STOCKBRIDGE, MI – Voters will soon decide if they want to allow Stockbridge Community Schools to borrow just shy of $15 million from the state to improve school infrastructure.

Voters will be asked in the general election Tuesday, Nov. 4, for permission to borrow up to $15,100,000 from the state for 16 years to pay for several major capital improvements to the district’s infrastructure.

The Stockbridge Community School district spans portions of Ingham, Jackson, Livingston and Washtenaw Counties.

Approving the bond would maintain the school district’s current millage rate of 3.3 mills with no increase or decrease in the tax rate.

One mill is equal to $1 paid in property taxes per every $1,000 of a property’s taxable value, roughly half of market value. As an example, the owner of a $20

See Full Page