Updated 10:02 p.m. With 49 of 49 Election Day precincts reporting, a majority of Montgomery County voters are showing support for the $84 million Magnolia ISD Proposition 1 bond referendum and the $8 million Proposition 2 measure on the ballot. Of those voting, 3,434 voters, or 62.63 percent, are in favor of Proposition 1, while 2,049 voters, or 37.37 percent, oppose the measure. For Proposition 2, 2,795 voters, or 51.16 percent, are in favor of the measure, while 2,668 voters, or 48.84 percent, oppose it. "This is the biggest turnout in numbers we've ever had for a [school bond] election," MISD trustee Deborah Rose Miller said. "We had 5,500 voters, and the most we've had in the past was 3,600. This [bond] is very important for our kids, so we're excited." Proposition 1 will allocate $84 million for a new fifth- and sixth-grade campus, renovations and expansions at existing schools, and the purchase of new technology, future school sites and 10 new buses. Proposition 2 will allocate $8 million in bonds for a multipurpose conference center and installation of artificial turf on the district’s two high school football fields. The $92 million referendum is the first bond proposal the district has placed on the ballot since 2004. MISD will be able to pay off the $92 million bond in 25 years without a tax increase due to conservative budgeting and property value growth estimates, MISD Communications Director Denise Meyers said. "The [district] will have a list of the bond projects they will be rolling out," Miller said. "Magnolia won today." All results are unofficial until canvassed. Posted 7:16 p.m. According to unofficial early voting results, a majority of Montgomery County voters are showing support for the $84 million Magnolia ISD Proposition 1 bond referendum, while a majority of voters are not in favor of the $8 million Proposition 2 measure on the ballot. Of those voting, 1,632 voters, or 61.63 percent, are in favor of Proposition 1, while 1,016 voters, or 38.37 percent, oppose the measure. For Proposition 2, 1,343 voters, or 50.89 percent, oppose the measure, while 1,296 voters, or 49.11 percent, are in favor of it. All results are unofficial until canvassed.