Frequently Asked Questions about the Referendum
How was this plan developed?
As a community, we worked together throughout 2023 and 2024 to determine a plan for addressing these significant infrastructure needs at our middle schools and complete the decade-long effort to put our district on a sustainable path forward with safe, efficient, and up-to-date buildings. Nearly 1,300 community members took part in this process to develop a consensus middle school facilities plan.
Will property taxes really go down even if the referendum is approved?
Yes. Because of our district’s fiscal responsibility, we have a unique opportunity to implement the community’s plan to modernize our middle schools while giving our taxpayers even more property tax relief in the bond and interest portion of the tax levy. We continue to spend less per student than the state average by minimizing administrative expenses and focusing funding on our classrooms. By responsibly paying down debt, we’ve saved taxpayers over $10 million while reducing taxes, maintaining our position as the 3rd lowest tax rate among our benchmark districts. We even abated a $2 million surplus back to taxpayers in 2023.
As the district has diligently paid off old debt, we are able to re-issue a portion of that debt amount to complete the effort to update our middle schools while letting the remainder fall off, while still reducing the Bond and Interest Fund levy for our residents.
What is the expected financing term/payback period for this debt if the referendum passes?
Traditionally, the district has issued debt over a 20 year period. However, it is anticipated that the Board of Education will issue debt for a 15 year period, saving our tax payers up to $85 million in interest compared to longer financing options.
For more details on the financing options, please click here to view finance presentation given to the Board of Education in July 2024.
How much will property taxes decrease if the referendum is approved?
If the referendum is successful, the median homeowner would see an average tax decrease of $71 per year for the next 15 years. Click here to use our tax calculator to determine your tax decrease.
What is included in the plan?
The community’s plan will now appear on our ballots in the November 5th election for final approval. This $151.5 million referendum would result in an average tax decrease of $71 per year for the median homeowner. If approved by the community, it would:
Improve Safety & Security in Our Middle Schools
Ensure Healthy & Accessible Buildings for All Students
Provide Our Middle Schoolers 21st Century Learning Environments
The referendum will improve safety & security in Franklin, Monroe, and Edison Middle Schools. This will ensure a more secure environment for students and teachers including improved sight lines in hallways, upgraded camera systems, and updated door entry systems.
The referendum will significantly improve our middle school infrastructure, mechanicals, and accessibility. This includes safer, updated, and more energy efficient school buildings through investments in infrastructure and mechanicals, including roofing, electrical systems, fire alarm systems, plumbing, HVAC units, lighting, ceilings, flooring, and finishings. It also includes more accessible buildings to increase ADA compliance and improve safety for students.
The referendum will also improve learning environments for our middle schoolers, better supporting today’s and tomorrow’s curriculum, optimizing hands-on learning, and further improving student outcomes. This includes modernized science lab classrooms with more space and improved features and furniture. It also includes increased space in some classrooms that are too small as well as optimized and dedicated spaces for co-curricular classes such as STEM and elective courses. It optimizes special education spaces to provide more support and life skill instruction for students. And it renovates and improves music spaces, library learning centers, indoor athletic spaces, and student wellness spaces.
What are the benefits of this plan?
This responsible, community-driven plan to modernize our middle schools would provide safer and more secure buildings with learning spaces that support the rigorous curriculum our community expects and deserves. It would build pride in our middle school buildings. It would bring parity to our four middle schools, giving all students the same quality learning opportunities. It could also provide welcoming spaces for the community. And all this can be accomplished without a tax increase—in fact, with a reduction in our Bond and Interest Fund tax rate, for the third time in five years.
Why is the referendum necessary?
Working together, we’ve put Community Unit School District 200 on a positive path forward that inspires in everyone a passion to excel. As a result of this collaborative work, our students achieve high levels of academic success in one of the best-ranked school districts in the entire state of Illinois.
Since 2017, we’ve worked diligently to catch up on our district’s significant infrastructure needs, investing at least $7 million per year into capital facilities projects. We have completed much of the work needed in our elementary and high school spaces.
Now, we need to address the significant needs at three of our four middle schools: Franklin, Monroe, and Edison. In these aging 1960s buildings, learning spaces weren’t developed to support 21st Century learning. Sight lines in some hallways are limited, making it difficult to supervise students, and camera systems and door entry systems need to be updated. The science labs are too small and outdated and music rooms don’t have enough space or sound barriers. Out-of-date mechanical systems increase costs, create inconsistent temperatures throughout the buildings, and in some locations are so loud they disrupt learning. Some floors are so old they can no longer be waxed and are splintering. The locker rooms and bathrooms are original to the buildings. And all three schools need upgrades to be fully accessible for those who use walkers or wheelchairs.
What will we see on the ballot?
To achieve the improvements desired by our community, the District 200 Board of Education voted unanimously to place the following referendum question on the ballot in the upcoming November 5th general election:
“Shall the Board of Education of Wheaton Warrenville Community Unit School District Number 200, DuPage County, Illinois, construct additions to, alter, repair, equip and improve the sites of the Franklin, Edison and Monroe middle school buildings, including constructing safety and security improvements, updating infrastructure and mechanical systems to improve efficiency, improving special education spaces and accessibility, updating science lab classrooms, improving music spaces, completing technology improvements and renovating instructional spaces, and issue bonds of said School District to the amount of $151,500,000 for the purpose of paying the costs thereof?”
Who can vote and where can I register to vote?
You can vote in the November 5th election if you are a U.S. citizen, you will be 18 years old by election day, and if you have been a resident of your precinct at least 30 days prior to election day. You must be a registered voter, and you may register to vote online through the Illinois State Board of Elections website.
What are the different ways to vote?
You can vote by mail. You may now request a vote-by-mail application HERE.
You can vote early. In-person early voting begins at temporary sites from Sept. 26 to Nov. 4 and at permanent sites from Oct. 21 to Nov. 4. Click HERE for early voting locations.
You can vote in person on election day, Nov. 5. Click HERE to find your polling place location.