MALONE — Voters in the Malone Central School District rejected a $38.4 million construction and renovation project Thursday by a vote of 908 to 843, with 12 void votes.
District Superintendent Wayne Walbridge reported that Phase 1 of the project went down by 65 votes.
"It was a heavy turnout, just as I expected; and I expected it to be a very close vote, and it was."
The plan called for $19.5 million in renovations at Malone Middle School and the purchase of 110 acres of land at the corner of Houndsville Road and U.S. Route 11 for $525,000.
A new $12.5 million transportation facility, with 39 bays to hold the district's fleet of buses, would have been built on the property during Phase 1 of construction.
The old bus garage would have been torn down, and two regulation-size sports fields would have been built in its place at Franklin Academy High School.
The bulk of the renovations and improvements were slated for the Middle School, which would have gotten a larger cafeteria, upgrades to the gymnasium and auditorium, a new library with upgraded computer equipment and new laboratory space.
The rest of the money was for energy-savings improvements to Davis Elementary School, a new roof at Flanders Elementary School and replacement of a boiler and other energy-efficiency upgrades at St. Joseph's Elementary School.
The proposition also included permission for the School Board to create a capital-reserve fund, with a $5 million cap, to pay for building and renovation projects.
The first $1 million would have been deposited from unspent funds from the 2008-09 budget; then the School Board would have decided each year for the next nine years how much money out of the annual budget to add to the reserve account.
In 2000, 768 people turned out to vote for the district's last capital-improvement project, which funded improvements at Franklin Academy High School.
E-mail Denise A. Raymo at: draymo@pressrepublican.com
Local News
School-renovation project voted down in Malone
- Local News
-
-
Glass half-full to Morrisonville fire victims
The smoke detector and her husband's shouts woke Tammy Maze last Friday morning as a grease fire set their apartment ablaze.
-
City School Board to weigh cuts
The aim is a new spending plan with a 2.84 percent levy increase, which is just under the district’s calculated 3.01 percent tax-levy limit.
-
SL firefighters save historic property
Early morning fire displaced residents from Park Place building as Saranac Lake firefighters staunched spread of flames.
-
Fire ravages Stonehelm
Between 14 and 18 tenants of the Beekmantown motel are in need of temporary housing, according to the North Country Chapter of the American Red Cross.
-
Peebles Department Store coming to Ti
It will take space vacated by Tops Market in the shopping plaza at routes 9N and 74; will hire manager soon.
-
Teen faces arson charge
Plattsburgh City Police arrested the youth in connection with the May 18 fire at the home of Dr. Ronald and Lee Ann Malseptic at 2 Flaglar Drive.
-
Florida man sentenced for rape
Daniel Stahl was found guilty of sexual crimes against an incapacitated woman in Lake Placid.
-
Elizabethtown considers wastewater options
There's no money for such projects, Town Supervisor Margaret Bartley said.
-
Chamber division to exhibit at Montreal trade show
The Adirondack Coast Visitors Bureau will promote the region at the Travel and Outdoor Festival in Parc Jean Drapeau on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
-
School making effort to attract foreign students
Keene Central School hopes to have six young people from six different countries joining the student body in September.
-
PSU team places third in investment competition
Members of the Student-Managed Investment Portfolio Club and Stock Market Club managed a hypothetical $1 million in portfolios of small-cap stocks.
-
Valcour once alive with summer camps
Roger Harwood has spent the past several years researching the history of the island and gave a talk about it recently at the Clinton County Museum in Plattsburgh.
-
Of Interest: May 23, 2012
PSU rummage sale to benefit needy; Section of Barney Downs Road in Peru closed today; Village dissolution study ready for reaction; City hydrant flushing continues; City Schools to present amended budget; Emergency work on Lower Locks today in Saranac Lake; Ti seeks input on town's needs; Franklin Co. Solid Waste Authority to consider buying land; Moriah Central sets special meeting; Matching funds available to libraries for technology; Keeseville to wrap up fiscal year.
-
Life a home run for Plattsburgh man
After playing professional baseball for the Brooklyn Dodgers, surviving a major attack in the Korean War and working hard in the construction business, Lester Fessette has lived what many would consider an extraordinary life.
- May 22, 2012
-
Peebles Department Store coming to Ti
It will take space vacated by Tops Market in the shopping plaza at routes 9N and 74; will hire manager soon.
-
Florida man sentenced for rape
Daniel Stahl was found guilty of sexual crimes against an incapacitated woman in Lake Placid.
-
Teen faces arson charge
Plattsburgh City Police arrested the youth in connection with the May 18 fire at the home of Dr. Ronald and Lee Ann Malseptic at 2 Flaglar Drive.
-
Valcour once alive with summer camps
Roger Harwood has spent the past several years researching the history of the island and gave a talk about it recently at the Clinton County Museum in Plattsburgh.
-
Glass half-full to Morrisonville fire victims
- Recent Article Comments


