Broken Arrow voters approve bond package

Broken Arrow officials are celebrating. Voters have approved the biggest bond package in that city&#39;s history. The four part package is worth $53-million. <br/><br/>Proposition 1 is for road improvements.

Tuesday, May 11th 2004, 10:04 am

By: News On 6


Broken Arrow officials are celebrating. Voters have approved the biggest bond package in that city's history. The four part package is worth $53-million.

Proposition 1 is for road improvements. it passed with 73% of the vote.

Proposition 2 upgrades the fire department and a 911call center. It was easily approved with 70%.

Proposition 3 is for parks and recreation. 64% of the voters gave their "okay."

And the bulk of Proposition 4 would pay for a conference center.
It passed with 58% of the vote.

In other elections Tuesday:

Lawton voters approved $29.8 million to fund improvements in the school system;

Two separate quarter-cent sales tax increases were approved in Durant to build a new $9 million community center with an Olympic-size swimming pool and to fund $8 million in projects, including new ball fields, a 10-acre lake with walking trail and new turf at Southeastern Oklahoma State University's football field;

A $7.8 million bond issue for a new middle school was rejected in Sallisaw, where a proposal to replace an aging 50-year-old middle school also failed;

Funding for a new $4.97 million high school in Lone Grove was approved;

Checotah voters, for the fourth time, turned down a nearly $3 million bond issue to fund a new events center for school and community use. The measure received 56 percent of the vote but needed 60 percent;

A penny sales tax was renewed for five years in Craig County to fund a county ambulance service, roads, law enforcement and other county needs;

Muskogee voters approved a one-cent sales tax to renovate a civic center and adjacent festival center and a separate 3/4-cent sales tax for funding of salaries and benefits for police, firefighters and other nonuniformed city workers;

Major County voters defeated a measure to implement a sales tax of three-fifths of a cent and passed a measure to eliminate the personal property tax. Major County remains one of only eight Oklahoma counties without a county sales tax. Promoters said the personal property tax adjustment would cut down assessing procedures without affecting the revenue stream.
logo

Get The Daily Update!

Be among the first to get breaking news, weather, and general news updates from News on 6 delivered right to your inbox!

More Like This

May 11th, 2004

April 15th, 2024

April 12th, 2024

March 14th, 2024

Top Headlines

April 23rd, 2024

April 23rd, 2024

April 23rd, 2024

April 23rd, 2024