school levies

Simple majority continues to make a difference for kids and schools

Posted on 12. Feb, 2010 by Mike.

Sign waving for Anacortes schools.

Sign waving for Anacortes schools.

In living rooms and makeshift campaign offices around the state, thousands of parents, educators and students eagerly awaited election results for critical school levies on Tuesday night. When the first results were released after 8 pm, cheers went up in a majority of communities.

Despite these tough economic times, voters showed that they care deeply about their public schools. In Rochester School District, the “successful campaign for the school levy was carried out on the backs of many dedicated community volunteers and hard working school district staff members volunteering their personal time as well,” said Karen Sanchez, levy committee chairperson.

Shoreline schools supporters.

Shoreline schools supporters.

But in Rochester and in many communities, the celebration would have been put on hold. With 59.27 percent of voters saying “yes” to the levy, it would be failing without a constitutional amendment that passed in 2007. A massive grassroots effort by more than 6,000 volunteers and a coalition of 250 organizations led by Washington Education Association, Washington State PTA and League of Education Voters made it possible for voters to approve school levies by a 50 percent plus one vote, instead of a 60 percent supermajority.

“All of the supporters who helped pass simple majority received a huge return on their investments of time, money and effort. Everyone should feel very good about the victory that continues to make a big difference for thousands of school children across the state,” said Nick Hanauer, co-founder of LEV and major contributor to the simple majority campaign.

Here’s the difference simple majority made in this election (special thanks to LEV volunteer Deborah Parsons for researching all of the election results):

Maintenance and operations levies

  • 49 passed between 50 and 60 percent
  • Raised $1.4 billion
  • Benefited 218,624 kids

Capital and technology levies

  • 15 passed between 50 and 60 percent
  • Raised $305.4 million
  • Benefited 138,263 kids

Transportation levies

  • 2 passed between 50 and 60 percent
  • Raised $700,000
  • Benefited 4,515 kids

Instead of gearing up for another election and preparing layoff notices to staff and teachers, school districts such as Marysville, Aberdeen, Kent, Ellensburg and Battle Ground can focus on preparing our students for life.

Below are the levies that passed due to simple majority for school levies (as of Wednesday or Thursday):

Maintenance & Operations Levies Capital Levies
School District Percentage School District Percentage
Willapa Valley 50.80% Federal Way 50.20%
Winlock 50.81% Tahoma 52.57%
Valley 51.54% Kent 52.86%
Colville 52.12% N Beach 52.91%
Battle Ground 53.16% Tukwila 53.82%
Kent 53.42% N Beach 55.35%
White Salmon Valley 53.62% Cle Ellum/Roslyn 56.00%
McCleary 53.92% Lake Stevens 56.45%
Ranier 54.34% Okanogan 57.00%
Omak 54.47% Nachese Valley 57.02%
La Center 54.50% Coupeville 57.14%
Hoquiam 54.63% Lake Washington 57.61%
Oroville 54.63% Riverview 57.90%
Tahoma 54.76% Tacoma 59.26%
Montesano 54.91% Franklin Pierce 59.32%
Elma 55.16%
Kittitas 55.20%
Kelso 55.47%
N Beach 55.98% Transportation Levies
Pasco 56.00%
Marysville 56.34% School District Percentage
Aberdeen 56.35% Montesano 53.19%
Griffin 56.51% Riverview 59.37%
Enumclaw 56.99%
Orting 57.17%
Oakville 57.18%
Davenport 57.31%
Wahluke 57.37%
Riverview 57.68%
Wahkiakum 57.71%
Hood Canal 57.72%
Tenino 58.13%
Kiona-Benton City 58.24%
Lake Stevens 58.24%
Thorp 58.30%
Woodland 58.60%
Waterville 58.63%
Bethel 58.98%
Coupeville 59.18%
Ellensburg 59.20%
Rochester 59.37%
Dieringer 59.38%
Franklin Pierce 59.50%
N Thurston 59.58%
Washougal 59.68%
Snoqualmie 59.86%
Mary M Knight 59.87%
Snohomish 59.88%
Lake Washington 59.91%

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School levy and bond elections

Posted on 10. Feb, 2010 by Mike.

