Everything you need to know about ranked-choice voting in one spot. Click to learn more!

San Rafael City High School District Bond Issue, Measure B (November 2015)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
See also: San Rafael City Elementary School District Bond Issue, Measure A (November 2015)
Measure info

Amount: $160.5 million
Tax: $18-$36 per $100,000
Matures in: 28 to 35 Years

Bond elections
2018201720162015
2014201320122011
201020092008
All years and states
Property tax elections
2018201720162015
2014201320122011
201020092008
All years and states
See also
State comparisons
How voting works
Approval rates

A bond issue, Measure B, was on the ballot for San Rafael City High School District voters in Marin County, California, on November 3, 2015. It was approved.

Measure B authorized the district to increase its debt by $160,500,000 through issuing general obligation bonds in that amount.[1]

A $108,225,000 bond issue for the San Rafael City Elementary School District, called Measure A, was also on the ballot. It was also approved. The approval of both measures increased tax payments for district residents by between $30 and $60 per $100,000 of assessed valuation, depending on the year and what portion of the bonds had been issued.[2]

There were 2,312 students enrolled in the high school district in the 2014-2015 school year.[3]

A 55 percent supermajority vote was required for the approval of Measure B.

Election results

San Rafael HSD, Measure B
ResultVotesPercentage
Approveda Yes 9,261 68.16%
No4,32731.84%
Election results from Marin County Elections Office

Text of measure

Ballot question

The following question appeared on the ballot:[1]

To upgrade and repair schools with local funding that cannot be taken by the State, shall San Rafael City High School District update, renovate/construct science, technology, engineering, math/core academic classrooms, replace aging electrical, plumbing/HVAC systems, make classrooms accessible for students with disabilities, repair, construct, acquire/equip classrooms, sites and facilities by issuing $160,500,000 of bonds at legal rates, with citizen oversight, no money for administrators’ salaries, benefits or pensions, and all funds used for local high schools?[4]

Support

San Rafael school officials said, “The District is looking at potential overcrowding based on student increases of 30 percent in student population over the next 10 years."[2]

Speaking of the enrollment for the entire district, including the high school and elementary school, Michael Watenpaugh, the superintendent of San Rafael school districts, said, “We added almost 2,000 kids (in enrollment) in the last five years.... we have to ensure that all utilities systems are operating accurately." Watenpaugh also stated that school facilities needed maintenance.[3]

Paul Abramson, the author of an annual report comparing school construction costs, said, "In New York and California, costs have gone up. The area you are talking about is a high-cost area, but with all the technology, the improved science facilities, the improved athletic facilities, that’s the cost. That’s what it costs if you want to give your children what they deserve.”[3]

The Marin Democratic Party endorsed a "yes" vote on Measure B.[5]

Opposition

If you know of any endorsements or arguments that should be posted here, please email the Local Ballot Measures Project staff writer.

Path to the ballot

Measure B was put on the ballot by a vote of the district's board of trustees.

Related measures

Approveda San Rafael City Elementary School District Bond Issue, Measure A (November 2015)

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms San Rafael high school district bond issue Measure B. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes