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East Valley School Districtโ€™s failed $220 million bond is returning to ballots in April.

The district put a bond before voters earlier this month that garnered 54.6% support in the special election, shy of the 60% supermajority voter support to pass a school bond.

The bond would have paid for the demolition and replacement of the 3,500-student districtโ€™s middle and high school. Both buildings are over five decades old, and have aged to the point where it would be more costly to pay for smaller, โ€œBand-Aidโ€ repairs than fully replace the buildings.

Februaryโ€™s attempt was the first the district has made to pass a bond, necessary for major construction, in over 13 years. The last time East Valley voters approved a school bond was in 1996.

โ€œWe have to take care of what hasnโ€™t been taken care of in a very long time,โ€ East Valley Superintendent Brian Talbott said at Tuesdayโ€™s school board meeting. โ€œThereโ€™s a cost of doing business, and we have reached the spot of, thereโ€™s a cost of not doing business, and thatโ€™s where we are.โ€

The school board unanimously approved sending the bond at Tuesdayโ€™s meeting, two weeks after the same crew watched election results roll in. The board considered reducing their overall ask, but decided against it because the needs of their buildings are too great.

โ€œBoth the buildings are older than me,โ€ said board member Mike Bly.

Board member Carolyn Petersen said itโ€™s not just a matter of the schoolsโ€™ practical age-related concerns, but opportunities for students. Her kids play in East Valley High Schoolโ€™s orchestra, and were recently critiqued at a regional competition for not using the full length of their bows when they played. Petersen asked her daughter why they didnโ€™t stretch out.

โ€œShe said, โ€˜Itโ€™s just a muscle memory, because we donโ€™t fit in our music room,โ€™ โ€ Petersen said.

Passage of the bond would also spur sixth-graders to the middle school level.

โ€œItโ€™s hard because we know this is a big ask and it is a burden on our community,โ€ Talbott said. โ€œAt the same time, the schools are owned by our community, and we have work to do.โ€