Across the state, a majority of communities are passing their levies thanks to the hard work of volunteers. Despite these tough economic times, voters showed that they care deeply about their public schools. And, simple majority for school levies made a difference in many elections.

We are closely watching several school bond measures that are narrowly passing in Shoreline, Northshore, Clover Park, Pomeroy, and Medical Lake School Districts. Bonds still require a 60 percent supermajority to pass.

Here’s a roundup of local media stories covering school levy and bond elections.

School levies passing in most area districts (Seattle Times)

Bonds fare well in early results (Spokesman-Review)

Most school levies passing easily (Tacoma News Tribune)

A stellar night for Clark County schools (Vancouver Columbian)

Schools do well in levy elections (Everett Herald)

All Yakima Valley levy measures passing (Yakima Herald)

Mid-Columbia voters OK school levies (Tri-City Herald)

Voters overwhelmingly approve levies in four Kitsap districts (Kitsap Sun)

Thurston County school levies passing (Olympian)

Voters approve bond for Meridian, levies for Ferndale and Lynden (Bellingham Herald)

NCW school levies passing in early returns (Wenatchee World)

Kelso, Woodland approve school levies (Longview Daily News)

Strong support for school levies in early returns (Snoqualmie Valley Star)

School levies passing (Skagit Valley Herald)

Voters approve Sequim schools levy (Peninsula Daily News)

All county school levies passing, but Winlock’s margin Is tight (Centralia Chronicle)

Voters on Lopez, Orcas, San Juan islands renew M&O levies (Islands Sounder)

School levies look to pass, Lake Washington bond in trouble (Sammamish Review)

All school levies passing (The Aberdeen Daily World)

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Seattle school levies campaign kickoff

Posted on 05. Jan, 2010 by Lisa.

In just 5 short weeks, Seattle voters will be asked to renew a pair of expiring school levies that provide critical support to 45,000 public school children in our city.

Schools First, the grassroots organization spearheading the levy renewal campaign, would like to invite parents, educators, students and community members to the campaign kickoff on Saturday, January 9 at 10:30 AM.  The event is at Campaign Headquarters at 524 Dexter Ave N in Seattle.

Join Mayor McGinn, other elected officials, parents, educators, and community leaders as we rally in support of Seattle’s 45,000 public school children.

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March 10 levy and bond results

Posted on 11. Mar, 2009 by admin.

More than 30 school districts ran levy and/or bond elections yesterday.  The majority of school levies are passing, however bonds continue to struggle to reach the 60 percent supermajority requirement.

Congratulations to the children, parents and educators in the Snoqualmie Valley School District!  Their bond is passing by 65 percent.  The district previously ran three unsuccessful attempts to construct modern, new school buildings.  The current bond, however, was paired down significantly and will only renovate schools and add more portable classrooms.

Here’s a list of some of the levy and bond results from last night.

March 2009 Levy/Bond Elections

School District Type Approve Reject % Approve Status
Auburn School District Bond 4571 5997 42.35 Failing
Bickleton School District Bond 135 35 79.41 Passing
Burlington-Edison School District Bond 1993 2285 46.59 Failing
Kennewick School District Bond 8831 6271 58.48 Failing
Puyallup School District Bond 9176 10,541 46.54 Failing
Snoqualmie Valley School District Bond 5328 2767 65.82 Passing
Spokane School District Bond 29,187 17,685 62.27 Passing
Tacoma School District Bond 13,929 16,059 46.45 Failing
Vashon Island School District Bond 1878 2032 48.03 Failing
W. Valley School District (Yakima) Bond 3745 4045 48.07 Failing
Auburn School District Capital Levy 4631 5983 42.72 Failing
Longview School District Capital Levy 4,359 2,910 59.97 Passing
Puyallup School District Capital Levy 9119 10,589 46.27 Failing
Bickleton School District Levy 140 31 81.87 Passing
Eastmont School District Levy 3157 2473 56.07 Passing
Longview School District Levy 4,567 2,715 62.72 Passing
Oak Harbor School District Levy 3703 4701 44.06 Failing
Oak Harbor School District Levy 4277 4140 50.81 Passing
Spokane School District Levy 30,539 16,499 64.92 Passing
Toppenish School District Levy 559 550 50.41 Passing
Wenatchee School District Levy 5845 3373 63.41 Passing

 

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Children and Schools Are Counting On Your Vote Tomorrow

Posted on 09. Mar, 2009 by admin.

