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California
Smart Voter
San Joaquin County Ballot

Combined ballot

See Also:   Information for the County of San Joaquin
(Elections Office, local League of Women Voters, links to other county election sites)

November 6, 2018 Election

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County Results as of Nov 6 11:10pm, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (485/485)
57.0% Countywide Voter Turnout (196,635/344,891)
Statewide Results as of Dec 17 8:57am, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (24312/24312)
64.5% Statewide Voter Turnout (12,712,542/19,696,371)

Judicial | State | United States Senator | United States Representative | Member of the State Assembly | School | City | District | State Propositions | Local Measures
Click on Name of Contest below.
Polling Location on November 6, 7am - 8pm
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[Poll data last updated 2018/10/10 21:01]
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Vote-by-Mail ballots may be returned to a worker at any of the  polling places within your county on election day.
Contests for all precincts in San Joaquin County, CA combined are shown below.
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  • Judicial

    California Supreme CourtClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (Yes/No)

    • Leondra R. Kruger
      72.8% Yes (6,698,643) 27.2% No (2,506,418)
    • Carol A. Corrigan
      69.8% Yes (6,539,085) 30.2% No (2,833,205)

    Justice, California State Court of Appeal; District 3Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (Yes/No)

    • Louis Mauro
      70.0% Yes (734,898) 30.0% No (315,257)
    • Cole Blease
      66.0% Yes (697,150) 34.0% No (358,357)

    State

    GovernorClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Gavin Newsom, Democratic
      7,721,410 votes 61.9%
    • John H. Cox, Republican
      4,742,825 votes 38.1%

    Lieutenant GovernorClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Eleni Kounalakis, Democratic
      5,914,068 votes 56.6%
    • Ed Hernandez, Democratic
      4,543,863 votes 43.4%

    Secretary of StateClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Alex Padilla, Democratic
      7,909,521 votes 64.5%
    • Mark P. Meuser, Republican
      4,362,545 votes 35.5%

    ControllerClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Betty T. Yee, Democratic
      8,013,067 votes 65.5%
    • Konstantinos Roditis, Republican
      4,229,480 votes 34.5%

    TreasurerClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Fiona Ma, Democratic
      7,825,587 votes 64.1%
    • Greg Conlon, Republican
      4,376,816 votes 35.9%

    Attorney GeneralClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Xavier Becerra, Democratic
      7,790,743 votes 63.6%
    • Steven C. Bailey, Republican
      4,465,587 votes 36.4%

    Insurance CommissionerClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Ricardo Lara, Democratic
      6,186,039 votes 52.9%
    • Steve Poizner, No Party Preference
      5,515,293 votes 47.1%

    State Board of Equalization; District 1Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Ted Gaines, Republican
      1,436,547 votes 51.4%
    • Tom Hallinan, Democratic
      1,355,782 votes 48.6%

    United States Senator

    United States SenatorClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Dianne Feinstein, Democratic
      6,019,422 votes 54.2%
    • Kevin De León, Democratic
      5,093,942 votes 45.8%

    United States Representative

    United States Representative; District 9Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Jerry McNerney, Democratic
      113,414 votes 56.5%
    • Marla Livengood, Republican
      87,349 votes 43.5%

    United States Representative; District 10Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Josh Harder, Democratic
      115,945 votes 52.3%
    • Jeff Denham, Republican
      105,955 votes 47.7%

    Member of the State Assembly

    Member of the State Assembly; District 9Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Jim Cooper, Democratic
      92,951 votes 68.3%
    • Harry He, Democratic
      43,225 votes 31.7%

    Member of the State Assembly; District 12Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Heath Flora, Republican
      94,404 votes 60.0%
    • Robert D. Chase, Democratic
      62,811 votes 40.0%

    Member of the State Assembly; District 13Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Susan Talamantes Eggman, Democratic
      74,813 votes 65.4%
    • Antonio M. Garcia, Republican
      39,532 votes 34.6%

