This Nov. 5, 2024 election dashboard was developed by Ciara Zavala and a dedicated team of journalists and engineers. The data was scraped from official county websites and then coded using ChatGPT and Claude.ai. Every step was carefully reviewed by human editors. While we aim for accurate and timely results, this dashboard relies on government data and automated tools so please allow for slight delays or discrepancies as editors verify the information.

Election Results

Measures

Election Results
City of El Cerrito
Measure G
To continue to maintain and prevent cuts to City services, without increasing taxes, such as fire prevention/emergency response times; neighborhood police patrols; wildfire prevention; crime prevention/investigation; after-school programs; library hours; senior services; open space, parks/playfields; for general government use, extending the existing voter approved 1¢ sales tax, until ended by voters.
YES
81.03
NO
18.97
City of Lafayette
Measure H
To provide funding to maintain City services, including public streets, storm drains, pothole repairs, wildfire preparedness, number of police officers, traffic safety, senior and youth programs, and other general city services, enacting a 1/2¢ sales tax for 7 years generating approximately $2,400,000 annually.
YES
64.81
NO
35.19
City of Pinole
Measure I
To maintain Pinole’s fiscal stability, prevent cuts, provide essential City services such as maintaining 911 emergency response times/fire prevention; preventing property crimes; keeping public areas/parks safe and clean; providing clean water; repairing potholes/streets; retaining/attracting local businesses, enacting a 1/2¢ sales tax providing $2,500,000 annually until ended by voters.
YES
67.81
NO
32.19
City of Richmond
Measure J
Amending the Charter to reform the election process to improve accountability, governance, and strengthen representation by adding a nonpartisan primary municipal election.
YES
58.12
NO
41.88
Measure L
Amending the City Charter to authorize use of instant runoff voting (ranked choice voting) for Mayor and City Council election candidates, intended for implementation in the November 2026 election.
YES
54.39
NO
45.61
City of San Pablo
Measure M
Imposing a cannabis business license tax of up to 7% of gross receipts, or $10 per square foot of commercial grow area, estimated to generate $1,500,000 to $2,200,000 annually for City services such as police protection, recreational services, youth and senior services, and community grant programs.
YES
72.65
NO
27.35
City of San Ramon
Measure N
To provide local funding for City programs and services, including public safety and police services, neighborhood crime prevention, traffic enforcement, road improvements and maintenance, library and recreation services, park maintenance, and youth/senior programs, enacting a one cent sales tax providing approximately $16,000,000 annually for 10 years.
YES
56.21
NO
43.79
Martinez Unified School District
Measure O
Authorizing $90,000,000 in bonds at legal interest rates to modernize/construct classrooms and school facilities, make health and safety improvements, and renovate facilities at Martinez junior/senior high schools and adult education.
YES
56.12
NO
43.88
Pittsburg Unified School District
Measure P
Authorizing $140,000,000 in bonds to repair, upgrade and expand local schools, fix leaky roofs, improve safety/security/accessibility for students with disabilities, and update classrooms/labs for math, reading, writing, and science.
YES
71.63
NO
28.37
San Ramon Valley Unified School District
Measure Q
Renewing the existing $144 annual parcel tax to provide approximately $6.8 million annually for 9 years, supporting academic programs and attracting/retaining highly qualified teachers.
YES
74.9
NO
25.1
Byron Union School District
Measure R
Authorizing $24,000,000 in bonds to repair/upgrade elementary and middle schools, replace school well for safe drinking water, upgrade classrooms/labs for science, technology, engineering, arts, math instruction, and repair leaky roofs/HVAC systems.
YES
55.37
NO
44.63
Pleasant Hill Recreation and Park District
Measure S
Authorizing $77,000,000 in bonds to repair and improve local parks, trails, and recreation facilities, add restrooms, improve park safety, and children’s playground equipment, with independent citizen oversight.
YES
64.81
NO
35.19