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El Dorado County Ballot

Combined ballot

See Also:   Information for the County of El Dorado
(Elections Office, local League of Women Voters, links to other county election sites)

November 7, 2000 Election

[line]
County Results as of Nov 8 0:30am, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (208/208)
66.9% Countywide Voter Turnout (63153/94,278)

Statewide Results as of Dec 5 12:43pm, 100% of Precincts Reporting (25702/25702)
70.5% Statewide Voter Turnout (11,087,155/15,707,307)

President | United States Senator | United States Representative | State | County | School | Special Districts | Cities | State Propositions | Local Measures
Click on Name of Contest below.
Polling Location on November 7, 7am-8pm
Do My Ballot or contact the Election Dept.
Contests for all precincts in El Dorado County, CA combined are shown below.
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  • President

    President; United States

    • Al Gore, Democratic
      5,833,974 votes 53.5%
    • George W. Bush, Republican
      4,542,793 votes 41.7%
    • Ralph Nader, Green
      415,370 votes 3.9%
    • Harry Browne, Libertarian
      45,291 votes .4%
    • Patrick J. Buchanan, Reform
      44,817 votes .4%
    • Howard Phillips, American Independent
      16,974 votes .1%
    • John Hagelin, Natural Law
      10,864 votes 0%
    • David McReynolds (Write-In)
    • William M. Kenyon, Sr. (Write-In)

    United States Senator

    United States Senator

    United States Representative

    United States Representative; District 4

    • John T. Doolittle, Republican
      197,140 votes 63.5%
    • Mark A. Norberg, Democratic
      97,818 votes 31.5%
    • William Fritz Frey, Libertarian
      9,477 votes 3%
    • Robert E. Ray, Natural Law
      6,446 votes 2%

    State

    State Senator; District 1

    Member of the State Assembly; District 4

    • Tim Leslie, Republican
      144,475 votes 67%
    • Stephen A. Macola, Democratic
      71,320 votes 33%

    County

    Supervisor; County of El Dorado; District 1

    • Rusty Dupray
      9409 votes 64.8%
    • Janice Platz
      5089 votes 35.1%

    Supervisor; County of El Dorado; District 2

    School

    Board Member; Camino Union School District (2 Elected)

    • Christa Kay Campbell
      1375 votes 52.4%
    • Robert Balga
      625 votes 23.8%
    • Stephen V. Bird
      623 votes 23.7%

    Board Member; Gold Trail Union School District (2 Elected)

    Board Member; Rescue Union School District (2 Elected)

    Trustee; Black Oak Mine Unified School District; Area 2

    • Liz Honeycutt
      3202 votes 70.2%
    • Jan Frelick
      1355 votes 29.7%

    Trustee; Black Oak Mine Unified School District; Area 1

    • Charles Pryor
      1727 votes 35.9%
    • Darcy Knight
      1725 votes 35.9%
    • Debi Hales
      799 votes 16.6%
    • Maria Capraun
      551 votes 11.4%

    Board Member; Sierra Community College District; Area 4

    • Sally Robison
      914 votes 43.6%
    • Joyce Kelley
      748 votes 35.7%
    • Jan Romero
      432 votes 20.6%

    Special Districts

    Board Member; El Dorado Resource Conservation District (3 Elected)

    • John C. James
      19915 votes 26.3%
    • Ronald Huston
      19784 votes 26.1%
    • Dale Pierce
      19282 votes 25.5%
    • William "Bill" McSwain
      16580 votes 21.9%

    Board Member; Diamond Springs/El Dorado Fire Protection District (3 Elected)

    • Edward Cunha
      3994 votes 29.7%
    • Jackye Phillips
      3168 votes 23.6%
    • Buddy Baker
      2587 votes 19.2%
    • Jeff Routsong
      2366 votes 17.6%
    • Robert Larsen
      1303 votes 9.7%

    Board Member; El Dorado Hills County Water District (2 Elected)

    • John W. Hidahl
      3611 votes 30.1%
    • Jim Hartley
      3514 votes 29.3%
    • John R. Knight
      3135 votes 26.1%
    • Keith Rios
      1005 votes 8.3%
    • Robert Feusi
      705 votes 5.8%