Our children and schools are counting on us to vote YES to approve local school levies and bonds tomorrow.

View a list of March 10th school levy and bond elections.

If your school district is on the list, visit your school district’s home page for more information about the levy and/or bond.

Your YES vote on a school levy provides critical funding that supports student learning. The levy helps fund smaller class sizes, new textbooks, student transportation, technology, bilingual and special education services, and student activities.

A YES vote on a school bond will fund renovation or construction of new schools in your community. Bond elections still require a 60 percent supermajority to pass.

For your vote to count, please postmark and mail your ballot by Tuesday, March 10th.

We know economic times are tough in our state. However, our economy will eventually recover. A levy failure can impact a child’s quality of education for years to come.

To get involved, share best practices, and learn more about school levy and bond elections, visit the League of Education Voters Levy Library.

Thank you for supporting our schools.

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More Good News for 4204 Supporters

Posted on 13. Mar, 2008 by admin.

The preliminary results from Tuesday’s elections are out, and come as another pat on the back for 4204 (Simple Majority) supporters.  Most of the 47 levies are passing—more than a third thanks to simple majority—while the 13 bonds are faring less well.

It’s encouraging to see approval rates above 60 percent for half of the levy elections, but it’s even more rewarding to know an additional 66,000+ children will benefit from the passage of Simple Majority last November.

Here are the preliminary results, as of today, separated by approval rate to highlight the impact of Simple Majority:

Approval Rate  

 

Levy  

 

% of total  

 

Bond  

 

% of total  

 

60% and above  

 

24  

 

51.1%  

 

2  

 

15.4%  

 

50%-59%  

 

19  

 

40.4%  

 

10  

 

76.9%  

 

49% and below  

 

4  

 

8.5%  

 

1  

 

7.7%  

 

A number of bonds are close to the required 60 percent supermajority approval rates. Both failing King County bonds (Renton and Snoqualmie Valley) are within 3 percentage points. Another three bonds (Woodland, Snohomish and Ferndale) are failing with 55+ percent approval.  If bonds needed simple majority approval rather than supermajority (60 percent), all but one of the bonds would be passing—impacting almost 54,000 kids.

As Bonnie noted in her blog posting after the February 19th election, everyone involved with passing 4204 can sit back and smile. Your work continues to change the lives of kids across our state.

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The Levy Lady Chimes In

Posted on 10. Mar, 2008 by admin.

Asking a 50-something person who doesn’t “blog” (and until recently didn’t know what one was) to write one seems awfully risky. But the younger, hipper LEVitators assigned me a topic they knew I would bite on–tomorrow’s school levy elections. The reality is that I got infected by the school levy virus back in 1996 when Seattle failed its operating levy, and I have been fairly obsessed with wanting to help other districts pass their funding measures ever since. One example is our Levy Library. Check it out and be sure to send us samples from your last campaign.

It is a strange system we have in Washington, where existing operating levies for schools have to be re-approved by local voters every few years. Until recently, those renewal levies needed an undemocratic supermajority of 60 percent to pass. After the passage of “simple majority” last fall, school districts all across the state are breathing easier. But hopefully school districts are not getting lazy and taking their voters for granted. They still need to get voters’ permission to just keep up the current level of spending, much less ask for more, and they have to prove that they are spending tax dollars wisely.

Bonds have always been tougher sells and they still need 60 percent approval to pass.

