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Shenendehowa Central School District elections (2015)

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2016
2014
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2015 Shenendehowa Central School District Elections

General Election date:
May 19, 2015
Table of Contents
About the district
Method of election
Elections
What was at stake?
Key deadlines
Additional elections
External links
See also
New York
Shenendehowa Central School District
Saratoga County, New York ballot measures
Local ballot measures, New York
Flag of New York.png

Two seats on the Shenendehowa Central School District Board of Education were up for general election on May 19, 2015. The election shared the ballot with the school district's annual budget vote, which was passed by voters.[1][2]

The seats held by incumbents Janet Grey and Robert Pressly were on the ballot.[3] Grey did not file for re-election, leaving Pressly to run against three challengers, Samuel H. Hazleton V, Christina Rajotte and Kerensa Rybak.[4] Pressly was elected to another term on the board, and Rajotte won the open seat.[5]

Prior to the election, Shenendehowa education officials sent a letter to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) detailing their concerns with state education policies. One concern included the emphasis on standardized testing. In April 2015, 18 percent of the district's students opted out of Common Core-aligned state assessments.

See also: Issues in the district

About the district

See also: Shenendehowa Central School District, New York
Shenendehowa Central School District is located in Saratoga County, N.Y.

Shenendehowa Central School District is located in Saratoga County in eastern New York. The county seat is Ballston Spa. Saratoga County was home to 223,865 residents in 2013, according to the United States Census Bureau.[6] During the 2012-2013 school year, Shenendehowa Central was the 16th-largest school district in New York and served 9,776 students.[7]

Demographics

Saratoga County outperformed the rest of New York in terms of higher education achievement in 2013. The United States Census Bureau found that 37.1 percent of county residents aged 25 years and older had attained a bachelor's degree, compared to 33.2 percent for New York as a whole. The median household income in Saratoga County was $69,826, compared to $58,003 statewide. The poverty rate was 6.5 percent, compared to 15.3 percent for the entire state.[6]

Racial Demographics, 2013[6]
Race Saratoga County (%) New York (%)
White 94.1 70.9
Black or African American 1.7 17.5
American Indian and Alaska Native 0.2 1.0
Asian 2.3 8.2
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 0.0 0.1
Two or More Races 1.6 2.3
Hispanic or Latino 2.8 18.4

2013 Party Affiliation,
Saratoga County[8]
Party Registered Voters % of Total
Republican 66,841 41.25
Democratic 42,399 26.17
Independent 9,986 6.16
Constitution 2,454 1.51
Working Families 498 0.31
Green 394 0.24
Other 84 0.05
Unaffiliated 39,374 24.31

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 Shenendehowa Central Board of Education consists of seven members elected at large to three-year terms on a staggered basis every year in May. Three seats were up for election in 2014, and two seats were up for election in 2015. There was no primary election, and the general election was held on May 19, 2015. Because the election was held at-large, every qualified voter in the school district was able to vote for both seats. The two candidates who received the most votes in the election were elected to the board.[9]

School board candidates must be at least 18 years old and must be qualified voters who have lived in the district for at least one full, uninterrupted year prior to the election. They must also be able to read and write. School board candidates cannot reside in the same household of a current board member, hold another incompatible office or have been removed from another school board office within a year of the election.[10] To get on the ballot, candidates had to file nominating petitions with the district clerk by April 20, 2015.[1][11]

Elections

2015

Candidates

At-large
Robert Pressly Green check mark transparent.png Samuel H. Hazleton V
Robert Pressly.jpg
  • Incumbent, first elected in 2012
  • Graduate, U.S. Naval Academy and the University of Oklahoma
  • Commercial manager, Momentive Performance Materials
  • Retired colonel, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve
Sam Hazleton.png
  • Graduate, University of Albany
  • Owner and CEO, Efficiency Partners, LLC
Christina Rajotte Green check mark transparent.png Kerensa Rybak
Christina Rajotte.jpg
  • Graduate, St. John Fisher College
  • Director of development and community relations, Equinox, Inc.
Kerensa Rybak.jpg
  • Graduate, Arizona State University

Election results

Shenendehowa Central School District,
At-Large General Election, 3-year term, 2015
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngRobert Pressly Incumbent 29% 1,811
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngChristina Rajotte 26.2% 1,636
     Nonpartisan Samuel H. Hazleton V 22.7% 1,420
     Nonpartisan Kerensa Rybak 22.1% 1,378
Total Votes 6,245
Source: Abbey Smith, "Phone communication with Shenendehowa Superintendent's Office," June 30, 2015

Endorsements

CSEA Unit 8458 endorsed incumbent Robert Pressly and challenger Christina Rajotte.[12]

Campaign finance

Campaign Finance Ballotpedia.png
See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2015

No contributions or expenditures were reported in the election, according to the New York State Board of Elections.[13][14]

Candidates must file finance statements if they spend more than $500 on their campaign. The statements had to be filed with the clerk of the school district as well as the New York Commissioner of Education on April 20, 2015, May 14, 2015, and June 8, 2015. Candidates who did not spend more than $500 on their campaign had to file a signed statement to that effect with the clerk of the school district.[15]

Past elections

What was at stake?

