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U.S. Representative - 46th District Republican candidate:...

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U.S. Representative - 46th District

Republican candidate:

DANA ROHRABACHER

United States Representative

State Assembly - 67th District

Republican candidate:

TOM HARMAN

Member California State Assembly, 67th District

County Assessor

WEBSTER J. GUILLORY

Incumbent

District Attorney

TONY RACKAUCKAS

District Attorney of Orange County

Countywide Measures

Measure V: Passed.(211,988 yes votes to 192,049 no; 52.5% to

47.5%)

This measure makes Orange County a charter county and changes the

method of selection when a vacancy occurs in the Board of Supervisors.

The governing body of the county is a Board of Supervisors made up of

five members elected by and from designated supervisorial districts for

terms of four years. If a vacancy occurs in the first three years of the

term, measure V proposes the vacancy shall be filled by a vote of the

electors of that district at a special election to be called by the Board

of Supervisors not less than 56 days or more than 70 days after the

vacancy occurs. If the vacancy occurs within 180 days of a regularly

scheduled election held throughout the supervisorial district, the

election to fill the vacancy may be consolidated with that regularly

scheduled election.

Measure W: Passed.(263,003 voted yes to 191,998 voted no;

57.8% to 42.4%)

Eliminate the planned airport uses at the closed El Toro Marine Corps

Air Station by repealing Measure A, and amending the Orange County

General Plan to authorize an urban regional park and a variety of

agricultural, material recovery/recycling, recreational, cultural,

educational, employment, public and housing land uses at El Toro.

Huntington Beach City School District Measure:

Measure DD: Passed.(10,389 yes votes to 6,854 no votes;

60.3% to 39.7%)

Approves a general obligation bond for $30 million to be used to

improve the quality of education, repair existing schools, replace

35-year-old roofs and classroom heating and ventilation systems, provide

student access to modern technology, upgrade classroom electrical and

fire alarm systems, replace deteriorating water and sewer systems. It

also qualifies the district to receive, as available, $16.7 million in

state-matching funds.

City of Huntington Beach:

Measure EE: Passed.(24,104 yes votes to 11,185 no; 68.3% to 31.7%)

Amends the Charter of the City of Huntington Beach to add a new

section that would provide that only a property owner can establish the

price or terms regarding that property’s sale, lease, rental, exchange or

transfer. It would prohibit the City of Huntington Beach from legislating

or regulating the price or terms concerning the sale, lease, rental,

exchange or transfer of property.

Measure FF: Passed. (18,564 yes votes to 14,075 no; 56.9% to

43.1%)

Creates an infrastructure fund. The Huntington Beach Charter will be

amended to establish an “Infrastructure Fund” with all infrastructure

revenues raised, and accrued interest, directed into the fund. The

transfer or loan of money from the fund will be prohibited. A minimum of

15% of the General Fund will go into this infrastructure fund based on a

five-year rolling average. City Council will be required to designate an

advisory board to annually review and audit the fund.

Measure GG: Passed. (18,637 yes votes to 13,789 no; 57.5% to

42.5%)

Power Plant Utility Taxes will be placed solely in the infrastructure

fund to be used only for the maintenance, construction and repair of

infrastructure such as storm drains, storm water pump stations, alleys,

streets, highways, curbs and gutters, sidewalks, bridges, street trees,

landscaped medians, parks, beach facilities, playgrounds, traffic

signals, street lights, block walls along arterial highways and all

public buildings and public ways.

Measure HH: Failed. (11,421 yes votes to 22,135 no votes;

34.0% to 66.0%)

Would have repealed the gas tax exclusion for electric power plants.

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