South San Francisco Unified School District bond proposition, Measure J (November 2010)
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A South San Francisco Unified School District bond proposition, Measure J was on the November 2, 2010 ballot for voters in the South San Francisco School District in San Mateo County. It was approved.
Measure J allows the school board of the South San Francisco Unified School District to borrow $162 million. The money will be spent on "replacing deteriorated portable classrooms with permanent classrooms; repairing deteriorated roofs; providing disabled students access; upgrading science labs, libraries, technology and restrooms; enhancing safety, fire detection and security systems; improving energy efficiency; replacing outdated electrical, plumbing, and heating systems."
Election results
Election results are from the San Mateo County elections division as of November 27, 2010.
A 55 percent supermajority vote was required for approval.
Text of measure
The question on the ballot:
| Measure J: To provide safe, modern classrooms and educational support facilities by replacing deteriorated portable classrooms with permanent classrooms; repairing deteriorated roofs; providing disabled students access; upgrading science labs, libraries, technology and restrooms; enhancing safety, fire detection and security systems; improving energy efficiency; replacing outdated electrical, plumbing, and heating systems, shall South San Francisco Unified School District issue $162,000,000 in bonds at legal interest rates, with citizen oversight, annual audits, no money for administrators’ salaries, and all funds benefiting local schools?[1] |
See also
External links
- Full text of Measure J
- Analysis of Measure J
- Measure J tax rate statement
- Argument in favor of Measure J
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- ↑ Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.