Civic Media
  • News

  • Shows

  • Stations
    • Radio Stations

    • Coverage Area

  • About
    • Get to Know us

    • Our mission, vision, values

    • Careers

    • Get in Touch

    • Press

    • Awards

  • Advertise

  • Support

  • Store

Civic Media

202 State St, Suite 200
Madison, WI 53703
608-819-8255
info@civicmedia.us

News Ethics and Standards | Privacy Policy

Youtube

Bluesky

X

Facebook

Instagram

LinkedIn

  • News

  • Shows

  • Stations
    • Radio Stations

    • Coverage Area

  • About
    • Get to Know us

    • Our mission, vision, values

    • Careers

    • Get in Touch

    • Press

    • Awards

  • Advertise

  • Support

  • Store

© 2026 Civic Media

WMDX

92.7 WMDX

Select to listen

0:00

WMDX

Something went wrong...

Kenosha Schools Seek $115M Referendum to Address Budget Gaps and Boost Safety

Education

•

1 min read

Kenosha Schools Seek $115M Referendum to Address Budget Gaps and Boost Safety

Stuart J. Wattles's profile picture
Stuart J. Wattles

Nov 21, 2024, 6:29 AM CT

Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Reddit
Bluesky

Share

Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Reddit
Bluesky

KENOSHA, Wis. (WRJN) — The Kenosha Unified School District (KUSD) Board of Education has approved a $115 million referendum for the February 18, 2025 ballot, addressing financial and security concerns.

The measure proposes allocating $23 million annually over five years, with the majority aimed at closing the district’s budget deficit. About $3 million per year would be dedicated to security upgrades, according to Superintendent Jeffrey Weiss.

The estimated initial property tax impact is $1.25 per year on every $1,000 of property value. The owner of a home worth $250,000 would have a property tax increase of $313 per year.

The decision follows a November 7 incident at Roosevelt Elementary School, where a 13-year-old student attempted to enter with a suspicious backpack.

Kenosha - Roosevelt Incident

If passed, the referendum would fund controlled entrances at seven schools, update cameras, replace exterior doors, install shatter-resistant window film, and add more card readers.

The district has already hired entrance monitors for schools without controlled access.

The referendum also aims to assist in hiring add reading and math specialists, expanding course offerings, and increasing pay for educational support staff.

Stuart J. Wattles
Stuart J. Wattles

Stuart J. Wattles is Southeastern Wisconsin News Director and the voice of newscasts on WRJN and WAUK. Email him at stuartj.wattles@civicmedia.us.

More from Stuart J. Wattles

Racine Council to Review Plan to Rebuild Shoop Park Golf Course

Evers Signs New School Safety Laws After Kenosha Grooming Case

Want More Local News?

We've got you. Scan it to get it.

Civic Media App Icon

Civic Media

Civic Media Inc.

Civic Media App Icon

The Civic Media App

Put us in your pocket.