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Lloyd Worth

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Lloyd Worth

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Prior offices
School District 27J Board of Education District 3
Successor: Melinda Carbajal

Lloyd Worth was a member of the School District 27J Board of Education in Colorado, representing District 3. He assumed office in 2015. He left office on November 29, 2023.

Worth won re-election to the School District 27J Board of Education to represent District 3 in Colorado outright after the general election on November 5, 2019, was canceled.

Elections

2019

See also: School District 27J, Colorado, elections (2019)

General election

The general election was canceled. Lloyd Worth (Nonpartisan) won without appearing on the ballot.

Note: Incumbent Lloyd Worth was the only candidate to file and won the position by default when the election was canceled.

2015

See also: School District 27J elections (2015)

Five of the seven seats on the School District 27J Board of Education were up for election on November 3, 2015. Seats in Districts 1, 3, 4, 6, and 7 were on the general election ballot.

Incumbents Roberta Thimmig, Kyle Farner, and Gregory Piotraschke were unopposed in their districts, and all three won re-election. The District 4 seat was not scheduled for regular election until 2017, but Farner, who was appointed to the board, ran for election to the remaining two years on former board member Michael K. Landwehr's unexpired term.[1] Landwehr resigned from the board earlier in 2015 because he moved out of District 4. He sought election to the District 3 seat against Lloyd Worth. Worth was successful in securing the seat. District 6 incumbent Teresa R. Gallegos successfully won re-election against Stanley Hiller, Farid Jalil, and Luke Richards.[2][3]

Results

School District 27J, District 3, General Election, 2015
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Lloyd Worth 52.1% 7,060
Michael K. Landwehr 47.9% 6,498
Total Votes 13,558
Source: Adams County Clerk & Recorder, "Official County Results," accessed December 21, 2015

Funding

Worth reported no contributions but $344.69 in expenditures to the Colorado Secretary of State, which left his campaign with $344.69 in debt as of October 30, 2015.[4]

Campaign themes

2019

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Lloyd Worth did not complete Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey.

Demographics

Adams County underperformed the rest of Colorado in terms of its average household income, poverty rate and higher education achievement in 2011. The median household income in Adams County is $56,089, compared to $57,685 for the state of Colorado. The poverty rate in Adams County is 14.0% compared to 12.5% for the entire state. The U.S. Census also found that 20.7% of Adams County residents aged 25 years and older attained a bachelor's degree compared to 36.3% in Colorado as a whole.[5]

Racial Demographics, 2012[5]
Race Adams County (%) State (%)
White 87.4 88.1
Black or African American 3.5 4.3
American Indian and Alaska Native 2.2 1.6
Asian 3.9 3.0
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 0.2 0.2
Two or More Races 2.8 2.8
Hispanic or Latino 38.4 21.0

Party Affiliation, 2013[6]
Party Registered Voters % of Total
Unaffiliated 96,016 37.65
Democratic 91,925 36.04
Republican 64,406 25.25
Libertarian 1,665 0.65
American Constitution 599 0.23
Green 440 0.18

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.


See also


External links

Footnotes