Houston ISD Voters Reject Bond, Delivering Rebuke of State-Appointed Leadership
Many voters saw the bond as a referendum on Superintendent Mike Miles鈥 leadership, with his critics rallying behind the slogan, 'No trust, no bond.'

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This article is part of 社区黑料鈥檚 EDlection 2024 coverage, which takes a look at candidates鈥 education policies and how they might impact the American education system after the 2024 election.
Houston ISD voters resoundingly rejected a $4.4 billion school bond package Tuesday, a victory for opponents of the district鈥檚 state-appointed leadership and setback for the district鈥檚 years-long push to upgrade campuses.
About 58 percent of voters opposed , which promised to rebuild or significantly renovate roughly three dozen schools, improve campus security, upgrade schools鈥 heating and cooling systems and expand preschool offerings, among other changes. The school bond proposal was the largest in Texas history, and it became the first Texas school bond after the previous 23 passed.
HISD’s last school bond vote, held in 2012, received support from two-thirds of district voters.
The vote came a year and a half after a controversial June 2023 state takeover of HISD, in which the Texas Education Agency installed a new superintendent, Mike Miles, and school board. Since then, Miles has carried out a dramatic overhaul of the district, turning HISD into one of the .
The bond vote garnered extra attention because it represented community members鈥 first opportunity to vote on an issue that will meaningfully impact district operations since Miles鈥 appointment. Many voters saw it as a referendum on Miles鈥 leadership, with his critics rallying behind the slogan, 鈥淣o trust, no bond.鈥
Steve McHenry, 76, who cast his ballot at a polling location in Houston鈥檚 Frenchtown neighborhood, said he was voting against the schools package because of issues with the district鈥檚 leadership. All his children attended HISD schools but are now grown, he said.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 like the superintendent and I don鈥檛 like the state running (HISD),鈥 McHenry said.
Usually, large Texas districts pass bonds roughly every five years to keep campus facilities up to date, but HISD . In that time, the district has put off roughly $10 billion worth of needed maintenance and repairs, HISD administrators said during several bond-related meetings. The $4.4 billion total represented HISD鈥檚 most immediate needs for safe and healthy learning conditions, they said.
The district will now have to pay for some of those upkeep costs out of its general fund, leaving less cash for other operating expenses, such as staff salaries.
Miles expressed frustration with the bond result in a statement HISD released Tuesday evening, arguing students across the district would bear the brunt of the community鈥檚 decision.
鈥淚n this instance, the politics of adults beat out the needs of our children,鈥 Miles wrote. 鈥淚 cannot promise our aging facilities and systems will never be a barrier to student learning. We will do our best to keep long expired heating and cooling systems running, but on very hot or very cold days, we are likely going to have to close campuses to keep students safe.鈥
Jackie Anderson, president of the Houston Federation of Teachers, HISD鈥檚 largest employee union, celebrated the early voting results as a sign that a wide coalition of community members oppose HISD鈥檚 leadership. She hopes the vote encourages Miles and his team to take the union鈥檚 concerns more seriously.
鈥淲e hope that this sends a resounding message to them that we鈥檙e not going away,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淚t would behoove them to sit down and talk to us.鈥
Two education advocacy nonprofits that have been high-profile bond advocates, Good Reason Houston and Houstonians for Great Public Schools, released statements shortly after early voting results were published that treated the bond result as a defeat. Both groups are backed by some of Houston鈥檚 wealthiest philanthropists, who helped raise about $2 million to support the bond through a political action committee.
鈥淲e are deeply disappointed that the HISD bond measure did not pass,鈥 Good Reason Houston CEO Cary Wright said in a statement. 鈥淭his outcome means we must continue to work within the current insufficient infrastructure, even though we know students deserve and need more.鈥
Because HISD typically has held bond elections during the November of even-numbered years, the district may be at least two years away from another bond vote. If leaders choose to wait until the state returns power to a locally elected school board, the timeline would likely extend until at least the 2028 election.
This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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