The Linn-Mar Community School District was formed in 1948 when 17 sub-districts were joined together to build the Marion Rural Independent School District. At that time, 678 students were enrolled in grades K-8.
March, 1993, district residents approved an $8.5 million bond issue to construct a new 5-6 intermediate building, fund media center expansions, construct 14 additional High School classrooms, and create additions to four elementary buildings: Bowman Woods, Indian Creek, Wilkins and Novak.
February, 1997 a $25 million bond proposal was voter approved. This bond helped fund the 1999 District change from a K-4, 5-6, 7-8, and 9-12 configuration to a K-5, 6-8, and 9-12 configuration. Westfield elementary was constructed and additions were made to Wilkins and Indian Creek. Excelsior was expanded to become a 6-8 building and the High School underwent a remodeled to make it a more efficient 9-12 building.
A $12 million bond proposal allowed for the construction of Oak Ridge and the Bowman Woods Gymnasium. This bond proposal was approved in 2001.
January 2006 voters approved a $27.5 million bond referendum by nearly 75% approval. The District constructed two new elementary schools, converted Oak Ridge to a 6-8 building and made renovations to the High School and Novak Elementary.
September of 2018 voters approved a $55 million bond. This bond will be utilized to fund the construction of two 5-6 grade buildings and change the district to a PreK-4, 5-6, 7-8, and 9-12 building configuration. The future construction of these buildings will provide major support to overcrowding in the current PreK-5 elementary buildings.
SILO (School Infrastructure Local Option)
Voters in Linn County approved a 10-year School Infrastructure Local Option Sales Tax on February 13, 2007. SILO tax revenues are distributed across all school districts in Linn County for the first five years of the tax. In 2008, the Iowa Legislature passed SAVE legislation which extended the penny sales tax for schools to 2029 and created an average per student allocation for school districts across the state. The increase in the sales and use tax from 5% to 6% was intended to replace the 1% SILO tax that had been in effect. To date, SILO revenue has allowed the district to build the new Novak Elementary school, air condition five schools, construct a 6,000 seat multipurpose stadium, install additional high school parking, purchase property to relocate Transportation and Operations & Maintenance, relocate the baseball and softball fields to the Oak Ridge property and construct an indoor aquatics center.
Enrollment
In the fall of 2017 Linn-Mar Community School District had a certified enrollment count of 7436 students. Since 2000 Linn-Mar’s certified enrollment number has grown at an average yearly rate of 2.24%.
In the 2017-2018 school year Linn-Mar Community School District had a reading proficiency level of 84.1% compared to a state level of 77%. From 2014-2018 district ACT test scores averaged 24.34. The state average for the same timeframe was 21.675. In 2016 the national average for the ACT test was 20.8.