seymour Gretchko, West Bloomfield School
Among the bond's earliest
District superintendent
upporters was Debbie Sosne, a
eader of Citizens for the West
asked me to be on the committee, I
loomfield Schools. When her older
said, 'Sure.'
aughter, Jayme, began kindergarten
"We have a good district," she says,
t the district's Ealy Elementary,
and
we want it to stay that way." ❑
nrollment at the K-5 school stood at
00, Sosne says. Now, as her younger
aughter, Amanda, is finishing fifth
For information on the West
rade, the school holds about 550
Bloomfield School District bond
tudents — an increase of more than
proposal, call the district at (738)
5 percent.
3568, or visit the Web site
"I have a vested interest of 11 years
www.westbloomfield.kl 2.mi.us
n this school," says Sosne, a former
Ealy PTO president, "so when they

Bond Proposition

Shall the West Bloomfield School District, Oakland County, Michigan,
borrow the sum of not to exceed Fifty Two Million ($52,000,000.00)
Dollars and issue its general obligation unlimited tax bonds therefore, in
one or more series, for the purpose of paying for the cost of the follow-
ing:
1. Erecting, equipping and furnishing additions to school buildings;
2. Remodeling, equipping, re-equipping, furnishing and refurnishing
school buildings and improving sites for school buildings.
3. Remodeling, equipping, re-equipping, playgrounds and athletic fields,
and improving sites for playgrounds and athletic fields; and
4. Acquiring, installing and equipping school buildings and other facil-
ities, for technology systems and equipment and purchasing school buses?
The maximum number of years the bonds may be outstanding, exclu-
sive of refunding, is 20 years; the estimated millage that will be levied to
pay the proposed bonds in the first year is 1.45 mills (which is equal to
$1.45 per $1,000 of taxable value); and the estimated average millage
that will be required to retire the bonds over 20 years is 1.96 mills annu-
ally ($1.96 per $1,000 of taxable value).
(Pursuant to State law, expenditure of bond proceeds must be audited,
and the proceeds cannot be used for teacher, administrator or employee
salaries; repair or maintenance costs or other operating expenses.)

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4/7
2000

19

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