  • 13 districts have a bond measure on tomorrow’s ballot
  • 12 districts have a capital levy
  • 35 school districts have operating levies up for renewal

One district (Renton) has all three.

Here is the link to the complete list.

These last few hours before the vote counts come in are nerve wracking. You wonder whether you have done everything possible to remind your voters what is at stake. But the decision–including the important one about whether enough people will even bother to mail in a ballot or show up to cast a vote–is out of your hands.

One thing is for certain. Every vote counts. Remember our over-time simple majority win. Schools are unfortunately used to winning and losing these ballot measures by just a handful of votes. I am just hoping that voters all over the state do the right thing tomorrow and say yes to investing in kids and schools.

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4204 Supporters Have Reason to Cheer Again

Posted on 22. Feb, 2008 by admin.

Posted by Bonnie, 2/22/08

After what turned into a somewhat depressing Election Night last November, I spent two days accepting that we had lost Simple Majority.  Few dislike losing as much as I do - but when a loss has a direct negative effect on one million students, it is especially hard.

I think it was on the fourth day that things began to change.  I remember sitting at my computer at 4 p.m. waiting patiently for Pierce, Snohomish and King counties to update their vote totals. By 4:15 p.m. suddenly we were winning - and man did it feel fantastic. I never thought I could match the excitement I felt that afternoon. I was wrong.

This past Tuesday, 127 school levies were up for election statewide. But this time it was very different. The levy elections are now like the majority of elections we have, needing 50 percent plus one to pass rather than the old, unfair supermajority requirement. The results are pretty incredible. As of today, 122 of these levies are passing.

Here are the results separated by approval rate to show how the results might have looked under the old supermajority requirement:

Approval rate

Number of School Levies

Percentage of Total

49% and below

5

3.9%

50%-59%

68

53.5%

60% and above

54

42.4%

As you can see, it would have been an entirely different story under the old barrier. An additional 53.5 percent of school levies statewide would have failed. Even more compelling, this group of 68 levies adds up to more than $485 million.  Almost $500 million to help school districts reduce class size, increase professional development for teachers, and purchase new text books … the list goes on.

I admit there were moments during the campaign when I got tired. I phone banked nearly every night for a month straight with a dedicated group of staff and volunteers. We all had moments of exhaustion, but we kept going. Now we see why - and we will continue to see our efforts pay off in future elections. It took a huge amount of collective hard work to pass Simple Majority and we should all feel proud. So, if you talked to a neighbor, picked up the phone, wrote a check, or simply voted to APPROVE 4204, ­- this is your moment to sit back and smile. Your work is changing the lives of one million students statewide.

Thank you!

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School Levy Elections Benefit from Simple Majority

Posted on 20. Feb, 2008 by admin.

Posted by Michael

Hundreds of school levy volunteers are breathing a sigh of relief today.

Last night’s levy results show that the education community’s victory in November is making a huge difference for thousands of students across the state.

While many communities continue to approve their levies at rates above the old 60 percent standard, a large number of levies passed thanks to the new 50 percent simple majority requirement.

School leaders, educators, parents and students in places like Kennewick, Ellensburg, and Centralia will not have to brace themselves for a costly and time consuming second levy attempt.  Instead, they can continue to focus on educating students.

We’ll be holding our breath for close elections around the state, especially in Thurston County where the North Thurston, Rochester and Yelm school districts are hovering just below 50 percent.  Late-arriving ballots do tend to favor school levy elections.

For bond elections, the supermajority requirement continues to thwart our schools.  Only two out of five bond proposals are passing as of Tuesday night.  In Lake Chelan, the bond is passing with just over 61 percent.  This shows that every vote is especially important for school bond elections.

While simple majority saved the day for many school districts, the League of Education Voters is confident school supporters will not take this election for granted. 

And we’ve not lost sight on what’s at stake.

A large part of the success of our state’s students and schools comes from levy funding.  That’s because the state continues to NOT fully fund basic education services.

The League of Education Voters would like to see a new K-12 finance system adopted next year that fully funds basic education and returns levies to their intended purpose of funding school enrichment programs.

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