Black Oak Mine Unified School District, California, Measure A, School Bond Measure (November 2024)

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Black Oak Mine Unified School District Measure A

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Election date

November 5, 2024

Topic
School district bonds
Status

ApprovedApproved

Type
Referral

Black Oak Mine Unified School District Measure A was on the ballot as a referral in Black Oak Mine Unified School District on November 5, 2024. It was approved.

A yes vote supported authorizing $12.7 million in bonds, with property tax levies of about $40 per $100,000 assessed value, to fund STEM classroom expansion and facility improvements.
A "no" vote opposed authorizing $12.7 million in bonds to fund STEM classroom expansion and facility improvements.


A 55 percent supermajority vote was required for the approval of Measure A.

Election results

Black Oak Mine Unified School District Measure A

Result Votes Percentage

Approved Yes

4,622 58.23%
No 3,315 41.77%
Results are officially certified.
Source


Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title for Measure A was as follows:

With funds that cannot be taken by the State and spent elsewhere, shall Black Oak Mine Unified School District’s measure to expand classrooms for STEM; replace leaky roofs/plumbing; and enhance labs for Coding, Robotics, Woodworking, Circuitry, and Career Training be adopted, authorizing $12.7 million of bonds with average levies below $40 per $100,000 of assessed valuation (raising $1.2 million annually) while outstanding, legal rates, audits, citizen oversight, and full public disclosure of all spending?


Path to the ballot

The measure was placed on the ballot by the governing board of Black Oak Mine Unified School District.

How to cast a vote

See also: Voting in California

See below to learn more about current voter registration rules, identification requirements, and poll times in California.

How to vote in California

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. California Secretary of State, "Section 3: Polling Place Hours," accessed October 29, 2025
  2. California Secretary of State, "Voter Registration," accessed October 29, 2025
  3. 3.0 3.1 California Secretary of State, "Registering to Vote," accessed October 29, 2025
  4. California Secretary of State, "Same Day Voter Registration (Conditional Voter Registration)," accessed October 29, 2025
  5. SF.gov, "Non-citizen voting rights in local Board of Education elections," accessed November 14, 2024
  6. Under federal law, the national mail voter registration application (a version of which is in use in all states with voter registration systems) requires applicants to indicate that they are U.S. citizens in order to complete an application to vote in state or federal elections, but does not require voters to provide documentary proof of citizenship. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the application "may require only the minimum amount of information necessary to prevent duplicate voter registrations and permit State officials both to determine the eligibility of the applicant to vote and to administer the voting process."
  7. Democracy Docket, "California Governor Signs Law to Ban Local Voter ID Requirements," September 30, 2024
  8. Congress, "H.R.3295 - Help America Vote Act of 2002," accessed September 30, 2025
  9. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.