Sheila Ellis

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Sheila Ellis

Silhouette Placeholder Image.png


Education

Graduate

Health education, East Carolina University

Personal
Profession
Independent insurance agent
Contact

Sheila Ellis was a candidate for the District 1 seat on the Wake County Public School System school board in North Carolina. Ellis was defeated in the by-district general election on November 8, 2016.

Biography

Ellis works as an independent insurance agent. Before that, she taught in Wake schools for nearly 20 years, also serving as a coach and athletic director. Ellis received her master's in health education from East Carolina University online and a degree in physical education from Elon College.[1]

Elections

2016

See also: Wake County Public School System elections (2016)

When state legislation created new school board district boundaries for the Wake County Public School System, a group of voters disputed the change in court.

See also: Issues in the election

District 1 incumbent Tom Benton filed for re-election and faced challengers Donald Agee, Mary Beth Ainsworth, and Sheila Ellis. Agee defeated the incumbent. In District 2, incumbent Monika Johnson-Hostler filed for an additional term on the board and successfully defended her seat against challenger Peter Hochstaetter. Mark Ivey initially filed in the race but withdrew his candidacy in September 2016. Because of the late withdrawal, his name still appeared on the ballot. Sole newcomer Roxie Cash filed for the District 3 seat and won. District 4 incumbent Keith Sutton filed for re-election and faced single challenger Heather Elliott. Sutton won another term on the board. In their bids for re-election, District 5, 6, and 7 incumbents Jim Martin, Christine Kushner, and Zora Felton were unopposed and won additional terms on the board. However, Felton passed away unexpectedly shortly after the general election, leaving the District 7 seat vacant. District 8 saw three newcomers file for the seat: Gary Lewis, Gil Pagan, and Lindsay Mahaffey, with Mahaffey winning the seat. In District 9, incumbent Bill Fletcher won the race against challenger Michael Tanbusch. There was no primary.[2][3]
After Judge Dever announced that the candidates who originally filed in this school board race were disqualified and would have to file again during a new filing window that ran from August 11, 2016, to August 17, 2016, three dropped out and two newcomers filed. Former candidates Beverley Clark, James McLuckie, and Donald Mial did not appear on the revised candidate list. District 7 incumbent Zora Felton and District 9 challenger Michael Tanbusch entered the race after the new deadline was set.[2]

Results

Wake County Public School System,
District 1 General Election, 2-year term, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Donald Agee 35.20% 17,445
Tom Benton Incumbent 33.96% 16,830
Mary Beth Ainsworth 16.64% 8,244
Sheila Ellis 13.78% 6,829
Write-in votes 0.41% 205
Total Votes (100) 49,553
Source: North Carolina State Board of Elections, "11/08/2016 Official General Election Results," accessed December 5, 2016

Funding

Ellis filed a Certification of Threshold with the Wake County Board of Elections, declaring she did not intend to receive or expend more than $1,000 during the 2016 election cycle.[4]

See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2016
Campaign Finance Ballotpedia.png

School board candidates in North Carolina were required to file campaign finance reports to their county's board of elections unless the candidate:

(1) Did not receive more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) in contributions, and

(2) Did not receive more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) in loans, and

(3) Did not spend more than one thousand dollars ($1,000).[5]

The third quarter campaign finance deadline was October 31, 2016, and the fourth quarter deadline was January 11, 2017.[6]

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Sheila Ellis Wake County Public School System. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes