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Houston-area voters on Tuesday backed roughly $5 billion in bonds for new school buildings, technology upgrades and athletics facilities.

This election cycle, 10 school districts across greater Houston put bond issues on the ballot, ranging from $15 million to $2 billion, worth a total of $5.7 billion. In most cases, voters appeared to green light the initiatives, sending them toward passage.

School bond measures allow districts to borrow money for construction or other large investments. If voters approve, districts are pre-approved to borrow a set amount of money, which they pay back over time. For each proposition to pass, a simple majority of 50 percent plus one vote is needed.

Conroe Independent School District in Montgomery County put forward the largest bond package at $2 billion. Most of the money will be used to improve existing campuses and purchase new sites, according to the ballot proposition. However, the district says it also will make other investments, such as a competition swimming pool and an agricultural barn for its career and technical education program.

Aldine and Katy ISDs presented the second- and third-largest packages at $1.8 billion and $840 million, respectively.

Houston ISD did not put a bond levy on the ballot, but new Superintendent Mike Miles said residents should expect one as soon as next fall. The last time HISD voters passed a school bond was in 2012, when a measure raised $1.9 billion for facilities upgrades. Miles says many of the buildings in Texas’ largest district are overdue for fixes.

Here’s how the Greater Houston bond packages fared:

Last updated 10:11 a.m.

Conroe ISD

Total value: $2 billion

What the bonds are for: School building upgrades, new school sites, new buses, elementary school gyms, competition swimming pool, educational agricultural barn

How did they do: Three of the four bond measures passed by large margins, according to the final vote tally. The fourth measure, the bond for the swimming pool, narrowly failed.

Aldine ISD

Total value: $1.8 billion

What the bonds are for: Campus improvements, new school sites, construction of a performing arts center, technology

How did they do: All three bond measures appeared likely to pass, with more than half of precincts reporting.

Katy ISD

Total value: $841 million

What the bonds are for: School building construction and renovation, technology, athletic facilities improvements, swimming pools

How did they do: Of the four measures on the ballot, voters green lit two, accounting for a combined $807 million. Measures for athletic facilities and a swimming pool were shot down.

Goose Creek ISD

Total value: $386 million

What the bonds are for: Replacing Sterling High School, safety improvements, new school buses, renovation of an athletic stadium, technology

How did they do: All three bond measures failed by double-digit margins.

Clear Creek ISD

Total value: $302 million

What the bonds are for: School building construction, renovation, acquisition and expansion, technology

How did they do: Voters OK'd both bond issues.

Cleveland ISD

Total value: $125 million

What the bond is for: New school buildings, properties and buses

How did it do: The bond measure failed by a wide margin, according to Liberty County's unofficial results.

Santa Fe ISD

Total value: $93 million

What the bond is for: Construction, purchase and renovation of school buildings

How did it do: The bond measure failed in a tight vote, according to Galveston County's unofficial results.

Huffman ISD

Total value: $92 million

What the bond is for: New career and technical education center, new police training facility, school safety improvements, school buses

How did it do: The measured passed with a majority of voter support.

Crosby ISD

Total value: $85 million

What the bond is for: School facilities

How did it do: Voters rejected the bond measure by a large margin.

Lamar Consolidated ISD

Total value: $15 million

What the bond is for: Renovation of athletic stadium

How did it do: The measure did not pass, according to Fort Bend County's unofficial tally.

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Asher Lehrer-Small is a K-12 education reporter for the Abdelraoufsinno. He previously spent three years covering schools for The 74 where he was recognized by the Education Writers Association as one...