    School

    State Superintendent of Public InstructionClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Tony K. Thurmond
      5,385,912 votes 50.9%
    • Marshall Tuck
      5,198,738 votes 49.1%

    Trustee; San Joaquin Delta Community College District; Trustee Area 3Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Janet A. Rivera
      87,888 votes 48.4%
    • Eddie Brown
      57,847 votes 31.9%
    • Richard A. Vasquez
      35,667 votes 19.7%
    • (72 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.0%, 4,127 Under Votes 2.2%, 6 Over Votes 0.0%)

    Trustee; San Joaquin Delta Community College District; Trustee Area 4Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Charles R. Jennings
      89,787 votes 51.1%
    • Diane Oren
      86,011 votes 48.9%
    • (123 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.1%, 4,889 Under Votes 2.7%, 1 Over Votes 0.0%)

    Trustee; Yosemite Community College District; Trustee Area 1Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Denise Springer
      2,006 votes 52.2%
    • Margie Bulkin
      1,835 votes 47.8%
    • (90 Total Other Write-In Votes 0.6%, 3,329 Under Votes 23.9%, 1 Over Votes 0.0%)

    Trustee; Stockton Unified School District; Trustee Area 2Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Angelann Flores
      1969 votes 50.0%
    • Ralph L. White
      790 votes 20.1%
    • Jazmine Hernandez
      615 votes 15.6%
    • Kiasha "Madave" Moore
      296 votes 7.5%

    Trustee; Stockton Unified School District; Trustee Area 5Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Maria Mendez
      1883 votes 34.8%
    • Kitty Ruhstaller
      1809 votes 33.4%
    • Grant Gilson
      1031 votes 19.0%

    Trustee; Stockton Unified School District; Trustee Area 6Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Scot McBrian
      1990 votes 37.7%
    • Angela Phillips
      1889 votes 35.7%
    • Michael Jones, Jr.
      791 votes 15.0%

    Trustee; Stockton Unified School District; Trustee Area 7Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Candelaria Vargas
      2522 votes 37.0%
    • Dee Johnson
      2346 votes 34.5%
    • Aaron Edwards
      1138 votes 16.7%

    Trustee; Lincoln Unified School District; Trustee Area 1Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Jenny Van De Pol
      2138 votes 57.9%
    • Samantha L. Chan
      1203 votes 32.6%

    Trustee; Manteca Unified School District; Trustee Area 4Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Marie Freitas
      2870 votes 52.2%
    • Andrea Collins-Cambra
      1849 votes 33.6%

    Trustee; Manteca Unified School District; Trustee Area 5Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Cathy Pope-Gotschall
      2256 votes 51.1%
    • Evelyn Moore
      1614 votes 36.5%

    Trustee; Escalon Unified School District; Trustee Area 1Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Richard O. Thompson
      526 votes 55.0%
    • Ryan Rissetto
      306 votes 32.0%

    Trustee; Escalon Unified School District; Trustee Area 2Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Kate Isidra Powell
      505 votes 48.1%
    • Kurt S. Kale
      373 votes 35.6%

    Trustee; Lodi Unified School District; Trustee Area 1Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Susan Macfarlane
      3871 votes 45.9%
    • Bonita "Bonnie" Cassel
      2833 votes 33.6%

    Trustee; Lodi Unified School District; Trustee Area 4Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Courtney Porter
      4803 votes 46.7%
    • Dave Sorgent
      2100 votes 20.4%
    • Kanwaljeet Gill
      1464 votes 14.2%

    Trustee; Lodi Unified School District; Trustee Area 5Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Ron Heberle
      3592 votes 62.4%
    • Ramon Yepez
      1277 votes 22.2%

    Board Member; Tracy Unified School District Elementary SchoolsClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (4 Elected)

    • Stephen Abercrombie
      14650 votes 46.9%
    • Lori Souza
      12531 votes 40.1%
    • Ameni E. Alexander
      10525 votes 33.7%
    • Simran Kaur
      10211 votes 32.7%
    • James Young, Sr.
      7830 votes 25.1%
    • Jeremy Silcox
      7413 votes 23.7%
    • Mateo Morelos Bedolla
      7127 votes 22.8%
    • James P. Vaughn
      6976 votes 22.3%
    • Gregory Silva
      6763 votes 21.6%

