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====Endorsements====
====Endorsements====
Estupiñan {{Greener | start=2/3/2015 8:00pm CDT | before=has not received | after=did not receive}} any official endorsements for this election.
Estupiñan {{Greener | start=2/3/2015 8:00pm CDT | before=has not received | after=did not receive}} any official endorsements for this election.
[[File:Map of New Mexico highlighting Doña Ana County.svg|150px|thumb|left|link=Gadsden Independent Schools, New Mexico|Gadsden Independent Schools is located in Doña Ana County, N.M.]]
The Gadsden Independent school district is located in [[Dona Ana County, New Mexico|Doña Ana County]] in southern [[New Mexico]]. The county seat is [[Las Cruces, New Mexico|Las Cruces]]. Doña Ana County is home to 213,460 residents, according to the United States Census Bureau.<ref name=census>[http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/35/35013.html ''United States Census Bureau'', "Doña Ana County, New Mexico," accessed December 4, 2014]</ref> During the 2011-2012 school year, Gadsden Independent Schools was the [[Largest school districts in the United States by enrollment|fourth-largest school district by enrollment]] in [[New Mexico school districts|New Mexico]] and served 14,182 students.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/2/http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/elsi/tableGenerator.aspx ''National Center for Education Statistics,'' "ELSI Table Generator," accessed April 22, 2014]</ref>
===Demographics===
Doña Ana County outperformed the rest of New Mexico in terms of higher education achievement in 2013. The United States Census Bureau found that 26.6 percent of Doña Ana County residents aged 25 years and older had attained a bachelor's degree compared to 25.8 percent for New Mexico as a whole. The median household income for Doña Ana County was $37,933 compared to $44,927 for the state of New Mexico. The percentage of people below poverty level for Doña Ana County was 27.0 percent while it was 20.4 percent for the entire state.<ref name=census/>
{{col-begin|width=95%}}
{{col-break}}
{| class="wikitable collapsible" style="background:none; text-align: center;"
! colspan="4" style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" |'' Racial Demographics, 2013<ref name=census/>
|-
! style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" | Race
! style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" | Doña Ana County (%)
! style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" | New Mexico (%)
|-
| White || 92.2 || 82.9
|-
| Black or African American || 2.2 ||  2.5
|-
| American Indian and Alaska Native || 2.3 || 10.4
|-
| Asian || 1.3 || 1.6
|-
| Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander || 0.2 || 0.2
|-
| Two or more races || 1.8 || 2.4
|-
| Hispanic or Latino || 66.6 ||  47.3
|}
{{col-break}}
{| class="wikitable collapsible" style="background:none; text-align: center;"
! colspan="3" style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" |'' Presidential Voting Pattern<ref>[https://donaanacounty.org/elections/results/archive ''Doña Ana County,'' "Election Results Archive," accessed December 4, 2014]</ref>
|-
! style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" | Year
! style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" | Democratic Vote (%)
! style="background-color:#00008B; color: white;" | Republican Vote (%)
|-
| 2012 || 56.0 || 41.1
|-
| 2008 || 58.0 || 41.0
|-
| 2004 || 51.0 ||  48.0
|-
| 2000 || 51.3 || 45.6
|}
{{col-end}}
{{School census}}


==Recent news==
==Recent news==

Revision as of 19:56, 4 July 2024


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Daniel Estupiñan is the District 1 representative on the Gadsden Independent Schools Board of Education in the New Mexico.[1] He was first elected to the board on February 3, 2015.

Elections

2015

See also: Gadsden Independent Schools elections (2015)

The school board election for Gadsden Independent Schools featured three of the five board seats up for general election on February 3, 2015.

Incumbents Gloria Irigoyen, Maria E. Saenz and Daniel Castillo from Districts 1, 3 and 4, respectively, were up for re-election. Saenz ran unopposed and won re-election. Irigoyen and Castillo faced one challenger each. Daniel Estupiñan ran for the District 1 seat, and Maria E. Carter ran for the District 4 seat. Estupiñan won the election for District 1, defeating Irigoyen, and Castillo defeated Carter to win re-election to District 4.

Results

Gadsden Independent Schools,
District 1 General Election, 4-year term, 2015
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Estupiñan 66.9% 101
     Nonpartisan Gloria Irigoyen Incumbent 33.1% 50
Total Votes 151
Source: Abbey Smith, "Email communication with Dona Ana County Elections Staff Coordinator Janice Giron," February 26, 2015

Funding

The New Mexico Secretary of State's Office requires school board candidates in districts with an enrollment of 12,000 students or more to file an annual report each year. Candidates running for a seat on this district's school board had to file that annual report by April 13, 2015.[2]

Endorsements

Estupiñan did not receive any official endorsements for this election.

Recent news

This section links to a Google news search for the term "Daniel + Estupiñan + Gadsden + Independent + Schools"

See also

External links

Footnotes