Election Results
No results found.
Voter Turnout
68.2%
Ballots Cast
118,495
Registered Voters
173,865
Precincts Reporting
58 of 58 Precincts Reported
Town of Fairfax Recall of LISEL BLASH
Town of Fairfax Recall of LISEL BLASH
Town of Fairfax Recall of LISEL BLASH is failing4,371 votes counted
Response% VotesPctVotes
No
55.71%
2,435
Yes
44.29%
1,936
Town of Fairfax Recall of STEPHANIE HELLMAN
Town of Fairfax Recall of STEPHANIE HELLMAN
Town of Fairfax Recall of STEPHANIE HELLMAN is failing4,359 votes counted
Response% VotesPctVotes
No
55.08%
2,401
Yes
44.92%
1,958
State of California
Proposition 50
Requires temporary use of new congressional district maps through 2030. Directs independent Citizens Redistricting Commission to resume enacting congressional district maps in 2031. Establishes policy supporting nonpartisan redistricting commissions nationwide. Fiscal Impact: One-time costs to counties of up to a few million dollars statewide to update election materials to reflect new congressional district maps.
Proposition 50 is passing118,364 votes counted
Response% VotesPctVotes
Yes
80.68%
95,495
No
19.32%
22,869
Petaluma Joint Union High School District
Measure I
To provide locally controlled funding for local junior high/ high schools that cannot be taken away by the state to attract/ retain excellent teachers; enhance math, science, engineering, technology, writing programs; maintain smaller class sizes; and prepare students for college/ careers, shall Petaluma Joint Union High School District’s measure be adopted levying an $129 educational parcel tax, raising $3,020,000 annually, for 8 years, with exemptions for seniors, no funds for administrators’ salaries and independent citizen oversight?
Measure I is passing173 votes counted
Response% VotesPctVotes
Yes
54.34%
94
No
45.66%
79
City of Sausalito
Measure J
Shall the measure adopting various housing overlay zones to allow housing at various income categories, including housing for seniors/families/individuals, on twelve sites in Sausalito’s commercial districts, consistent with Sausalito’s publicly reviewed and adopted Housing Element – in order to maintain compliance with State Housing Element Law, preserve local land use authority, prevent state fines, and preserve historic community character, while maintaining existing required developer fees – be adopted?
Measure J is passing3,771 votes counted
Response% VotesPctVotes
Yes
75.44%
2,845
No
24.56%
926
City of Sausalito
Measure K
Shall the measure to achieve compliance with State Housing Law mandates, by adopting a housing overlay zone allowing City-directed development on limited parts of the City-owned Martin Luther King Jr. property consistent with Sausalito’s publicly adopted Housing Element, providing capacity for no more than 50 units of housing prioritizing Sausalito’s seniors; while maintaining existing recreational, dog park, and school uses; maintaining building height limits, be adopted?
Measure K is passing3,821 votes counted
Response% VotesPctVotes
Yes
54.59%
2,086
No
45.41%
1,735