Elections

Kansas City Public Schools secure nearly 85% of votes for first bond in decades

Kansas City Public Schools
Kansas City Public Schools

Kansas City voters overwhelmingly approved a $474 million bond for Kansas City Public Schools in Tuesday’s election, according to unofficial results from the Kansas City Board of Elections.

Nearly 85% of voters, 18,870 out of 22,226 total, opted for a tax increase to help pay for an array of long-waiting improvements to city schools. The district needed to win 57.1% of votes for the bond to pass.

The bond measure, which was the first proposed for the district since 1967, will allocate funding to more than 40 schools throughout KCPS. It will also allocate a total of $50 million to nine charter schools in the Kansas City area.

“This is a monumental day for our children and our community!” said Superintendent Jennifer Collier in a statement Tuesday night about the election results. “This bond will allow us to move beyond temporary fixes and invest in sustainable improvements for our facilities.”

Kids learn on their computers in a first grade classroom, Wednesday, July 21, 2021 at Phillis Wheatley Elementary School in Kansas City.Rebecca Slezak
Star file photo

Before Tuesday, KCPS was the only school district in the Kansas City region to operate without bond funding, according to the district.

Every school in the district will receive at least $5 million from the bond, with a focus on building security and safety, play areas, STEM and music spaces and athletic facilities. KCPS also plans to construct several entirely new buildings, opening new schools to serve students and families as enrollment rises after decades of decline.

The bond aims to address a $1 billion deficit of deferred maintenance and renovation projects, according to the district. The approved funding will go in part to heating and cooling needs, electrical and plumbing repairs, as well as toward fixing broken bathrooms, windows, roofs and emergency safety equipment.

A portion of the bond funds will go to creating two $68 million “empowerment centers,” which will each include a pre-K center, an elementary school and a resource center for families. One at the site of King Elementary and another at the site of the Woodland Early Learning Center.

The King campus project was set to occur regardless of the results of Tuesday’s bond election, relying instead on a $100 million certificate of participation bond passed by the school board last month without the need for voter approval. Special education students from Wheatley Elementary with unique medical needs would also be moved to the campus, which would include a maker space, a media center and a playground.

At the Woodland site, a new elementary school will also be built, with similar early childhood and family empowerment wings as well as a Global Academy section catered toward international students.

Another primary goal of the bond is to open a third middle school at the former site of Southwest High School, 6512 Wornall Road. The project, which will enable KCPS to transition entirely to a middle school model for sixth through eighth graders, earmarks $45.1 million in bond money but will need additional funding sources.

A large first grade class heads outdoors on at George Melcher Elementary School in Kansas City, Missouri. The school grew rapidly during the 2023-24 school year.
A large first grade class heads outdoors on at George Melcher Elementary School in Kansas City, Missouri. The school grew rapidly during the 2023-24 school year. Zach Bauman/The Beacon

In a note to KCPS families and voters shared on the district’s website ahead of Election Day, Collier described the proposed bond as a strong step toward “meeting modern educational needs.”

“This proposal reflects KCPS’s commitment to creating equitable, safe, and high-quality learning spaces for all students while aligning with the district’s long–term strategic Blueprint 2030 plan,” Collier wrote.

KCPS regained full accreditation in 2022 after losing accredited status in 2011 and regaining provisional accreditation in 2014. The bond proposal reflected several of the key goals the district laid out after it reached that milestone.

“We extend our deepest gratitude to the voters of Kansas City for sending a clear message: Our children and their schools are important, and we will not leave them behind,” Collier said in her statement Tuesday night.

This story was originally published April 8, 2025 at 9:18 PM.

Ilana Arougheti
The Kansas City Star
Ilana Arougheti (they/she) is The Kansas City Star’s Jackson County watchdog reporter, covering local government and accountability issues with a focus on eastern Jackson County .They are a graduate of Northwestern University, where she studied journalism, sociology and gender studies. Ilana most recently covered breaking news for The Star and previously wrote for the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times and Raleigh News & Observer. Feel free to reach out with questions or tips! Support my work with a digital subscription
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