    Board Member; Galt Joint Union High School DistrictClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (3 Elected)

    • Mark Beck
      6,161 votes 22.9%
    • Dennis Richardson
      5,115 votes 19.1%
    • Melissa Neuburger
      4,918 votes 18.3%
    • Mathew Pratton
      3,779 votes 14.1%
    • Patrick W. Maple
      3,707 votes 13.8%
    • Alice Henderson
      3,169 votes 11.8%

    Board Member; Banta School DistrictClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (2 Elected)

    • Gene Neely
      512 votes 44.8%
    • Frank I. Silva
      456 votes 39.9%
    • Joshua Anderson
      449 votes 39.2%
    • Dan-Joe Lopez
      335 votes 29.3%

    Board Member; Oak View Union School DistrictClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (3 Elected)

    • Mark Huft
      559 votes 50.5%
    • Cody Brum
      525 votes 47.4%
    • Dustin McDonald
      497 votes 44.9%
    • Norman Pearson
      497 votes 44.9%

    City

    Council Member; City of Stockton; Council District 3Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Paul Canepa
      6256 votes 50.5%
    • Susan Lofthus
      5231 votes 42.2%

    Council Member; City of Stockton; Council District 5Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Christina Fugazi
      3789 votes 49.6%
    • Dyane Burgos Medina
      3315 votes 43.4%

    Council Member; City of EscalonClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (3 Elected)

    • Ed Alves
      1445 votes 50.5%
    • Robert Swift
      1414 votes 49.4%
    • Peter Krumeich
      1045 votes 36.5%
    • Richard Percey
      911 votes 31.8%
    • Stephanie Ennis Wiensz
      777 votes 27.1%
    • William Smith
      549 votes 19.2%

    Mayor; City of MantecaClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Benjamin Cantu
      12042 votes 48.9%
    • Steve Debrum
      10988 votes 44.6%

    Council Member; City of MantecaClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (2 Elected)

    • David Breitenbucher
      9934 votes 40.3%
    • Jose Nuño
      9377 votes 38.1%
    • Mike Morowit
      9322 votes 37.9%
    • Chris Silva
      7770 votes 31.6%

    Council Member; City of Lodi; Council District 1Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Alan Nakanishi
      4694 votes 77.6%

    Council Member; City of Lodi; Council District 2Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Mark Chandler
      2406 votes 57.1%
    • Spencer Rhoads
      1376 votes 32.6%

    Council Member; City of Lodi; Council District 3Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Doug "Keen" Kuehne
      3210 votes 68.1%

    Mayor; City of TracyClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Robert Rickman
      13433 votes 49.3%
    • Nancy D. Young
      12356 votes 45.4%

    Council Member; City of TracyClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (2 Elected)

    • Dan Tavares Arriola
      10100 votes 37.1%
    • Veronica Vargas
      8371 votes 30.7%
    • Dotty Nygard
      8256 votes 30.3%
    • Juana L. Dement
      6952 votes 25.5%
    • Catalina Olvera
      5516 votes 20.2%
    • Amer Hammudi
      4923 votes 18.1%

    Mayor; City of LathropClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Sonny Dhaliwal
      4675 votes 83.6%

    Council Member; City of Lathrop; 4 Year TermClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (2 Elected)

    • Paul Akinjo
      2529 votes 45.2%
    • Diane Lazard
      2330 votes 41.7%
    • Minnie "Cotton" Diallo
      2094 votes 37.4%
    • Debbie Rock
      1028 votes 18.4%

    Council Member; City of Lathrop; 2 Year TermClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Jennifer Torres-O'Callaghan
      2525 votes 45.1%
    • Steve Dresser
      2499 votes 44.7%

    District

    Board Member; Lockeford Community Services DistrictClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (3 Elected)

