Callie Tippett

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Callie Tippett

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Vail Unified School District Governing Board At-large

Tenure
Present officeholder
Term ends

2025

Elections and appointments
Last elected

November 3, 2020

Callie Tippett is an at-large member of the Vail Unified School District Governing Board in Arizona. Tippett's current term ends on January 1, 2025.

Tippett ran for re-election for an at-large seat of the Vail Unified School District Governing Board in Arizona. Tippett won in the general election on November 3, 2020.

Elections[edit]

2020[edit]

See also: Vail Unified School District, Arizona, elections (2020)

General election
General election for Vail Unified School District Governing Board At-large (3 seats)

Incumbent Allison Pratt, incumbent Callie Tippett, and Christopher King defeated Andre Mixon and Kim Fargusson in the general election for Vail Unified School District Governing Board At-large on November 3, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes

Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Allison_Pratt.jpg

Allison Pratt (Nonpartisan)
 
26.8
 
19,888

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Callie Tippett (Nonpartisan)
 
25.2
 
18,683

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Christopher King (Nonpartisan)
 
17.3
 
12,835

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Andre Mixon (Nonpartisan)
 
16.1
 
11,971

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Kim Fargusson (Nonpartisan)
 
13.9
 
10,320
  Other/Write-in votes
 
0.7
 
513

Total votes: 74,210

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2016[edit]

See also: Vail Unified School District elections (2016)

Three of the five seats on the Vail Unified School District school board were up for at-large general election on November 8, 2016. Allison Pratt was the only incumbent to file for re-election. She was joined by three challengers: Anthony Sizer, Callie Tippett, and Mark Tate. Pratt, Tate, and Tippett won the election. There was no primary.[1][2]

Results[edit]

Vail Unified School District,
At-Large General Election, 4-year terms, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Allison Pratt Incumbent 29.15% 15,140
Green check mark transparent.png Mark Tate 26.72% 13,880
Green check mark transparent.png Callie Tippett 24.67% 12,816
Anthony Sizer 19.45% 10,104
Total Votes (100) 51,940
Source: Pima County Elections Department, "Offiical Canvass," accessed December 7, 2016

Funding[edit]

See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2016
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School board candidates in Arizona were not required to file a campaign finance report if they did not raise or spend more than $500. If they planned to stay under this threshold, they were permitted to file an exemption statement. This rendered them exempt from all other campaign finance reporting, provided they did not exceed the $500 threshold. Otherwise, candidates were not required to file any report until they raised or spent more than the threshold limit. At that point, they had to file a Statement of Organization within five business days from when the threshold was reached. The pre-general campaign finance report was due November 4, 2016. All campaign finance filing was handled by the Arizona Secretary of State.[3]

Campaign themes[edit]

2020[edit]

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Callie Tippett did not complete Ballotpedia's 2020 Candidate Connection survey.

About the district[edit]

See also: Vail Unified School District, Arizona
Vail Unified School District is located in Pima County, Arizona.

Vail Unified School District is located in south-central Arizona in Pima County. Tucson is its county seat. Pima County was home to 1,010,025 residents between 2010 and 2015, according to the United States Census Bureau.[4] The district was the 22nd-largest school district in the state in the 2013–2014 school year and served 11,779 students.[5]

Demographics[edit]

Pima County outperformed Arizona as a whole in terms of higher education attainment from 2010 to 2014. The United States Census Bureau found that 30.1 percent of county residents aged 25 years and older had attained a bachelor's degree or higher, compared to 27.1 percent for state residents. The median household income for the county was $46,233, compared to $49,928 statewide. County residents lived below the poverty level at a rate of 18.7 percent, while that rate was 17.4 percent for state residents.[4]

Racial Demographics, 2015[4]
Race Pima County (%) Arizona (%)
White 85.3 83.5
Black or African American 4.1 4.8
American Indian and Alaska Native 4.3 5.3
Asian 3.2 3.4
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 0.2 0.3
Two or More Races 2.9 2.7
Hispanic or Latino 36.4 30.7

Presidential Voting Pattern, Pima County[6]
Year Democratic Vote Republican Vote
2012 201,251 174,779
2008 206,254 182,406
2004 193,128 171,109
2000 147,688 124,579

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.

See also[edit]


External links[edit]

Footnotes[edit]



Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Original source: https://ballotpedia.org/Callie_Tippett
Status: cached on March 17 2022 15:11:34
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