Mark Holland (Wisconsin)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
BP-Initials-UPDATED.png
Ballotpedia does not currently cover this office or maintain this page. Please contact us with any updates.
Mark Holland
Image of Mark Holland
Prior offices
Watertown Unified School District school board At-large

Education

Bachelor's

Indiana University

Graduate

Ball State University

Personal
Profession
Educator/Nurse

Mark Holland is an at-large representative on the Watertown Unified School District school board in Wisconsin. Holland won a new term in the at-large general election on April 4, 2017.

Biography

Email editor@ballotpedia.org to notify us of updates to this biography.

Holland moved to Watertown in 1973. His work experience includes teaching at Maranatha Baptist University and serving as a registered nurse at Watertown Hospital. Holland earned a bachelor's degree from Indiana University and a master's degree in educational administration from Ball State University.[1]

Elections

2017

See also: Watertown Unified School District elections (2017)

Three of the nine seats on the Watertown Unified School District Board of Education were up for at-large general election on April 4, 2017. In their bids for re-election to the board, incumbents Tony Arnett, Jennifer Bakke, and Mark Holland defeated challenger Ronald Roehl.[2][3][4]

Results

Watertown Unified School District,
At-large General Election, 3-year terms, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Jennifer Bakke Incumbent 26.28% 1,690
Green check mark transparent.png Tony Arnett Incumbent 25.64% 1,649
Green check mark transparent.png Mark Holland Incumbent 24.06% 1,547
Ronald Roehl 23.65% 1,521
Write-in votes 0.37% 24
Total Votes 6,431
Source: Dodge County Clerk, "Spring Election April 4, 2017," accessed May 2, 2017 and Jefferson County Clerk, "Spring General Election," accessed May 2, 2017

Funding

See also: Campaign finance in the Watertown Unified School District election

Holland filed an exemption statement detailing he would not spend or receive more than $2,000 toward his campaign. Because of this, he did not have to file additional campaign finance reports.[5]

See also

External links

Footnotes