The Park City Board of Education appears likely to put a bond measure on the ballot in November, asking taxpayers to pony up for a massive overhaul of the district’s schools. If voters were to say yes, it would be the culmination of the wide-ranging master-planning discussions that have continued, in one form or another, since 2014. Given how long the district has been mired in talks about facilities upgrades, a resolution would be welcome. It would allow school officials — and the community — to achieve long-desired goals like grade realignment and retiring Treasure Mountain Junior High, whose aging infrastructure and crowded hallways have long been a bane for students, teachers and parents.