Natomas Unified School District, California, Measure L, Bond Issue (November 2018)
| Measure L: Natomas Unified School District Bond Issue |
|---|
| The basics |
| Election date: |
| November 6, 2018 |
| Status: |
Majority required: 55% |
| Topic: |
| Local school bonds Tax: $0.06 per $100 assessed value Matures in: Legal limit |
| Related articles |
| Local school bonds on the ballot November 6, 2018 ballot measures in California Sacramento County, California ballot measures Local education on the ballot |
| See also |
| Natomas Unified School District, California |
A bond issue was on the ballot for Natomas Unified School District voters in Sacramento County, California, on November 6, 2018. It was approved.
| A yes vote was a vote in favor of authorizing the district to issue $172 million in bonds at an estimated tax rate of $0.06 per $100 in assessed property value to fund upgrades to facilities, technology, security, and infrastructure. |
| A no vote was a vote against authorizing the district to issue $172 million in bonds at an estimated tax rate of $0.06 per $100 in assessed property value to fund upgrades to facilities, technology, security, and infrastructure. |
Election results
|
Natomas Unified School District Measure L |
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 16,545 | 68.15% | |||
| No | 7,733 | 31.85% | ||
-
- Results are officially certified.
- Source
Text of measure
Ballot question
The ballot question was as follows:[1]
| “ |
To enhance quality education in Natomas, increasing student safety/security, upgrading classrooms for 21st century learning and college/career readiness with technology/equipment, upgrading aging infrastructure/utilities and repairing/constructing facilities, shall Natomas Unified School District issue $172,000,000 of bonds with an estimated $11,000,000 in taxes raised annually on average for 32 years at maximum projected tax rates of 6¢ per $100 of assessed valuation with citizen oversight, annual audits and no money for administrators' salaries/pensions?[2] |
” |
Path to the ballot
This measure was put on the ballot through a vote of the governing officials of Natomas Unified School District, California.
See also
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ Voter's Edge, "Measure L," accessed November 7, 2018
- ↑ Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
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