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Lamar County School District elections (2014)

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2014 Lamar County School District Elections

General Election date:
November 4, 2014
Table of Contents
About the district
Method of election
Elections
Key deadlines
Additional elections
External links
See also
Mississippi
Lamar County School District
Lamar County, Mississippi ballot measures
Local ballot measures, Mississippi
Flag of Mississippi.png

One seat on the Lamar County School District Board of Education was up for general election on November 4, 2014.

Incumbent Buddy Morris defeated challenger Shawn Walker for the District E seat.[1]

About the district

See also: Lamar County School District, Mississippi
Lamar County School District is located in Lamar County, Mississippi.

Lamar County School District is located in Lamar County, Mississippi. The county seat is Purvis. Lamar County had a population of 58,801 residents, according to the United States Census Bureau in 2014.[2] In the 2011-2012 school year, Lamar County School District was the seventh-largest school district in Mississippi and served 9,251 students.[3]

Demographics

In 2012, Lamar County had a higher percentage of residents with a bachelor's degree compared to the state overall. The United States Census Bureau reported that 31.9 percent of residents aged 25 and older in Lamar County had earned a bachelor's degree, compared with 20.0 percent for Mississippi. The county’s median household income was $50,743, above the state median of $38,882. The poverty rate in Lamar County was 17.6 percent, below the state rate of 22.3 percent.[2]

Racial Demographics, 2013[2]
Race Lamar County (%) Mississippi (%)
White 76.9 59.8
Black or African American 20.4 37.4
American Indian and Alaska Native 0.3 0.6
Asian 1.2 1.0
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 0.1 0.1
Two or more races 1.2 1.1
Hispanic or Latino 2.4 2.9

Presidential Voting Pattern, Lamar County[4]
Year Democratic Vote Republican Vote
2012 5,494 19,101
2008 5,159 18,497
2004 3,923 16,410

Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

Voter and candidate information

As of the 2014 election, the Lamar County Board of Education consisted of five members elected by specific geographic districts to six-year terms. There was no primary election, and the general election was held on November 4, 2014. One seat was up for election in 2014.[1]

School board candidates had to file with their county elections department during the candidate filing period, which began on August 6, 2014, and ended on September 5, 2014. To vote in the 2014 general election, voters had to register by October 4, 2014.[5][6]

Elections

2014

Candidates

District E

Election results

Lamar County School District, District E General Election, 6-year term, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngBuddy Morris Incumbent 59.4% 1,593
     Nonpartisan Shawn Walker 40.6% 1,090
Total Votes 2,683
Source: WDAM 7, "Pine Belt Election Results," accessed November 5, 2014

Campaign finance

The Lamar County Circuit Clerk does not publish and freely disclose school board candidate campaign finance reports.

Past elections

Key deadlines

The following dates were key deadlines for the Lamar County School District election in 2014:[5][6]

Deadline Event
August 6, 2014 First day for candidates to file nomination documents
September 5, 2014 Last day for candidates to file nomination documents
October 4, 2014 Last day to register to vote in the general election
October 28, 2014 Campaign finance report due
November 4, 2014 General election day
January 30, 2015 Annual campaign finance report due

Additional elections on the ballot

This election shared the ballot with general elections for a U.S. House seat and a U.S. Senate seat. It also shared the ballot with county, municipal, and judicial elections. One statewide ballot measure, the Right to Hunt and Fish Amendment, also appeared on the ballot.[7]

See also

External links

Footnotes