Kendall Pace
Kendall Pace was the at-large Position 9 member of the Austin School Board in Texas. She resigned May 21, 2018.[1]
Biography
Pace obtained a bachelor's degree in finance from the University of Texas at Austin. As of 2014, she served on the Kealing Middle School Campus Advisory Council and on the AISD District Advisory Council (DAC). She was also a local business owner. She and her husband, Charlie, have three sons.[2]
Elections
2014
The November 4, 2014, general election in Austin Independent School District featured five seats up for election. The District 1 race featured four candidates; P. Kevin Bryant, Edmund T. Gordon, Stanton Strickland, and David “D” Thompson competed for the seat held by Cheryl Bradley. Since neither Gordon nor Thompson garnered 50 percent "plus one" or more of the vote, they faced each other in a runoff election on December 16, 2014. Gordon triumphed over Thompson in that race.
The District 4 race featured newcomers Julie Cowan and Karen Zern Flanagan, as incumbent Vincent Torres did not file for-election. Cowan triumphed over Flanagan in that race. The District 6 race featured three candidates; Kate Mason-Murphy, Monica Sanchez, and Paul Saldaña vied for the seat held by Lori Moya. Mason-Murphy and Saldaña headed to the runoff election, where Saldaña was victorious.
The lone incumbent to file for re-election was Robert Schneider in District 7. He defeated challenger Yasmin Wagner. Meanwhile, the at-large position held by Tamala Barksdale drew five challengers; Nael Chavez, Kendall Pace, Kazique J. Prince, Hillary Procknow, and Andy M. Trimino competed for that seat. Neither Pace nor Procknow received a majority of the vote, so they competed in the runoff election. Pace defeated Procknow in that election.
Results
Runoff election
Party | Candidate | Vote % | Votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nonpartisan | ![]() |
65% | 28,868 | |
Nonpartisan | Hillary Procknow | 35% | 15,515 | |
Total Votes | 44,383 | |||
Source: Travis County Clerk, "Austin Independent School District Cumulative Results," accessed December 30, 2014 |
General election
Party | Candidate | Vote % | Votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nonpartisan | ![]() |
39.7% | 37,916 | |
Nonpartisan | ![]() |
24.2% | 23,142 | |
Nonpartisan | Nael Chavez | 16% | 15,273 | |
Nonpartisan | Kazique J. Prince | 11.9% | 11,324 | |
Nonpartisan | Andy M. Trimino | 8.3% | 7,905 | |
Total Votes | 95,560 | |||
Source: Travis County Clerk, "Austin Independent School District Cumulative Results," accessed December 30, 2014 |
Funding
Candidates must file reports with the Texas Ethics Commission or the appropriate county clerk. They must disclose the amount of each contribution (or the value and nature of any in-kind contribution), the name and address of the individual or political committee making the contribution and the date of the contribution. Filers must also report all expenditures, including the date of an expenditure, the name and address of the person to whom the expenditure is made and the purpose of the expenditure.[3]
As of September 30, 2014, Pace had not filed a campaign finance report with the Travis County Clerk.[4]
Endorsements
District 1 candidate Edmund T. Gordon, District 4 candidate Julie Cowan, District 7 candidate Yasmin Wagner and At-large Position 9 candidate Kendall Pace were endorsed by the advocacy group, Austin Kids First.[5][6]
Recent news
This section links to a Google news search for the term "Kendall + Pace + Austin + Independent + School + District + Texas"
See also
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ KUT, "Austin School Board President Kendall Pace Resigns After Text Message Controversy," May 21, 2018
- ↑ Kendall Pace for AISD Trustee At-Large Position 9, "Meet Kendall," accessed October 14, 2014
- ↑ Texas Ethics Commission, "Campaign Finance Guide for Candidates and Officeholders Who File With Local Filing Authorities," September 1, 2013
- ↑ Travis County Clerk, "Search Campaign Finance Reports," accessed September 19, 2014
- ↑ Austin Kids First, "Endorsement: District 1," accessed September 19, 2014
- ↑ Austin Kids First, "Endorsement: District 4," accessed September 19, 2014