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Three of the five seats on the Academy School District 20 Board of Education in Colorado were up for nonpartisan general election on November 7, 2017. No incumbents filed to run for re-election, which guaranteed three newcomers were elected to the board. Eric Davis, Thomas LaValley, Doug Lundberg, Karin Reynolds, and William Temby ran for the seats, and LaValley, Lundberg, and Reynolds won the election.[1][2]
The 2017 election was the first time in three consecutive election cycles that no incumbents filed to run for re-election. For information on election trends in the district, click here.
The Academy School District 20 Board of Education consists of five members elected to four-year terms. The board also includes a sixth, nonvoting member who acts as a liaison for the United States Air Force Academy. The at-large elections for the five regular members are held on a staggered basis so that two or three members are up for election every November of odd-numbered years.[3]
To qualify to run for school board, candidates had to be residents of the school district and registered voters for a minimum of 12 consecutive months before the election. They also could not have been convicted of a sexual offense against a child. To get on the ballot, school board candidates had to file nomination petitions containing 50 signatures of eligible voters in the school district by September 1, 2017.[4]
Colorado voters were allowed to register to vote through election day.[5] Photo identification was not required to vote in Colorado.[6]
| Academy School District 20, At-large General Election, 4-year terms, 2017 |
||
|---|---|---|
| Candidate | Vote % | Votes |
| 24.85% | 13,182 | |
| 20.97% | 11,123 | |
| 19.55% | 10,370 | |
| William Temby | 19.52% | 10,353 |
| Eric Davis | 15.11% | 8,012 |
| Total Votes | 53,040 | |
| Source: El Paso County Elections Office, "Official Results: ACADEMY SCHOOL DISTRICT 20 DIRECTOR," accessed November 27, 2017 | ||
| Eric Davis | Thomas LaValley |
Doug Lundberg | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karin Reynolds |
William Temby | ||
|---|---|---|---|
The Academy School District 20 Board of Education election shared the ballot with El Paso County Question 1A and Colorado Springs City Question 2A.[7][8]
The county question appeared on the ballot as follows:
| “ | WITHOUT IMPOSING NEW TAXES OR RAISING TAX RATES, SHALL EL PASO COUNTY BE PERMITTED TO RETAIN AND SPEND $14,548,000 IN EXCESS 2016 REVENUE AS A VOTER-APPROVED REVENUE CHANGE PURSUANT TO TABOR (ARTICLE X, SECTION 20 OF THE COLORADO CONSTITUTION) TO INVEST ONLY IN THE FOLLOWING INFRASTRUCTURE:
WITH THE UNDERSTANDING THAT SUCH EXCESS REVENUE WOULD OTHERWISE BE REFUNDED ONLY TO TAXABLE REAL PROPERTY OWNERS AS A ONE-TIME TAX CREDIT (EXAMPLE: APPROXIMATELY $40 FOR A TYPICAL SINGLE-FAMILY HOME VALUED AT $250,000), AND TO RETAIN AND SPEND IN THE 2017 FISCAL YEAR AND THEREAFTER AN AMOUNT OF REVENUE THAT EXCEEDS CURRENT TABOR LIMITATIONS BUT IS NO GREATER THAN THE COUNTY REVENUE CAP, WHICH CONTINUES TO LIMIT FUTURE REVENUE GROWTH AS PROVIDED IN RESOLUTION NO. 17-244?
__YES |
” |
| —El Paso County (2017)[7] | ||
The city question appeared on the ballot as follows:
| “ | Without imposing any new tax or increasing any existing taxes, shall Ordinance No. 17 - 69 of the City of Colorado Springs be approved authorizing: the collection of stormwater service fees beginning July 1, 2018 and ending July 1, 2038, for the sole purpose of funding through a City enterprise, the construction, improvement, operation and maintenance of public stormwater facilities and a public stormwater system in the City, including regulatory permit compliance and protection of life and property within the City from the hazards of flooding and stormwater, to be assessed on all developed real property within the City, with such fees not to exceed the following maximum amounts:
Residential property: $5.00 per dwelling unit/month Non-residential property: $30.00 per acre/month providing that such fees may be thereafter increased by City Council by Resolution only to the extent required to comply with a valid court order, federal or state permits, federal or state laws, and intergovernmental agreements of the City entered into before June 1, 2016; and providing for citizen advisory committee oversight? _____Yes _____No[9] |
” |
| —City of Colorado Springs (2017)[8] | ||
The following dates were key deadlines for the 2017 Colorado school board elections.[10][11]
The Academy Education Association endorsed Doug Lundberg, Karin Reynolds, and William Temby.[12] The Pikes Peak Association of REALTORS® (PPAR) endorsed Reynolds and Temby as well as Thomas LaValley.[13]
Academy School District 20 Board of Education member Catherine Bullock endorsed LaValley and Reynolds.[14][15] Academy School District 20 Board of Education member Linda Van Matre endorsed Reynolds and Temby.[15][16]
LaValley was also endorsed by the state Rep. Dan Nordberg (R-14) and El Paso County Commissioner Peggy Littleton (R).[14]
Do you know of an official or organization that endorsed a candidate in this race? Let Ballotpedia know by email at editor@ballotpedia.org.