2015

Issues in the district

Parents opt students out of state testing
Common Core logo.jpg

School districts in New York held Common Core-aligned state testing in April 2015, but a large movement of parents opting their children out of the testing meant many did not take the tests. Shenendehowa Central School District saw 861 students opt out of testing, which was 18 percent of the district's enrollment of students in third through eighth grade for the 2014-2015 school year.[16]

School districts across the state saw a rise in the number of students opting out of testing in 2015 compared to 2014. Over 50 percent of students opted out statewide. The greatest number of opt-outs occurred in the regions of Long Island, Westchester and Buffalo. Some school district officials voiced concern over the opt-outs as districts could be penalized at both the state and federal level if less than 95 percent of students participated in testing. New York State United Teachers started a robocall campaign with automated, pre-recorded messages a few days before the test began to remind members they could opt out their children. In reaction to the union's campaign, the New York Department of Education said standardized testing helps ensure the state's most vulnerable students do not get ignored.[17][18]

Shenendehowa education officials send letter to governor

The Shenendehowa Central School District Board of Education, superintendent, PTA president and the president of the Shenendehowa Teachers Association sent a letter to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) on March 24, 2015, expressing their concern and frustration with his proposed policies and detailing the priorities they felt he needed to address. The full letter can be found here.[19]

"You say you want what's best for New York, yet our vast experiences and perspectives within public school systems have led to the conclusion that your proposals negatively impact our children and our community," the letter stated. It was addressed directly to the governor, but a number of state officials were cc'd, including Chair of the Assembly Education Committee Catherine Nolan (D), Chair of the Senate Education Committee John J. Flanagan (R), New York Board of Regents Chancellor Meryl Tisch and Acting Commissioner of Education Beth Berlin.[19]

The letter outlined three priorities the Shenendehowa education groups wished the New York government would address. The first priority was a commitment to fair public school funding, including paying the $6 billion owed to public schools under the court order from the Campaign for Fiscal Equity lawsuit, ending the gap elimination adjustment, increasing Foundation Aid funding, amending the tax cap law and discarding any plans to set permanent tax caps.[19]

The second priority was to increase the emphasis on teaching and learning rather than on testing, and the third priority was to retain local control, such as releasing school-aid runs and teacher evaluation processes back to the control of the school board.[19]

The letter was sent one month after Gov. Cuomo released a report of failing schools in the state. The report listed 178 failing schools in 17 school districts. A number of superintendents whose districts were listed in the report requested that the state government provide equitable funding for high-poverty attendance areas.[20]

Key deadlines

The following dates were key deadlines for the Shenendehowa Central School District election in 2015:[1][15]

Deadline Event
April 20, 2015 Last day to file candidate nominating petitions
First campaign finance report due
May 14, 2015 Last day to register to vote in this election
Second campaign finance report due
May 19, 2015 Election Day
June 8, 2015 Third campaign finance report due
July 1, 2015 First day of term for newly elected board members

Additional elections on the ballot

See also: New York elections, 2015

This election shared the ballot with the school district's annual budget vote, which was passed by voters.[1][2] The budget for the 2015-2016 school year included a $162.9 million spending plan, which was a 1.72 percent increase from the previous year's budget. Because it passed, the true value tax rate increased an estimated 1.04 percent, according to the district. That increase constituted another $47 in school taxes for market value properties of $250,000.[21]

There was also a second proposition on the ballot that asked voters to approve the purchase of 21 new buses for the district. It was approved.[2][21]

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Shenendehowa Central School District New York. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

Shenendehowa Central School District New York School Boards
School Board badge.png
Seal of New York.png
School Board badge.png

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 New York State School Boards Association, "Timeline - 2015 Annual Budget Vote & School Board Election," accessed April 13, 2015
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Shenendehowa Central School District, "Latest News: Post from 5/19/2015," accessed May 19, 2015
  3. Shenendehowa Central School District, "Board of Education," accessed January 23, 2015
  4. Shenendehowa Central School District, "Budget," accessed April 27, 2015
  5. Shenendehowa Central School District, "Latest News: Post from 5/19/2015," accessed May 19, 2015
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 United States Census Bureau, "Saratoga County, New York," accessed January 23, 2015
  7. National Central for Education Statistics, "ELSI Table Generator," accessed April 29, 2015
  8. New York State Board of Elections, "NYS Voter Enrollment by County, Party Affiliation and Status - Voters Registered as of November 01, 2013," accessed April 22, 2014
  9. Shenendehowa Central School District, "Board of Education," accessed April 24, 2015
  10. Shenendehowa Central School District, "1210 -- By-Laws: Board of Education Members - Qualifications," accessed April 24, 2015
  11. Shenendehowa Central School District, "1220 -- By-Laws: Board of Education Members - Nomination and Election," accessed April 24, 2015
  12. CSEA Unit 8458, "Home," accessed May 19, 2015
  13. New York State Board of Elections, "Campaign Financial Disclosure: Expenditure Search Page," accessed June 30, 2015
  14. New York State Board of Elections, "Campaign Financial Disclosure: Contribution Search Page," accessed June 30, 2015
  15. 15.0 15.1 Shenendehowa Central School District, "1230 -- By-Laws: Reporting of Contributions and Expenditures," accessed April 24, 2015
  16. The Times Union, "Students opt out of Common Core tests," April 16, 2015
  17. Syracuse.com, "NYS opt-out movement grows; tens of thousands - maybe more - expected to skip tests," April 14, 2015
  18. Business Insider, "Over 50% of students in some New York school districts are boycotting Common Core tests," April 15, 2015
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 Shenendehowa Central School District, "Shen Advocacy Letter March 2015," March 24, 2015
  20. Troy Record, "Superintendents of ‘failing schools’ unite with message," March 31, 2015
  21. 21.0 21.1 Shenendehowa Central School District, "2015-16 Budget Newsletter," accessed April 29, 2015