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Pete Puzzuoli

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Pete Puzzuoli
Education
Bachelor's
Wayne State University
Graduate
Eastern Michigan University
Personal
Profession
Educator

Pete Puzzuoli was a candidate for an at-large seat on the Plymouth-Canton Community Schools school board in Michigan. Puzzuoli was defeated in the at-large general election on November 8, 2016.

Biography

Puzzuoli earned his B.A. in world history from Wayne State University. He later received his master's degree from Eastern Michigan University. Puzzuoli was a teacher in the district for 42 years prior to his retirement.[1]

Elections

2016

See also: Plymouth-Canton Community Schools elections (2016)

Four of the seven seats on the Plymouth-Canton Community Schools school board were up for general election on November 8, 2016. These seats included three seats with six-year terms and one seat with a four-year term. No incumbents filed for a six-year term, leaving nine candidates to fill three seats: Douglas Brooks, Bharat Malhotra, Patti McCoin, Patricia Mullen, Pete Puzzuoli, Leonardo Savage, Michael Scopone, Girish Tiwari, and Gurunath Vemulakonda. Mullen, Brooks, and McCoin won in the general election. Incumbent Patrick Kehoe won re-election to a four-year term without opposition.[2] Malhotra, Vemulakonda, and Tiwari ran as a candidate slate.[3]

Results

Plymouth-Canton Community Schools,
At-Large General Election, 6-year terms, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Patricia Mullen 21.41% 20,434
Green check mark transparent.png Patti McCoin 18.30% 17,464
Green check mark transparent.png Douglas Brooks 15.06% 14,375
Pete Puzzuoli 10.71% 10,221
Michael Scopone 8.81% 8,408
Gurunath Vemulakonda 7.37% 7,039
Leonardo Savage 6.71% 6,406
Girish Tiwari 5.92% 5,651
Bharat Malhotra 5.10% 4,864
Write-in votes 0.61% 585
Total Votes 95,447
Source: Wayne County, Michigan, "Elections Division-Results," November 22, 2016

Funding

See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2016

School board candidates in Michigan were required to file pre-election campaign finance reports with their county election offices by October 28, 2016. Post-election reports were due by December 8, 2016.[4]

In Michigan, candidates are prohibited from receiving contributions from corporations or labor organizations. Within 10 days of becoming a candidate, candidates must form a candidate committee. Following the creation of the committee, candidates have an additional 10 days to register the committee with the school district filing official by filing a statement of organization. A candidate committee that does not expect to receive or spend more than $1,000 during the election cycle is eligible to receive a reporting waiver, which allows that committee not to file pre-election, post-election, and annual campaign statements.[5]

October 28 filing

Candidates received a total of $12,746.00 and spent a total of $10,042.85 as of October 30, 2016, according to the Wayne County Clerk.[6]

Six-year terms
Candidate Contributions Expenditures Cash on hand
Douglas Brooks $3,229.00 $2,972.13 $256.87
Bharat Malhotra $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Patti McCoin $5,780.00 $3,801.32 $1,978.68
Patricia Mullen $3,737.00 $3,269.40 $467.60
Pete Puzzuoli $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Leonardo Savage $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Michael Scopone $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Girish Tiwari $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Gurunath Vemulakonda $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Four-year term
Candidate Contributions Expenditures Cash on hand
Patrick Kehoe (incumbent) $0.00 $0.00 $0.00

Campaign themes

2016

Puzzuoli provided the following responses to questions compiled by MLive for its 2016 voter guide:

Why are you running for office?
As a former teacher in the district, for a span of 42 years, I have acquired an intimate knowledge of how classrooms and schools should work. I believe in the past several years, the reputation of the PCCS District has diminished greatly. If elected to a seat on the board, I believe my past experience as an educator can help me to make decisions for our district so that children, parents and staff can be better served.

What are your top three priorities?
There are three issues that need immediate attention and scrutiny:

1) the district needs to demonstrate more transparency in the way it makes decisions and conducts its business
2) administrative positions have been filled by personnel lacking in experience and qualifications
3) there has been an exodus of many of our top students to the charter schools. Why?

What is the most pressing issue for this office?
The confidence and trust of the community, including the district's employees, needs to be restored by addressing the three priorities I stated above.[1][7]

—Pete Puzzuoli (2016)

Recent news

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See also

External links

Footnotes