Many elections are coming up
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Put on your thinking caps -- it’s going to be a busy election season
this fall for Lagunans.
With the City Council setting a Tuesday, Dec. 13 date on the
question of whether to increase the city sales tax by one-half cent
to raise money for disaster relief, there will be three -- or more --
special elections in the next three months.
On Tuesday, Oct. 4, voters will be asked to make their picks for
who should fill the 48th District Congressional seat vacated by Chris
Cox.
A total of 17 candidates are asking for your vote, including 10
Republicans, four Democrats and one each Libertarian, Green and
American Independent. The race is getting attention from around the
country because John Gilchrist of the Minuteman Project -- who
recently joined job center picketers on Laguna Canyon Road -- is one
of the candidates.
If no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote on Oct. 4, a
runoff will be held featuring the top vote-getters from each of the
parties on Tuesday, Dec. 6.
But even if a single candidate wins the primary, don’t put away
your punch cards just yet. A special statewide election will be held
Tuesday, Nov. 8, with seven initiatives on the ballot, including
“hot-button” measures involving abortion, school funding, teacher
tenure and union dues.
* Proposition 75 would prohibit public employee labor
organizations from using dues or fees for political contributions
unless the employee provides prior consent each year on a specified
written form.
* Proposition 76 would make public school teachers wait five years
before becoming “permanent employees.”
* Proposition 73 would amend the state Constitution so minors
would have to wait 48 hours to terminate a pregnancy unless certain
conditions are met.
* The school funding measure, Proposition 76, would suspend
minimum-guaranteed funding of public schools and allow excess state
income to go into non-education coffers.
* Proposition 77, the reapportionment measure, would alter the
traditional “political” means of redrawing legislative districts and
require an appointed three-judge panel to determine the boundaries
for state Senate, Assembly, Congressional and Board of Equalization
districts.
* Voters will be asked to decide between two competing drug
prescription initiatives: Proposition 78 would create a state-run
discount prescription drug program; and Proposition 79 would provide
lower cost drugs through a state-operated rebate program from drug
companies.
* Finally, Proposition 80 would re-regulate electric utilities by
placing them again under the control of the Public Utilities
Commission.
So, as they say, save the dates: Oct. 4; Nov. 8; Dec. 6 and Dec.
13.
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