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

Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
BP-Initials-UPDATED.png
This page was current at the end of the official's last term in office covered by Ballotpedia. Please contact us with any updates.
Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge
Image of Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge
Prior offices
Jefferson Parish School Board District 9

Education

High school

Dominican High School

Bachelor's

University of New Orleans

Other

Louisiana State University School of Allied Health

Personal
Profession
Business owner
Contact

Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge (Republican Party) was a member of the Jefferson Parish School Board in Louisiana, representing District 9. She assumed office in 2010. She left office on December 31, 2022.

Denapolis-Bosarge (Republican Party) won re-election to the Jefferson Parish School Board to represent District 9 in Louisiana outright in the primary on November 6, 2018, after the general election was canceled.

Denapolis-Bosarge was first elected on October 2, 2010. She sought re-election in the November 4, 2014, general election against Eugene "Gene" Katsanis (R), whom she defeated in the 2010 election. Katsanis had held the office since 1994. Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge won the general election on November 4, 2014.

Biography

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

Denapolis-Bosarge attended Dominican High School, where she participated in National Honors Society, Mu Alpha Theta, the cheerleading squad and graduated summa cum laude. She attended University of New Orleans, and received a nursing degree from the Louisiana State University School of Allied Health. She worked at Hotel Dieu Hospital in New Orleans and the Medical Center of Louisiana.[1]

After 2005, Denapolis-Bosarge went on disability retirement for multiple sclerosis. She started her own company, Medical Appointment Specialists LLC in 2010.[1]

Her family includes her husband, Dexter Bosarge, their two daughters and two granddaughters.[1]

Elections

2018

See also: Jefferson Parish Public Schools elections (2018)


Louisiana elections use the majority-vote system. All candidates compete in the same primary, and a candidate can win the election outright by receiving more than 50 percent of the vote. If no candidate does, the top two vote recipients from the primary advance to the general election, regardless of their partisan affiliation.

Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for Jefferson Parish School Board District 9

Incumbent Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge won election outright against Colleen Winkler in the primary for Jefferson Parish School Board District 9 on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge
Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge (R)
 
64.6
 
7,805
Image of Colleen Winkler
Colleen Winkler (R)
 
35.4
 
4,281

Total votes: 12,086
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

2014

See also: Jefferson Parish Public Schools elections (2014)

Nine seats on the Jefferson Parish School Board were up for election on November 4, 2014. Candidates who were unopposed at the end of the filing period were considered elected as of that date. Two districts advanced to a general election on December 6, 2014.

Eight of the district seats saw contested races. District 2 incumbent Etta Licciardi (R) filed to run in the District 3 contest, but later withdrew. Newcomers Rickeem Jackson (D), Ricky Johnson (D) and April Williams (D) ran to fill the open seat. Jackson and Johnson advanced to the general election. District 3 incumbent Ray St. Pierre (R) faced Raymond "Ray" Griffin Jr. (R) in his re-election bid. Phillip Huskey (D) also filed for the race, but was disqualified. District 4 incumbent Pat Tovrea (R) did not file to run for re-election. Melinda Bourgeois (R) and Glenn Mayeaux (R) vied for the open seat.[2]

Karen M. Barnes (D) and Sharlayne Jackson-Prevost (D) challenged District 5 incumbent Cedric Floyd (D). Meladie Munch (D) ran against District 6 incumbent Larry Dale (R). District 7 incumbent Mark Jacobs (R) faced challengers Melinda Doucet (R) and Jo Ann Scott (L). Deborah Armstrong (D) had filed for the District 7 seat, but later withdrew. Jacobs and Doucet advanced to the general election.[2]

Mike Delesdernier (R), the District 8 incumbent, faced Marion "Coach" Bonura (R). Denise Carpenter (R) also filed for the race, but later withdrew. Eugene "Gene" Katsanis (R) and incumbent Sandy Denapolis-Bosarge (R) faced one another for the second election in a row for the District 9 seat. Connie Montgomery (R) also filed to run in District 9, but later withdrew.[2]

In the only uncontested race, District 1 incumbent Mark Morgan (I) was re-elected without opposition after his opponent, Charles "Ken" Bradley (R), withdrew from the race.[2]

Results

Jefferson Parish Public Schools, District 9 Primary Election, 4-year term, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngSandy Denapolis-Bosarge Incumbent 55.5% 5,897
     Republican Eugene "Gene" Katsanis 44.5% 4,722
Total Votes 10,619
Source: Louisiana Secretary of State, "Official Results," accessed November 4, 2014

Funding

Denapolis-Bosarge began the race with an existing account balance of $38,119.10 from her previous campaign. As of October 29, 2014, she had reported $14,950.00 in receipts and $13,646.97 in disbursements to the Louisiana Ethics Administration Program, which left her campaign with $39,422.13 on hand.[3]

Endorsements

Denapolis-Bosarge was endorsed by the Jefferson Chamber and the Committee for a Better Jefferson.[4][5]

2010

Jefferson Parish Public Schools, District 9 Primary Election, 4-year term, 2010
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngSandy Denapolis 60.7% 2,965
     Republican Eugene "Gene" Katsanis 39.3% 1,921
Total Votes 4,886
Source: Jefferson Parish Clerk of Courts, "2010 General Election Results: Member of School Board -- District 9," accessed August 15, 2014

What was at stake?

2014

With all nine seats of the board up for election, the 2014 election was an opportunity for a shift in the board's partisan balance. Prior to the election, the board was comprised of seven Republicans and two Democrats. Democratic District 1 incumbent Mark Morgan switched parties to run as an independent, where he was re-elected without opposition. Due to redistricting, Republican District 2 incumbent Etta Licciardi was moved into District 3. Only Democratic candidates ran for the open seat. This left the board with a guaranteed three Republicans, two Democrats and one independent.

Beyond potential shifts in board partisanship, the election was also affected by residency challenges and redistricting.

Issues in the election

Redistricting
A map of the school board districts after the 2012 redistricting plan's approval.

The 2014 elections were the first to be affected by the redistricting plan approved by the school board in December 2012. The redistricting plan, which was developed by Redistricting LLC, was accepted with one modification. The board choose to keep the city of Westwego unified under District 1. There had been discussion of moving one predominately African-American precinct in Westwego to District 5, but it was ultimately decided against.[6] The map on the right shows the district boundaries for the 2014 election.

Candidate residency challenges

Two candidates faced challenges over whether or not they had met the residency requirements. Both Rickeem Jackson (D) in District 2 and Phillip Huskey (D) in District 3 had their candidacies challenged on this basis. The courts ruled in favor of Jackson and disqualified Huskey from the election.[7][8]

In Jackson's case, opponents to his candidacy cited the state law requiring candidates to live in the state for two years prior to their election. Jackson had been attending college in Pennsylvania, but argued in court that his intention had always been to return to Louisiana. He returned to Louisiana after graduating from college in May 2013. His attorney pointed out that he is the executive director of a local foundation started by his father, as well as an officer and director at his father's meat packing plant. The judge allowed Jackson to continue as a candidate in the race.[7]

Huskey, however, did not receive court approval for his candidacy. His opponents challenged him on the basis of not having domiciled in the district he was seeking election to, District 3, for the past year. Huskey's notice of candidacy and recent homestead exemptions demonstrated that he resides in District 1. While he did not appear in court to contest the challenge, Huskey later said that he had been asked by several people to drop out of the race after he qualified. He also claimed that it was a clerk of court official who told him that he should run in District 3. An attorney for the clerk of court responded to the claim by stating that the office does not give advice to candidates.[8]

See also

External links

Footnotes