Dan Sitter

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Dan Sitter
Image of Dan Sitter

Education

Bachelor's

St. Norbert College

Graduate

University of Wisconsin, LaCrosse

Personal
Profession
Instructional technology coordinator
Contact

Dan Sitter was a candidate for at-large representative on the Fond du Lac School District school board in Wisconsin. Sitter was defeated in the at-large general election on April 4, 2017.

Biography

Sitter works as an instructional technology coordinator in the district. He has experience with Volunteers In Service To America (VISTA). Sitter earned his master's in education and professional development from UW-LaCrosse and his bachelor's in sociology from St. Norbert College.[1]

Elections

2017

See also: Fond du Lac School District elections (2017)

Two of the seven seats on the Fond du Lac School District school board were up for at-large general election on April 4, 2017. Board incumbent Mark Strand filed for re-election and was joined on the ballot by newcomers Greg Freiherr, Monica Walk, and Dan Sitter. Strand and Walk won election for the two seats.[2]

Results

Fond du Lac School District,
At-Large General Election, 3-year terms, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Monica Walk 34.06% 2,725
Green check mark transparent.png Mark Strand Incumbent 30.51% 2,441
Dan Sitter 19.70% 1,576
Greg Freiherr 15.57% 1,246
Write-in votes 0.16% 13
Total Votes 8,001
Source: Elisabeth Moore, "Email correspondence with Eileen Shapiro," May 23, 2017

Funding

Sitter did not report any campaign contributions or expenditures to the Fond du Lac School District in this election.[3]

See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2017
Campaign Finance Ballotpedia.png

All school board candidates in Wisconsin were required to file a campaign registration statement with the Wisconsin Ethics Commission after qualifying as candidates. This statement declares their candidacy to the county clerk's office and allows them to claim exemption from reporting campaign contributions and expenditures. Candidates were only required to report campaign contributions and expenditures if they did one or both of the following:[4]

  • Accepted contributions, made disbursements, or incurred debt in excess of $2,000 during the calendar year
  • Accepted more than $100 from a single source during the calendar year, barring contributions made by candidates to their own campaigns

There were three campaign finance report deadlines in 2017:

  • The pre-primary report was due February 13, 2017,
  • The pre-election report was due March 27, 2017, and
  • The post-election report was due July 15, 2017.[5]

Candidates who filed before January 1, 2017, also had to file a continuing campaign finance report on January 16, 2017.[6]

See also

External links

Footnotes