    • Janina "Nina" Chandler
      391 votes 42.5%
    • David M. Rowe
      329 votes 35.7%
    • Gary Gordon
      327 votes 35.5%
    • Patrick J. Fischer
      311 votes 33.8%
    • Noel Stetson
      285 votes 30.9%

    Board Member; Mountain House Community Services DistrictClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (2 Elected)

    • Manuel "Manny" Moreno
      2118 votes 53.8%
    • Brian Lucid
      1668 votes 42.4%
    • Victor Liew
      1344 votes 34.2%

    Board Member; Waterloo-Morada Rural County Fire Protection DistrictClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites (3 Elected)

    • Marc Youngblood
      2357 votes 52.4%
    • Ralph Lucchetti
      2334 votes 51.9%
    • Ryan D. Haggerty
      1556 votes 34.6%
    • John D. Baker
      1078 votes 24.0%

    Board Member; Woodbridge Sanitary District; 2 Year Short TermClick here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Mary R. Avanti
      848 votes 52.3%
    • Bruce Henz
      544 votes 33.6%

    Board Member; Stockton-East Water District; Division 7Click here for more info on this contest including known links to other sites

    • Thomas McGurk
      55636 votes 66.1%
    • Mark L. Stebbins
      18735 votes 22.3%

    State Propositions

    Proposition 1 Authorizes Bonds to Fund Specified Housing Assistance Programs
    Pass: 6,751,018 / 56.2% Yes votes ...... 5,258,157 / 43.8% No votes
    Authorizes $4 billion in general obligation bonds for existing affordable housing programs for low-income residents, veterans, farmworkers, manufactured and mobile homes, infill, and transit-oriented housing. Fiscal Impact: Increased state costs to repay bonds averaging about $170 million annually over the next 35 years.

    Proposition 2 Authorizes Bonds to Fund Existing Housing Program for Individuals with Mental Illness
    Pass: 7,662,528 / 63.4% Yes votes ...... 4,417,327 / 36.6% No votes
    Amends Mental Health Services Act to fund No Place Like Home Program, which finances housing for individuals with mental illness. Ratifies existing law establishing the No Place Like Home Program. Fiscal Impact: Allows the state to use up to $140 million per year of county mental health funds to repay up to $2 billion in bonds. These bonds would fund housing for those with mental illness who are homeless.

    Proposition 3 Authorizes Bonds To Fund Projects for Water Supply and Quality, Watershed, Fish, Wildlife, Water Conveyance, and Groundwater Sustainability and Storage
    Fail: 5,879,836 / 49.3% Yes votes ...... 6,034,991 / 50.7% No votes
    Authorizes $8.877 billion in state general obligation bonds for various infrastructure projects. Fiscal Impact: Increased state costs to repay bonds averaging $430 million per year over 40 years. Local government savings for water-related projects, likely averaging a couple hundred million dollars annually over the next few decades.

    Proposition 4 Authorizes Bonds Funding Construction at Hospitals Providing Children's Health Care
    Pass: 7,551,298 / 62.7% Yes votes ...... 4,494,143 / 37.3% No votes
    Authorizes $1.5 billion in bonds, to be repaid from state's General Fund, to fund grants for construction, expansion, renovation, and equipping of qualifying children's hospitals. Fiscal Impact: Increased state costs to repay bonds averaging about $80 million annually over the next 35 years.

    Proposition 5 Changes Requirements For Certain Property Owners to Transfer Their Property Tax Base to Replacement Property
    Fail: 4,813,251 / 40.2% Yes votes ...... 7,152,993 / 59.8% No votes
    Removes certain transfer requirements for homeowners over 55, severely disabled homeowners, and contaminated or disaster-destroyed property. Fiscal Impact: Schools and local governments each would lose over $100 million in annual property taxes early on, growing to about $1 billion per year. Similar increase in state costs to backfill school property tax losses.

