Muri: Bond sale compliment to board and community

May 15—Ector County ISD's bonds went on sale May 14 and they had $338 million in requests for a $179 million offering.

The three proposition bond was $436,109,000, but only one proposition for $424 million passed.

With interest rates being lower than projected at 3.77 percent instead of 3.84 percent, Superintendent Scott Muri said in his media call Wednesday that it will save $2.9 million in interest over the life of the bond.

Community National Bank bought $3 million worth of bonds Tuesday morning, Muri said at the May 14 ECISD board workshop.

Muri said the bonds sold are a compliment to the board of trustees and the decisions they have made as good financial stewards and community members who approved the bond.

"All of those decisions set the course for a very healthy opportunity for ECISD in the bond market," Muri said. "It was an exciting day for the community. We'll be doing that again in the month of June."

Last Friday, 353 ECISD teachers earned the Teacher Incentive Allotment.

"These teachers together earned right at $3.1 million. We had an exciting day delivering really large checks to those individual teachers. That $3.1 million represents the hard work of those teachers. That money is not a gift. It is earned by those individual teachers because of the work they do with students," demonstrated through student growth on a variety of assessments "as well as their own evaluation instrument."

"Those two coupled together allow our teachers to take advantage of this incredible opportunity," Muri said.

He added that they continue to expand that program so that each year more teachers have access.

This Friday is the first graduation of six. Muri cautioned residents that there will be a lot of traffic around a variety of venues.

Asked about whether he thinks legislators should come back for a special session on education, he said he would encourage it, not only for ECISD, but districts across the state.

"Districts across the state of Texas are making dire cuts because they have not been appropriately funded, not just this year but for the past five years. Texas lags behind. We're in the bottom 10 of the 50 states in these United States. When we look at funding of public education within our state, the most effective investment that we can make is an investment in our children. That investment that we make in children pays dividends not only for society but for those individual students themselves," Muri said.

"I would strongly urge our legislature to come back into session, then have a singular focus and that focus should be the 5.5 million public school children and the financial needs that our public schools have today in order to serve those kids."