Eliness Estevez

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Eliness Estevez

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Prior offices
Middle Country Central School District school board, At-large

Eliness Estevez is an at-large representative on the Middle Country Central School District school board in New York. Estevez won a first term in the at-large general election on May 16, 2017.

Elections

2017

See also: Middle Country Central School District elections (2017)

Three of the nine seats on the Middle Country Central School District school board in New York were up for at-large general election on May 16, 2017. Board incumbent Doreen Feldmann filed for re-election and was joined on the ballot by newcomers Eliness Estevez and Dina Phillips. All candidates ran unopposed and won election to the board.[1][2]
The Middle Country Central School District is overseen by a nine-member board elected to three-year terms on a staggered basis. Board members are elected at large by the district as a whole, but each seat on the board is considered distinct and elected separately. Ballotpedia has assigned generic titles to all nine seats on the board to prevent confusion. These seat titles are arbitrary and do not reflect the status or seniority of the board members holding them.[3]

Results

Middle Country Central School District,
Seat 2 General Election, 3-year term, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Eliness Estevez  (unopposed) 100.00% 1,380
Total Votes 1,380
Source: Middle Country Central School District, "Annual District Election and Budget Vote Meeting," accessed September 5, 2017

Funding

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

All school board candidates in New York who raise or spend more than $50 are required to file campaign finance reports. If candidates raise or spend less than $1,000 they are required to file with their city or county's board of elections. If they raise or spend over $1,000 they must file with the New York State Board of Elections. Candidates who raise or spend less than $50 (including their own personal funds) do not have to file any reports. If this occurs, candidates are required to file an exemption statement with the appropriate board of elections.[4]

See also

External links

Footnotes