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Tina Hochstaetter

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Tina Hochstaetter

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Tina Hochstaetter was a candidate for at-large representative on the West Bend School District school board in Wisconsin. Hochstaetter withdrew from the race before the primary election, but it was too late to remove her name from the ballot.[1]

Elections

2017

See also: West Bend School District elections (2017)

Three seats on the West Bend School District Board of Education were up for general election on April 4, 2017. A primary election was held on February 21, 2017. In the general election, newcomers Nancy Justman, Tonnie Schmidt, and Bob Miller defeated incumbent Ryan Gieryn and candidates Richard Cammack and Joel Ongert to win the school board seats.[2]

Tina Hochstaetter completed the candidate filing process, but withdrew from the race in January 2017. She withdrew too late to have her name removed from the primary ballot. She was officially eliminated from the race after coming in seventh place in the primary election.[3]

Results

West Bend School District,
Primary Election, 3-year terms, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Nancy Justman 21.77% 1,660
Green check mark transparent.png Tonnie Schmidt 21.40% 1,632
Green check mark transparent.png Joel Ongert 19.25% 1,468
Green check mark transparent.png Bob Miller 13.98% 1,066
Green check mark transparent.png Ryan Gieryn Incumbent 10.16% 775
Green check mark transparent.png Richard Cammack 7.58% 578
Tina Hochstaetter 5.86% 447
Total Votes 7,626
Source: Washington County, Wisconsin, "Election Summary Report," accessed February 21, 2017These election results are unofficial and will be updated after official vote totals are made available.

Funding

See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2017
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All school board candidates in Wisconsin were required to file a campaign registration statement with the Wisconsin Ethics Commission after qualifying as candidates. This statement declares their candidacy to the county clerk's office and allows them to claim exemption from reporting campaign contributions and expenditures. Candidates were only required to report campaign contributions and expenditures if they did one or both of the following:[4]

  • Accepted contributions, made disbursements, or incurred debt in excess of $2,000 during the calendar year
  • Accepted more than $100 from a single source during the calendar year, barring contributions made by candidates to their own campaigns

There were three campaign finance report deadlines in 2017:

  • The pre-primary report was due February 13, 2017,
  • The pre-election report was due March 27, 2017, and
  • The post-election report was due July 15, 2017.[5]

Candidates who filed before January 1, 2017, also had to file a continuing campaign finance report on January 16, 2017.[6]

See also

External links

Footnotes