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Jennie Hill

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Jennie Hill
Image of Jennie Hill
Kalamazoo Public School District, At-large
Tenure

2011 - Present

Term ends

2028

Years in position

14

Contact

Jennie Hill is an at-large member of the Kalamazoo Public School District school board in Michigan. She was first elected in May 2011.[1] Hill won re-election in the at-large general election on November 8, 2016.

Elections

2016

See also: Kalamazoo Public School District elections (2016)

Two of the seven seats on the Kalamazoo Board of Education were up for general election on November 8, 2016. Incumbent Jennie Hill filed for re-election, while fellow board member Martha Warfield opted against seeking a new term. Hill faced challengers Maria Basnak, Lauren Freedman, Jesse Herron, Paul Marquardt, and George White. Hill and Freedman defeated Basnak, Marquardt, White, and Herron.[2]

Results

Kalamazoo Public School District,
At-Large General Election, 6-year terms, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Jennie Hill Incumbent 23.89% 12,910
Green check mark transparent.png Lauren Freedman 21.72% 11,734
Maria Basnak 15.04% 8,128
Paul Marquardt 13.28% 7,174
George White 13.17% 7,114
Jesse Herron 12.90% 6,970
Total Votes 54,030
Source: Election Magic, "Kalamazoo County Election Returns," accessed December 14, 2016

Funding

See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2016

School board candidates in Michigan were required to file pre-election campaign finance reports with their county election offices by October 28, 2016. Post-election reports were due by December 8, 2016.[3]

In Michigan, candidates are prohibited from receiving contributions from corporations or labor organizations. Within 10 days of becoming a candidate, candidates must form a candidate committee. Following the creation of the committee, candidates have an additional 10 days to register the committee with the school district filing official by filing a statement of organization. A candidate committee that does not expect to receive or spend more than $1,000 during the election cycle is eligible to receive a reporting waiver, which allows that committee not to file pre-election, post-election, and annual campaign statements.[4]

October 28 filing

Candidates received a total of $4,075.00 and spent a total of $3,632.48 as of October 30, 2016, according to the Kalamazoo County Clerk/Register.[5]

Candidate Contributions Expenditures Cash on hand
Jennie Hill (incumbent) $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Maria Bosnak $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Lauren Freedman $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Jesse Herron $4,075.00 $3,632.48 $442.52
Paul Marquardt $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
George White $0.00 $0.00 $0.00

Campaign themes

2016

Hill provided the following responses for the voter guide compiled by MLive.com:

Why are you running for office?
I was first elected to the KPS School Board in 2011 and believe that my work with others on the Board and with our Superintendent, Michael Rice, has helped improve and strengthen the district. I have over 20 years of active participation in KPS and the community which has given me many insights to our challenges and our opportunities. I am a parent of three children who graduated from KPS and benefited from the Kalamazoo Promise. All three have graduated from college. I am a strong advocate for all children of our district and believe every student should have the opportunity to reach their potential and it is my responsibility as a KPS Board member to help make that happen.

What are your top three priorities?
I will continue to:

1. Focus on early literacy. For example, we recently adopted a new curriculum to boost pre-K and Kindergarten literacy skills. We need to continue to build on these programs. A student who is able to read and comprehend at an early age has the best foundation for being successful at school and life.
2. Further improve our high school graduation rate. This requires efforts to help all students succeed at each grade level.
3. Champion career exposure for all KPS students so that they can put themselves in the best position to take advantage of their post-graduation options.

What is the most pressing issue for this office?
The most pressing issue is to secure adequate state funding and make sure that our spending produces the greatest results for our students. Other than millage requests, which voters in the KPS School District regularly support, almost all funding comes from the State of Michigan. Yet, in real terms, state funding has declined since at least 2008. By its own recent study, the state is underfunding K-12 education, especially school districts with high percentages of at-risk students like KPS. Special needs populations require additional resources. I will continue to strongly advocate and work with our state legislators to improve state funding for our children. [6][7]

—Jennie Hill (2016)

Recent news

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See also

External links

Footnotes