UPDATED: Lexington Voters Say 'Yes for Our Schools' (PHOTOS)
A pair of ballot questions seeking more than $60 million for elementary school building projects passed overwhelmingly during a special election held Tuesday, Jan. 24.
The preliminary results are in and they indicate resounding support for the debt exclusion questions seeking funding for repairs to the Bridge and Bowman elementary schools and rebuilding Estabrook Elementary.
Lexington voters yesterday were asked to finance through debt exclusion overrides a pair of school building projects totalling about $60 million and the 27 percent or so who turned out solidly responded to the "Yes for Our Schools" rallying call of the campaign supporting the projects.
Voter participation was significantly lower than expected, with turnout topping 30 percent in only percincts 2, 4 and 7. The polling places for those precincts were at the Bowman, Bridge and Estabrook schools, respectively.
| Precinct | Pct 1 | Pct 2 | Pct 3 | Pct 4 | Pct 5 | Pct 6 | Pct 7 | Pct 8 | Pct 9 | Total |
| Registered Voters | 2,134 | 2,483 | 2,126 | 2,502 | 2,635 | 2,475 | 2,415 | 2,316 | 2,349 | 21,435 |
| Total Votes | 458 | 793 | 420 | 749 | 598 | 695 | 781 | 604 | 627 | 5,725 |
| Percent | 21% | 32% | 20% | 30% | 23% | 28% | 32% | 26% | 27% | 27% |
The first question, to fund $22.7 million in renovations on the Bridge and Bowman schools passed with 3,755 votes in favor (about 66 percent of ballots cast) to 1,945 votes against, according to last night's unofficial numbers from the Town Clerk's office.
| Precinct | Pct 1 | Pct 2 | Pct 3 | Pct 4 | Pct 5 | Pct 6 | Pct 7 | Pct 8 | Pct 9 | Total |
| Yes | 252 | 594 | 306 | 514 | 331 | 445 | 546 | 393 | 374 | 3,755 |
| No | 205 | 196 | 112 | 232 | 267 | 247 | 224 | 209 | 253 | 1,945 |
| Blanks | 1 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 11 | 2 | 0 | 25 |
The Bridge and Bowman project, intended to extend the life of both aging but structurally sound schools, has already passed at Town Meeting and work should begin as early as this April vacation.
The second question, to rebuild Estabrook Elementary School, a project with an estimated price tag of about $40 million, passed even more decisively, garnering 4,139 votes in favor (about 72 percent) and 1,570 votes against.
| Precicnt | Pct 1 | Pct 2 | Pct 3 | Pct 4 | Pct 5 | Pct 6 | Pct 7 | Pct 8 | Pct 9 | Total |
| Yes | 269 | 626 | 320 | 564 | 366 | 515 | 625 | 438 | 416 | 4,139 |
| No | 189 | 165 | 98 | 182 | 230 | 178 | 154 | 165 | 209 | 1,570 |
| Blanks | 0 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 16 |
Tuesday's "yes" vote was marks the latest step in the process following the discovery and subsequent remediation of PCBs at the school last summer and fall. Back in December, the School Committee voted to sign off on a design concept calling for a three-story Estabrook School with a north-south orientation and a price tag between about $39 and $42.8 million.
The Estabrook project project, which is Massachusetts School Building Authority's pipeline for reimbursement funding, still requires Town Meeting approval, which will be sought during a special session of Town Meeting scheduled for April 2.
In total, the debt exclusions approved yesterday, which exempt the town from the provisions of Proposition 2 1/2 for these projects, will add about $300 to tax bill for the average Lexington homeowner, although that number will decrease over the life of the debt.
Though the voter turnout was not as high as expected, supporters of the projects say the results sent a clear message that, while some questioned the cost and wisdom of investing in renovations, the town could not afford not to undertake these projects at this time.
"The decisive, positive result on both questions is a huge win for our students and our town,” School Committee Chairwoman Mary Ann Stewart told Patch after the results were tallied. “I am thrilled with this result. Lexington places a high value on its excellent school system and has strongly supported its schools.
"I am grateful for the volunteers who worked so hard to get the facts about the three schools out to the community and for all of the voters who came out to vote on these important questions," Stewart said.