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Valley View to break ground on new K-12 campus as part of $68M plan


He said the existing high school building will house central office staff and the district’s preschool, along with a partnership with the YMCA for additional early learning center offerings. The district hopes to repurpose more high school space for community purposes.

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The project funding includes money for abatement and demolition of the three schools being vacated (two in Germantown and one in Farmersville). But Treasurer Laura Sauber said the district has not finalized whether those buildings will be demolished.

The new K-12 campus is to be built immediately south of the existing high school, which sits at the corner of Manning Road and Farmersville-Germantown Pike, between those two villages.

“We have not started the design phase,” Richards said. “We are now entering the phase where we solicit bids for architectural services and construction services.”

Richards said after those contracts are signed this summer, the district will plan public meetings on the design of the project.

The state lists the total “co-funded” part of the project at about $65.5 million, and Sauber said the last $2,473,712 of the bond money is available for “locally funded initiatives” (LFIs).

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Richards said most of that LFI money is allocated for extra learning spaces in the new building to accommodate potential growth. He said the rest is for improvements to help repurpose the existing high school.

On the ballot last spring, it was estimated that residents would pay 5.5 mills in local property taxes over 37 years to repay the principal and interest on the $28.7 million in bonds (about $192 annually on a $100,000 home).

The actual sale of the bonds is now scheduled for late May, and will help to determine those rates. Sauber said they hope the extremely low interest rates available currently will benefit residents.

“Because of favorable market conditions, we will pay back fewer interest dollars over a shorter period of time as long as the market is stable,” Sauber said. “The (county) auditor will adjust the millage amount each year to collect only what we need to make the principal and interest payments each year.”

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Bond issues are different from some other tax levies. If district property values go up in future years, residents’ bond repayment millage may go down further, as has happened in the Beavercreek and Huber Heights school districts. If property values go down, residents’ bond millage may rise, as happened in Dayton.

Richards said that thanks to voters’ approval last year, the new facilities will “drive the future of Valley View.”





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