Your monthly support provides voters the knowledge they need to make confident decisions at the polls. Donate today.

El Rancho Unified School District bond proposition, Measure EE (November 2010)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Bond elections
2018201720162015
2014201320122011
201020092008
All years and states
Property tax elections
2018201720162015
2014201320122011
201020092008
All years and states
See also
State comparisons
How voting works
Approval rates

An El Rancho Unified School District bond proposition, Measure EE was on the November 2, 2010 ballot for voters in the El Rancho Unified School District in Los Angeles County. It was approved.

Measure I allowed the school board of the El Rancho Unified School District to borrow $52 million. The money was designed to be spent to "improve student access to computers and classroom technology, build vocational technical classrooms, provide improvements to better maintain our schools, and provide renewable energy improvements to reduce operating costs."

A 55 percent supermajority vote was required for approval.

Election results

Measure EE
ResultVotesPercentage
Approveda Yes 9,549 74.01%
No3,35425.99%
These final, certified results are from the Smartvoter.org, California, Los Angeles County elections information.

Text of measure

The question on the ballot:

Measure EE: To construct and improve local schools and student support facilities, improve student access to computers and classroom technology, build vocational technical classrooms, provide improvements to better maintain our schools, and provide renewable energy improvements to reduce operating costs and put more money into the classroom, shall El Rancho Unified School District be authorized to issue up to $52,000,000 in bonds at legal interest rates, with annual audits, a Citizens' Oversight Committee, and no increase to current tax rates?[1]

Support

The editorial board of the Pasadena Star News endorsed a "yes" vote on Measure EE.[2]

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  2. Pasadena Star News, "A recap of endorsements," October 30, 2010