During the committee session, members revisited a 2023 cost-savings analysis for consolidating Joe Walker and explored alternative financing to reduce the district's long-term burden. The 2023 analysis estimated about $619,000 in annual savings from consolidation—mostly salary savings—if the district were able to move students into existing buildings.
A committee member proposed a seller-finance approach as an alternative to investing bond proceeds in Joe Walker. "Seller finance would be we could just barely up their rent but they own the building and they would have to do the upgrades the maintenance if they wanted to," the member said, describing a structure in which an outside operator (the example discussed was a charter or similar partner) would assume ownership and responsibility for capital work, and the district would collect periodic payments rather than carry the bond-funded upgrades.
Participants ran preliminary math: the presentation cited about $2 million of projected Joe Walker upgrades and noted the 20-year debt service on that amount could total roughly $3.6 million; converting that to a monthly figure showed about $15,000 per month as a rough bond-equivalent payment. Board members contrasted that with existing rental revenue from a potential operator (cited figures in the discussion included roughly $12,000 per month under the current arrangement) and noted that to be revenue-neutral the district would require materially higher rents or an outright sale/owner-occupant with a purchase agreement.
Board members stressed tradeoffs and risks: seller finance would shift upgrade and maintenance responsibility to the buyer/operator but would expose the district to the risk that an owner might later walk away, leaving the district with a building in need of repairs. Several members said the idea is "radical" but worth exploring as part of a broader consolidation and bond-prioritization study. Staff said more detailed cost estimates, legal analysis and community input would be required before pursuing seller-finance or any consolidation plan.
Next steps: staff will provide updated cost estimates for consolidation scenarios and timeline implications; the bond team will present project-level costs (Craig and facilities staff were named as the staff leads), and the board will schedule community-engagement opportunities before any vote on facility-specific bond spending.