    Proposition 6 Eliminates Certain Road Repair and Transportation Funding. Requires Certain Fuel Taxes and Vehicle Fees Be Approved By the Electorate
    Fail: 5,283,222 / 43.2% Yes votes ...... 6,952,081 / 56.8% No votes
    Repeals a 2017 transportation law's taxes and fees designated for road repairs and public transportation. Fiscal Impact: Reduced ongoing revenues of $5.1 billion from state fuel and vehicle taxes that mainly would have paid for highway and road maintenance and repairs, as well as transit programs.

    Proposition 7 Confirms California Daylight Saving Time to Federal Law. Allows Legislature to Change Daylight Saving Time Period
    Pass: 7,167,315 / 59.7% Yes votes ...... 4,828,564 / 40.3% No votes
    Gives Legislature ability to change daylight saving time period by two-thirds vote, if changes are consistent with federal law. Fiscal Impact: This measure has no direct fiscal effect because changes to daylight saving time would depend on future actions by the Legislature and potentially the federal government.

    Proposition 8 Regulates Amounts Outpatient Kindney Dialysis Clinics Charge For Dialysis Treatment
    Fail: 4,845,264 / 40.1% Yes votes ...... 7,247,917 / 59.9% No votes
    Requires rebates and penalties if charges exceed limit. Requires annual reporting to the state. Prohibits clinics from refusing to treat patients based on payment source. Fiscal Impact: Overall annual effect on state and local governments ranging from net positive impact in the low tens of millions of dollars to net negative impact in the tens of millions of dollars.

    Proposition 10 Expands Local Governments' Authority to Enact Rent Control
    Fail: 4,949,543 / 40.6% Yes votes ...... 7,251,443 / 59.4% No votes
    Repeals state law that currently restricts the scope of rent-control policies that cities and other local jurisdictions may impose on residential property. Fiscal Impact: Potential net reduction in state and local revenues of tens of millions of dollars per year in the long term. Depending on actions by local communities, revenue losses could be less or considerably more.

    Proposition 11 Requires Private-Sector Emergency Ambulance Employees to Remain On-Call During Work Breaks. Eliminates Certain Employer Liability
    Pass: 7,181,116 / 59.6% Yes votes ...... 4,861,831 / 40.4% No votes
    Law entitling hourly employees to breaks without being on-call would not apply to private-sector ambulance employees. Fiscal Impact: Likely fiscal benefit to local governments (in the form of lower costs and higher revenues), potentially in the tens of millions of dollars each year.

    Proposition 12 Establishes New Standards For Confinement of Specified Farm Animals; Bans Sale of Noncomplying Products
    Pass: 7,551,434 / 62.7% Yes votes ...... 4,499,702 / 37.3% No votes
    Establishes minimum requirements for confining certain farm animals. Prohibits sales of meat and egg products from animals confined in noncomplying manner. Fiscal Impact: Potential decrease in state income tax revenues from farm businesses, likely not more than several million dollars annually. State costs up to $10 million annually to enforce the measure.

    Local Measures

    Measure B Cannabis Business Tax -- County of San Joaquin (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 119256 / 63.5% Yes votes ...... 68430 / 36.5% No votes
    To support early childhood education, drug prevention, literacy , and other programs for children and youth; public health; public safety and enforcement of cannabis laws; shall an ordinance imposing a special tax on commercial cannabis businesses in unincorporated San Joaquin County at a rate of 3.5% to 8% of gross receipts, with an additional cultivation Square Footage Payment of $2.00 per square foot of cultivation space annually adj usted by Consumer Price Index (CPI) thereafter, be adopted?

    Measure D Cannabis Businesses Tax -- City of Tracy (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 16187 / 62.2% Yes votes ...... 9819 / 37.8% No votes
    Shall the City of Tracy adopt an ordinance establishing a speci al tax on cannabis businesses at annual rates, not to exceed $12.00 per canopy square foot for cultivation (adjusted for inflation), 6% of gross receipts for retail cannabis businesses, and 4% for all other b usinesses; which is expected to generate an estimated $35,000 to $100,000 annually to fund police and co de enforcement services and that shall be levied until repealed by voters?

