Updated 1 a.m. Nov. 5

With 243 of 442 vote centers reporting, the majority of voters remain in favor of approving Richardson ISD's bond package.

The specifics

With 13,948 "For" votes, Proposition A is currently passing with 65.05% of the vote. Proposition B has received 14,171 votes, or 66.12%, in favor of approval, while Proposition C is currently passing with 11,717 "For" votes, or 54.69%.

Community Impact will update this article as more election day vote totals are released. All results are unofficial until canvassed. Visit communityimpact.com/voter-guide/election-results to see results from all local elections in your community.


Updated 11 p.m. Nov. 4

The majority of voters are supporting Richardson ISD's bond package with 118 of 442 vote centers reporting.

What you need to know

Proposition A, B and C have received 11,383, 11,636 and 9,635 "For" votes, respectively. Proposition C is currently passing by the slimmest margin, with 55.33% voting to approve. Proposition A and B have 65.33% and 66.78% votes to approve, respectively.


Updated 10:21 p.m. Nov. 4

With 33 of 442 vote centers reporting, all three Richardson ISD bond propositions are currently passing.

The specifics

Proposition A, which accounts for $1.34 billion of the $1.4 billion bond package, is passing with 9,489 votes "For," or 65.63%.


Proposition B is passing with 9,765 votes to approve, or 67.54% of ballots, while 8,101 voters have supported Proposition C, or 56.05%.

Posted 7:09 p.m. Nov. 4

All three propositions in Richardson ISD’s $1.4 billion bond package are currently passing following the release of early voting numbers.

What you need to know


Proposition A is currently passing with 9,434 early voting ballots, or 65.71%, voting in favor. Proposition B is passing with 67.63% of votes to approve, while 56.16% of early ballots have voted to approve Proposition C.

The background

Proposition A makes up the majority of the referendum and asks voters for $1.338 billion to cover the construction of a new Career and Technical Education Center along with several other projects, including:
  • Renovations or new building construction to transition the six remaining junior high campuses to the middle school model
  • Renovations at the Environmental Studies Center
  • Infrastructure and safety upgrades across the district
  • Tennis court lighting, locker room refurbishment and additional athletic program improvements
  • Instructional materials and fine arts instruments and uniforms
Proposition B would allocate $54 million to replace tablets for teachers and students.

Proposition C would provide $7.4 million replace the turf and add Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant stadium seating to the football stadiums at Lake Highlands and Richardson High Schools.