Articles

Knowing What Matters: An Expanded Study of School Bond Elections in Michigan, 1998-2006

Bowers, Alex J.; Metzger, Scott; Militello, Matthew

This study investigates what factors are associated with the likelihood of passing school facility construction bonds by local district election. It uses statewide data from Michigan, 1998–2006, to examine the outcome of 789 bond elections in terms of ten variables: amount of the bond request; district enrollment; district locale; percentage of students receiving free school lunches; percentage of the district population with only a high school degree; the district’s long-term debt; voter turnout; the day of the calendar year on which the election is held; the number of the bond proposal on the ballot; and the inclusion of technology in the ballot proposal’s wording. The logistic regression analysis finds that bond amount, percentage of students receiving free lunches, percentage of district population with only a high school degree, voter turnout, and being further down on the ballot are all negative and significant factors. District long-term debt and holding the election later in the calendar year are both positive and significant factors. District enrollment numbers are non-significant. In terms of district locale (using mid-sized city/suburban districts as the reference group), being a small town and rural district is a negative and significant factor.

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Also Published In

Title
Journal of Education Finance
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1353/jef.0.0024

More About This Work

Academic Units
Education Leadership
Published Here
August 5, 2013