    Measure E School Bond -- Escalon Unified School District (55% Approval Required)
    Fail: 2488 / 48.3% Yes votes ...... 2661 / 51.7% No votes
    To better prepare our students fo r college, careers and jobs by modernizing schools, improving access to technology and learning, and co nstructing a new stadium and all-weather track for year-round use, shall Escalon Unified School District be authorized to issue $2 5,000,000 in bonds at legal rates, raising an average of approximately $1,620,000 annually to repay issued bonds through maturity from levies of approximately $0.03 per $100 of assessed valuation, requirin g oversight, audits, and no money for administrator salaries?

    Measure G School Bond -- Linden Unified School District (55% Approval Required)
    Fail: 1804 / 44.7% Yes votes ...... 2229 / 55.3% No votes
    To upgrade educational facilitie s, shall Linden Unified School District: modernize classrooms and science labs; improve safety and security ; modernize, construct and equ ip school and support f acilities; update athletic facilities; improve par king and energy usage; and payo ff outstanding liabilities; by issuing $31,200,000 in bonds repaying an annual average of $2,114,000 for 34 years at approximately $59.82 per $100,000 of assessed value, at legal interest rates with in dependent oversight, no funding for employee salaries, and all f unds staying in District?

    Measure I School Bond -- Ripon Unified School District (55% Approval Required)
    Fail: 3992 / 48.9% Yes votes ...... 4164 / 51.1% No votes
    To provide students with improve d learning environments, build classrooms to maintain smaller classes, replace older portable classrooms with permanent buildings, con struct science labs, and improve career technical facilities, shall Ripon Unified School District be au thorized to issue $38,500,000 in bonds at legal rates, raising an averag e of approximately $2,400,000 ann ually to repay issued bonds through maturity from levies of approximately $0.036 per $100 of assess ed valuation, requiring a citizen's oversight committee, audits, and no money for administrator sal aries?

    Measure J Transient occupancy tax -- City of Manteca (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 13664 / 57.8% Yes votes ...... 9961 / 42.2% No votes
    Shall the measure adopting a Cit y of Manteca ordinance to incre ase an ongoing transient occupancy tax (TOT - hotel tax) from 9% to 12% on hotel charges, increasing t he existing hotel tax by 3%, generating an estimated $450,000 to provide essential public services and improvements needed to support our City, be adopted?

    Measure K Affordable Housing -- City of Stockton (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 48542 / 75.9% Yes votes ...... 15444 / 24.1% No votes
    Without increasing local taxes, and only by using existing affordable housing funding, shall public or publicly assisted housing providers within the City of Stockton, according to the City's General Plan, construct, develop, acquire, and/ or convert housing project(s) into decent, safe, sanitary, and uncrowded units for low-income, elderly, or handicapped persons, up to 500 units annually for twenty years, with any unused units carried over each year?

    Measure L Sales Tax -- City of Lodi (Majority Approval Required)
    Pass: 11295 / 58.7% Yes votes ...... 7947 / 41.3% No votes
    To make neighborhoods safer, maintain/improve essential City of Lodi services including: reducing crime; maintaining neighborhood police patrols/gang violence intervention/prevention; fixing potholes/city streets; maintaining neighborhood fire stations; enhancing rapid police/fire response times by restoring firefighter and adding police positions; maintaining recreation facilities/programs; and other general fund purposes; shall the City of Lodi measure enacting an ongoing half cent local sales tax, providing $5,400,000 annually, with independent citizen oversight, and funds spent locally, be adopted?

    Measure M Ordinance Amendment -- City of Tracy (Majority Approval Required)
    Fail: 5756 / 21.8% Yes votes ...... 20632 / 78.2% No votes
    Shall an ordinance be adopted exempting deed-restricted senior housing, attached homes or detached homes on 4,000 square foot or less lots located in areas identified on the attached map from the City's Growth Management Ordinance, including the implementation section establishing a lottery requirement prior to the sale of homes?

    The order of the contests and candidates on this ballot representation is NOT necessarily the same as your county's official ballot.
    If you print and mark your choices on this page and take it to the polls instead of an official sample ballot, be very careful.


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