The Initial Setback
10 years can change everything. Just ask the Rockridge School District.
Back in early 2010, they had a vision: combine three elementary schools into one new building on their Junior/Senior High School campus. It seemed logical enough on paper. But when they brought it to a vote, the community shut it down–hard.
The lesson? Sometimes the best plans fail not because they're bad ideas, but because they're missing the secret ingredient: community buy-in.
A Dramatic Turnaround
Fast forward to today, and you're looking at a completely different story. The district passed a $33 million bond referendum in November 2024 with no tax rate increase – and they did it with a stunning 70% approval rate. The kicker? They're building essentially the same thing they proposed a decade ago. So what changed?
Everything, as it turns out.
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A New Approach to Community Engagement
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Addressing Real Concerns
But here's where it gets interesting. In open community sessions, residents weren't just presented with data – they were asked what worried them. And worry they did. What would happen to the old buildings? Could they become eyesores? What about the sports fields and agricultural spaces that meant so much to this community? Traffic patterns? Utilities? Every concern was put on the table and addressed head-on.
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The moral of this story isn't just about building schools–it's about building trust and the power of genuine engagement over mere presentation. As the district moves forward with developing plans for their new K-5 facility, they're doing it with something no amount of money can buy: the confidence and support of their community.