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Natomas Unified School District, California, Measure L, Bond Issue (November 2018)

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Local ballot measure elections in 2018
Measure L: Natomas Unified School District Bond Issue
LocalBallotMeasures Final.png
The basics
Election date:
November 6, 2018
Status:
Approveda Approved
Majority required:
55%
Topic:
Local school bonds
Amount: $172 million
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

Result Votes Percentage

Approved Yes

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

See also: Laws governing local ballot measures in California

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

  1. Voter's Edge, "Measure L," accessed November 7, 2018
  2. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.