From Ballotpedia - Reading time: 5 min
| Alisal Union School District School Board recall |
|---|
| Officeholders |
| Recall status |
| Recall election date |
| August 25, 2009 |
| See also |
| Recall overview Political recall efforts, 2009 Recalls in California California recall laws School board recalls Recall reports |
An election to consider the recall of Jesus Velazquez from his position as a school board trustee in the Alisal Union School District, located in Monterey County, California, took place on August 25, 2009.[1]
The recall was approved, removing Velazquez from office.[2]
| Should Jesus Velazquez be recalled? | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 198 | 69.96% | |||
| No | 85 | 30.04% | ||
Velazquez was the trustee for Area 1 in the school district. He had served on the board for 13 years, and at the time the recall campaign was launched, served as the president of the district's five-member Board of Trustees. If he had not been recalled, his term on the board would have ended in November 2010.[3]
The recall election was conducted exclusively as a mail-in ballot question. 1,580 ballots were mailed out to possible voters.[4]
Meredith Ibarra, who ran on the ballot as a replacement candidate, was elected. The board elected her as board president during her first meeting as an elected official.[5]
The same group of parents who successfully collected the signatures to force the Velasquez recall election also supported two candidates against incumbent trustees Gary Karnes and Juan Flores in the November school board elections.
According to Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas, "Since the recall, we have had a very difficult time in conducting the business of the district when it comes to the board. We need to pay people we owe money to, we have people we would like to hire but have not been able to. There are after-school programs that need staffing and lots of agenda items that need to be completed. If we don't get the business of the district done, we'll have a crisis. We can't have one side or two — there has to be a balanced view of what the problems are."[5]
The recall battle became very heated. Parents and teachers protested and rallied at meetings of the Board of Trustees. Police were called to school board meetings to remove parents. Police reports were filed by parents involved in the recall because of threats made against them.[6]
Those who sought the recall of Velazquez indicated on the recall petition they circulated that they had these reasons for wanting to recall him:
A group of teachers who were not directly involved in the recall effort asked these questions:
In response to the accusations against him, Velazquez said:
The recall election qualified for the ballot after the group that sought the recall submitted 451 recall signatures to election officials in late April. They needed 389 signatures to qualify the recall question for the ballot.[7]
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