    Board Member; El Dorado County Fire Protection District; Division 1

    • Patrick Carroll
      2240 votes 78.5%
    • Mauro Capone
      612 votes 21.4%

    Board Member; El Dorado County Fire Protection District; Division 5

    • Dan Francis
      2529 votes 87.2%
    • Edward W. Courtial
      370 votes 12.7%

    Board Member; El Dorado County Fire Protection District; Division 6

    Board Member; Cameron Estates Community Services District; 4 Year Term (2 Elected)

    • Jonathan Rea
      223 votes 38.7%
    • John L. Lustig
      177 votes 30.7%
    • Heidi Silva
      175 votes 30.4%

    Board Member; Cameron Estates Community Services District; Unexpired 2 Year Term

    • Richard J. Sopocko
      188 votes 58.0%
    • Nelson J. "Nels" Sprague
      136 votes 41.9%

    Board Member; Cameron Park Community Services District (2 Elected)

    Board Member; El Dorado Hills Community Services District (2 Elected)

    • Laurence Brilliant
      3146 votes 27.1%
    • Norbert Witt
      2810 votes 24.2%
    • F. J. Leslie
      2236 votes 19.3%
    • Adel Dimitropoulos
      1795 votes 15.5%
    • Robert Colenzo
      1587 votes 13.7%

    Board Member; Georgetown Divide Public Utility District; Services District 4

    • Douglas Pickell
      1274 votes 28.3%
    • Hy Vitcov
      1188 votes 26.4%
    • Mark Chase
      1181 votes 26.3%
    • James Pliley
      844 votes 18.8%

    Board Member; Georgetown Divide Public Utility District; Services District 5

    • David W. Whittington
      2252 votes 52.1%
    • Jack Podsedly
      2066 votes 47.8%

    Board Member; Tahoe City Public Utility District; Services District 3

    • Catherine Atchley
      162 votes 64.5%
    • Terry Dyer
      89 votes 35.4%

    Board Member; Tahoe City Public Utility District; Services District 4

    Board Member; Tahoe City Public Utility District; Services District 5

    • Ron Treabess
      148 votes 54.8%
    • Elizabeth Hale
      122 votes 45.1%

    Cities

    Councilmember; City of Placerville (2 Elected)

    Councilmember; City of South Lake Tahoe (2 Elected)

    State Propositions

    Proposition 32 Veterans’ Bond Act of 2000
    6,709,560 / 67.2% Yes votes ...... 3,278,248 / 32.8% No votes
    This act provides for a bond issue of five hundred million dollars ($500,000,000) to provide farm and home aid for California veterans. Fiscal Impact: Costs of about $858 million over 25 years (average cost of about $34 million per year); costs paid by participating veterans.

    Proposition 33 Legislature. Participation In Public Employees’ Retirement System
    3,791,715 / 39.0% Yes votes ...... 5,941,814 / 61.0% No votes
    Allows legislative members to participate in the Public Employees’ Retirement System plans in which a majority of state employees may participate. Fiscal Impact: Annual state costs under $1 million to provide retirement benefits to legislators, with these costs replacing other spending from the fixed annual amount provided in support of the Legislature.

    Proposition 34 Campaign Contributions and Spending. Limits. Disclosure
    5,903,907 / 60.0% Yes votes ...... 3,933,949 / 40.0% No votes
    Limits campaign contributions and loans to state candidates and political parties. Provides voluntary spending limits; expands public disclosure requirements and increases penalties. Fiscal Impact: Additional net costs to the state, potentially up to several million dollars annually, and unknown but probably not significant costs to local government.

    Proposition 35 Public Works Projects. Use of Private Contractors for Engineering and Architectural Services.
    5,442,138 / 55.1% Yes votes ...... 4,428,702 / 44.9% No votes
    Amends Constitution eliminating existing restrictions on state, local contracting with private entities for engineering, architectural services; contracts awarded by competitive selection; bidding permitted, not required. Fiscal Impact: Unknown impact on state spending for architectural and engineering services and construction project delivery. Actual impact will depend on how the state uses the contracting flexibility under the proposition.

