|
April 23, 2009 (Kearny NJ) The Kearny School
Board election results are as follows:
- James Doran, Jr.
886 (23.16%)
- Paul Castelli
771 (20.16%)
-Lisa Anne
Schalago 759 (19.84%)
- Jean C. McKeown 720
(18.82%)
- Rosemary
Martins-Marks 683 (17.86%)
-Personal Choice 6
(0.16%)
The School Budget
passed by a vote of 732 votes (54.67%) to 607 (45.33%).
As usual there
was a low voter turnout for the School Board election. Less than
1500 individuals turned out to vote. There is a discussion on our
discussion board regarding the low voter turnout. New Member I Know
started off the
discussion with the following post:
Out of 38,394
registered Kearny voters, only 1,561 actually took the time to vote in the
Board of Education election. That is 4% of the total registered voters. All
38,294 registered voters were sent a sample ballot by the County Board of
Elections so its not as though those that didn't vote didn't know there was an
election. Even more pathetic is that out of those who voted, only 1,299 cast a
vote on the Bd. of Ed. budget. That works out to 3.4%. So this means 1,299
registered voters approved a budget of over $47,000.000. The Bd. of Ed. budget
is over 47% of the total tax doller in Kearny and despite all of the wailing
over tax bills, the reality is that only a tiny percentage of people actually
will take the few minutes it takes to go to the polls and vote.
Although I Know's
numbers on registered voters is incorrect, the idea that a very small
percentage of voters exercise their right to vote in school board elections is
something that has been pointed out on KearnyOnTheWeb before. Many
residents don't exercise their right to vote for a variety of reasons.
First, people generally do not vote even in primary and general elections
unless its a Presidential Election. Secondly, there is very little publicity
generated by a school board election. Thirdly, the election is held in
April. Fourthly, the polls are only open from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. (not the
traditional 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.)
Ironically, the
School Board election is probably more important to Kearny's property
taxpayers than is the Primary or General Election. Over forty percent of
the town's budget goes to education. A small group of voters, many with
special interests to continue the status quo, decide who sits on the board of
education. An incumbent who steps out of line, or out of favor, can be
defeated by an organized group of individuals interested in maintaining an
even expanding the school budget. The solution: move School Board
elections to November and the voter turnout will be greater and you can save
the expense of paying poll workers twice.
What do you think?
Join the Discussion on our
Discussion Board.
|