Camas School District voters will soon decide the fate of two replacement levies supporters say are critical to the future of the school district.
Ballots for the Feb. 9 special election will arrive in Camas voters’ mailboxes by Jan. 27. At stake is the future of the school district’s Educational Programs and Operations (EP&O) levy and a Technology, Health, and Safety capital levy. If voters approve their renewal, the three-year levies will replace current levies expiring at the end of 2021.
In November 2020, Camas School Board members agreed to place the replacement levies on the Feb. 9 ballot.
“Families expect a high level of service and (the levies are) what help fund that,” board member Corey McEnry said then. “Really, the levies are the reason we can offer what we can offer in Camas.”
The levies represent nearly 20 percent of the school district’s funding.
The district uses its EP&O levy funds to supplement staff and programs not funded by state revenues — hiring teachers to help reduce Camas’ class sizes, offering extracurricular activities and athletics programs, and greatly supplementing the district’s school special education programs, libraries, nursing staff and transportation and food services.