Candidates received a total of $26,479.01 and spent a total of $26,548.12 in the election, according to the Colorado Secretary of State.[17]
| Candidate | Contributions | Expenditures | Cash on hand |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eric Davis | $2,800.00 | $1,794.09 | $1,005.91 |
| Thomas LaValley | $17,426.75 | $17,426.75 | $0.00 |
| Doug Lundberg | $0.00 | $1,449.69 | ($1,449.69) |
| Karin Reynolds | $2,977.65 | $2,728.75 | $248.90 |
| William Temby | $3,274.61 | $3,148.84 | $125.77 |
School board candidates in Colorado were required to file three campaign finance reports. The reports were due on October 17, 2017, November 3, 2017, and December 7, 2017.[11]
To see results from past elections in Academy School District 20, click here.
School board candidates participated in two candidate forums in October 2017.[18] Videos of the forums can be found below.
October 16 forum
Board of Education Candidate Forum One from 20TV on Vimeo.
October 17 forum
Board of Education Candidate Forum Two from 20TV on Vimeo.
Ballotpedia researches issues in school board elections across the United States, but information availability is a challenge for us in many school districts. Please contact us about the issues that impact your local school district. Note that not all submissions may meet Ballotpedia's coverage requirements for inclusion.
The 2017 Academy School District 20 Board of Education election was the first time in three election cycles that no incumbents filed to run for re-election. In the district's 2015 election, two incumbents ran unopposed for re-election and won new terms by default. In the district's 2013 election, two incumbents ran for re-election and won new terms on the board. A newcomer was also elected to an open seat that year.
| School board election trends | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Candidates per seat | Unopposed seats | Incumbents running for re-election | Incumbent success rate | Seats won by newcomers | |
| Academy School District 20 | ||||||
| 2017 | 1.67 | 0.00% | 0.00% | Not applicable | 100.00% | |
| 2015 | 1.00 | 100.00% | 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | |
| 2013 | 1.67 | 0.00% | 66.67% | 100.00% | 33.33% | |
| Colorado | ||||||
| 2015 | 1.77 | 30.77% | 55.38% | 83.33% | 53.85% | |
| United States | ||||||
| 2015 | 1.72 | 35.95% | 70.37% | 82.66% | 40.81% | |
|
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Academy School District 20 is located in El Paso County in central Colorado. The county seat is Colorado Springs. El Paso County was home to an estimated 688,284 residents in 2016, according to the United States Census Bureau.[19] The district was the 11th-largest school district in the state in the 2014-2015 school year and served 24,578 students.[20]
El Paso County underperformed compared to Colorado as a whole in terms of higher education achievement between 2011 and 2015. The United States Census Bureau found that 35.9 percent of county residents aged 25 years and older had attained a bachelor's degree, compared to 38.1 percent of state residents. The median household income in El Paso County was $58,206, compared to $60,629 statewide. The poverty rate in the county was 11 percent, while it was 11.5 percent for the entire state.[19]
| Racial Demographics, 2016[19] | ||
|---|---|---|
| Race | El Paso County (%) | Colorado (%) |
| White | 83.6 | 87.5 |
| Black or African American | 6.9 | 4.5 |
| American Indian and Alaska Native | 1.4 | 1.6 |
| Asian | 2.9 | 3.3 |
| Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander | 0.4 | 0.2 |
| Two or More Races | 4.8 | 3.0 |
| Hispanic or Latino | 16.7 | 21.3 |
Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Academy School District 20 Colorado election. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.
| Academy School District 20 | Colorado | School Boards |
|---|---|---|
| Academy School District 20 elections in 2017 | |
| El Paso County, Colorado | |
| Election date: | November 7, 2017 |
| Candidates: | At-large: • Eric Davis • Thomas LaValley • Doug Lundberg • Karin Reynolds • William Temby |
| Important information: | What was at stake? • Additional elections on the ballot • Key deadlines |