    Proposition 36 Drugs. Probation and Treatment Program
    6,199,992 / 60.8% Yes votes ...... 3,991,153 / 39.2% No votes
    Requires probation and drug treatment, not incarceration, for possession, use, transportation of controlled substances and similar parole violations, except sale or manufacture. Authorizes dismissal of charges after completion of treatment. Fiscal Impact: Net annual savings of $100 million to $150 million to the state and about $40 million to local governments. Potential avoidance of one-time capital outlay costs to the state of $450 million to $550 million.

    Proposition 37 Fees. Vote Requirements. Taxes
    4,579,981 / 48.0% Yes votes ...... 4,963,684 / 52.0% No votes
    Requires two-thirds vote of State Legislature, majority or two-thirds of local electorate to impose future state, local fees on activity to study or mitigate its environmental, societal or economic effects. Defines such fees as taxes except property, development, certain other fees. Fiscal Impact: Unknown, potentially significant, reduction in future state and local government revenues from making it more difficult to approve certain regulatory charges.

    Proposition 38 School Vouchers. State-Funded Private and Religious Education Public School Funding.
    3,085,457 / 29.5% Yes votes ...... 7,387,753 / 70.5% No votes
    Authorizes annual state payments of at least $4000 per pupil for private/religious schools. Permits replacement of current constitutional public school funding formula. Fiscal Impact: Near-term state costs from zero to $1.1 billion annually. Long-term state impact from $2 billion in annual costs to $3 billion in annual savings, depending on how many public school students shift to private schools.

    Proposition 39 School Facilities. 55% Local Vote. Bonds, Taxes Accountability Requirements.
    5,402,822 / 53.3% Yes votes ...... 4,733,205 / 46.7% No votes
    Authorizes bonds for repair, construction or replacement of school facilities, classrooms, if approved by 55% local vote. Fiscal Impact: Increased bond debt for many school districts. Long-term costs statewide could total in the hundreds of millions of dollars annually. Potential longer-term state savings to the extent school districts assume greater responsibility for funding school facilities.

    Local Measures

    Measure D Board Member Reduction -- El Dorado County Fire Protection District
    14102 / 72.4% Yes votes ...... 5362 / 27.5% No votes
    Shall the El Dorado County Fire Protection District reduce the number of its Board Members from seven to five?

    Measure H Vehicle In-Lieu Tax Expenditure -- El Dorado County (Initiative Ordinance)
    34316 / 60.8% Yes votes ...... 22121 / 39.1% No votes
    Shall Measure H, entitled "An Initiative Ordinance Requiring the Expenditure of at Least One-Half of the 'Vehicle In-Lieu Tax' Revenues Received by the County of El Dorado Annually on Roads, Ways and Highways for Specified Purposes," be adopted?

    Measure J Sales Tax Expenditure for Roads -- El Dorado County
    33188 / 58.4% Yes votes ...... 23604 / 41.5% No votes
    Shall the County be authorized to use that portion of its sales tax revenues generated by new development to pay for building road capacity improvements to offset the impacts of traffic generated by non-residential development as allowed under Policy 3.2.2.5 of Measure Y, enacted by the voters on November 3, 1998?

    Measure K Bond Debt Approval Requirement -- El Dorado Irrigation District (Advisory Vote Only)
    26795 / 71.2% Yes votes ...... 10795 / 28.7% No votes
    Shall an advisory vote of approval by the El Dorado Irrigation District ratepayers be required before EID incurs additional bonded indebtedness not secured by land?

    Measure R $215M Bonds -- Los Rios Community College District
    25914 / 55.1% Yes votes ...... 21088 / 44.8% No votes
    To repair classrooms and facilities throughout Los Rios Community College District (including American River, Cosumnes River, and Sacramento City Colleges), provide up-to-dates facilities for academic/vocational programs including computer science, electronics and biotechnology, upgrade libraries, build and acquire classrooms and facilities to reduce overcrowding and expand course offerings, upgrade electrical systems for technology, and build high-tech training facilities, shall the District Issue $215 million of bonds at the lowest possible interest rate?


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    Data Created: January 25, 2001 02:36
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