Monday, March 09, 2026
37.0°F

BCSD schedules November levy vote

NOAH HARRIS | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 2 weeks, 5 days AGO
by NOAH HARRIS
| February 18, 2026 1:00 AM

BONNERS FERRY — Boundary County voters will face a familiar question this November: Should they approve a maintenance and operations levy proposed by the Boundary County School District? 

The question follows the BCSD board of trustees' Feb. 10 vote to place a maintenance and operations levy on the Nov. 3 ballot.  

BCSD Vice Chair Teresa Rae said the levy is an ongoing one that the school district has historically run every two years.

However, voters rejected the levy in November of 2024, which would have cost taxpayers $98 per $100,000 of assessed property value. That levy totaled $2.31 million, representing about 15% of the district’s overall budget. 

“We've kept it at $2.4 million because that's what we have had and we felt a monetary crunch through the years,” Rae said. “At the same time, we are going to really look at that number. There's a chance we would want to ask for more or there's a chance we would want to ask for less.”

Rae said the amount for this levy will be determined in early fall 2026, after analyzing all changes and anticipated inputs over the next six months.

In 2024, the levy was to fund safety, security, maintenance, special programs, salaries and benefits, and other initiatives.

Rae said the benefits of running the levy in the November election outweigh the challenges of sharing the ballot with federal races. 

“The problem is, if you don’t run it in November and you wait until May, the budget cycle is so tight,” Rae said. “Your budget is turned in to the state by June. That throws you into a horrible bind, with only a couple of weeks to enact a new budget.” 

Scheduling the levy for November will also allow the district time to adapt after the Idaho legislative session concludes. 

“It’ll be done by the end of March and we’ll know what comes out of that and what we have to plan for,” Rae said. “The worst thing to come out of the Legislature this year would be a 2% or 3% holdback. But even then, we can weather that for a year or two.” 

Other financial unknowns include the impact of North Idaho Classical Academy’s opening in August. BCSD Superintendent Jan Bayer told board trustees that 74 current BCSD students attend the charter school. 

“We also will know by then how many kids will be going to the charter school, which will affect our numbers and our funding,” Rae said. “There’s no good or bad about that. It is what it is and it will allow us to plan better.” 

Rae said there are also uncertainties surrounding online education programs. 

“That program was originally established for rural schools,” Rae said. “What we’re hearing is that some larger schools have taken advantage of that program. For instance, they’ll put 30 kids in an English IDLA course online and not have it proctored by a certified teacher.” 

As of now, no budget cuts are in place, NICA has not held a lottery to confirm attendees, and online school has not been affected. 

“All of these are unknowns at this time,” Rae said. “They’re not necessarily scary or detrimental. They’re going to be what they’re going to be and we are going to plan accordingly.” 

Rae emphasized that the board and superintendent are themselves Boundary County taxpayers. 

“I would say that we as a school district are constantly looking at best practices so that we can deliver the best possible education for the least amount of cost to our taxpayers,” Rae said. 

Rae said she does not view the situation negatively. 

“Though there is much budget uncertainty for the county, we are viewing it as a positive,” she said. “We’re taking it head-on. It’s not doom and gloom. We hope our constituents have faith in the school board and the district to provide the public education our county deserves.” 

She also praised the district’s performance. 

“Our test scores are outstanding,” Rae said. “We’ve got a lot of people working hard in the school district and I’m super thankful for all of them.” 

The district expects to finalize the levy amount later this year.

ARTICLES BY NOAH HARRIS