Wylie Independent School District (Collin County, Texas) elections (2014)

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2014 Wylie Independent School District Elections

General Election date:
November 4, 2014
Table of Contents
About the district
Method of election
Elections
Key deadlines
Additional elections
External links
See also
Texas
Wylie Independent School District
Collin County, Texas ballot measures
Local ballot measures, Texas
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Four seats on the Wylie Independent School District Board of Trustees were up for general election on November 4, 2014. Tom Westhora, Mitch Herzog, Heather Leggett and Joe Stooksberry ran unopposed in Places 1, 2, 5 and 6, respectively. They were all re-elected to four-year terms.

About the district

See also: Wylie Independent School District, Texas
Wylie Independent School District is located in Collin County, Texas.

Wylie Independent School District is located in Collin County, Texas. The county seat of Collin County is McKinney. Collin County is home to 782,341 residents, according to the United States Census Bureau.[1] In the 2011-2012 school year, Wylie Independent School District was the 85th-largest school district in Texas and served 12,926 students.[2]

Demographics

Collin County overperformed in comparison to the rest of Texas in terms of higher education achievement in 2012. The United States Census Bureau found that 49.0 percent of Collin County residents aged 25 years and older had attained a bachelor's degree compared to 26.3 percent for Texas as a whole. The median household income in Collin County was $83,238 compared to $51,563 for the state of Texas. The poverty rate in Collin County was 7.5 percent compared to 17.4 percent for the entire state.[1]

Racial Demographics, 2013[1]
Race Collin County (%) Texas (%)
White 75.0 80.3
Black or African American 9.4 12.4
American Indian and Alaska Native 0.7 1.0
Asian 12.3 4.3
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 0.1 0.1
Two or More Races 2.4 1.8
Hispanic or Latino 15.0 38.4

Presidential Voting Pattern, Collin County[3]
Year Democratic Vote Republican Vote Other Vote
2012 101,415 196,888 4,518
2008 109,047 184,897 2,639
2004 68,035 174,435 1,784
2000 42,884 128,179 4,357

Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

Voter and candidate information

The Wylie ISD Board of Trustees consists of seven members elected to four-year terms and serve the district at-large. There was no primary election, and the general election was held on November 4, 2014. Four seats were up for election in 2014.[4]

Candidates began filing nominating petitions on July 19, 2014. The filing deadline for school board candidates to get on the ballot in the general election was August 18, 2014.[5]

Elections

2014

Candidates

Place 1

Place 2

Place 5

Place 6

Election results

All incumbents were re-elected to their seats without opposition.

Endorsements

No candidate publicly received an endorsement in this election.

Campaign finance

Candidates must file reports with the Texas Ethics Commission or the appropriate county clerk. They must disclose the amount of each contribution (or the value and nature of any in-kind contribution), the name and address of the individual or political committee making the contribution and the date of the contribution. Filers must also report all expenditures, including the date of an expenditure, the name and address of the person to whom the expenditure is made and the purpose of the expenditure.[6]

Key deadlines

The following dates were key deadlines for the Wylie Independent School District election in 2014:[5]

Deadline Event
July 19, 2014 First day to file for place on general election ballot
August 18, 2014 Last day to file for place on general election ballot
October 6, 2014 Voter registration deadline
October 20, 2014 Early voting begins
October 31, 2014 Last day of early voting
November 4, 2014 Election day

Additional elections on the ballot

See also: Texas elections, 2014

This election shared the ballot with general elections for U.S. House seats, Texas state executive offices and one seat in the U.S. House Senate. It also shared the ballot with other county and municipal elections. There was one statewide measure on the ballot regarding the diversion of oil and gasoline tax revenues from the state's "Rainy Day Fund" into transportation funding.[5]

Recent news

This section links to a Google news search for the term "Wylie + Independent + School + District + Texas"

See also

External links

Footnotes