Deadline for Filing Draws Last-Minute Candidates
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The filing deadline for November’s election brought a handful of last-minute candidates out on Wednesday to qualify for the already-thick ballot of local races.
The crowded city council races in Thousand Oaks and Camarillo each picked up a candidate late in the day, as elections officials across Ventura County scrambled to file papers, check signatures and collect fees for the nine city councils and dozens of school boards and special districts with seats up for grabs this fall.
Ojai and Camarillo have no incumbents seeking office, while three other cities will see all the council members up for reelection bidding for another term. Some school board races have not mustered enough candidates to merit an election in November. At the same time the Simi Valley Unified School District board has nine contenders seeking just two seats.
Despite the interest in local races, county Assistant Registrar of Voters Bruce Bradley said he has seen little campaigning or registration activity among candidates in the seven federal and state races.
“It’s been very unusual,” Bradley said. “There’s just not a lot shaping up here in Ventura County.”
Bradley said the strong positions of some incumbents have apparently dulled the enthusiasm for many congressional and statewide races.
“There’s even a lack of voter registration drives,” he said. “Usually by July and August we’re pretty busy with affidavits.”
Besides helping to choose a president and congressional leaders, Ventura County voters will consider more than a dozen statewide measures and more than 40 local races.
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Bradley predicted an 80% turnout among Ventura County’s 395,000 registered voters, based on past presidential ballots.
Nominations in some cities--including mayor and council races in Simi Valley, Oxnard and Santa Paula--closed last Friday because all of the incumbents are seeking reelection. Several uncontested races, such as the Briggs and Mupu school districts, have been taken off the ballot.
Nonetheless, city clerks around Ventura County said Wednesday that many of the local races are getting crowded.
For example, at least 10 people are vying for two seats open on the Thousand Oaks City Council, a race that promises to prompt fierce campaigning and tens of thousands of dollars in advertising.
One city council that failed to entice either incumbent is the Ojai panel, where James Loebl and Robert McKinney each have decided not to seek reelection. That means six newcomers will vie for those two available seats.
A similar situation is brewing in Camarillo, where incumbent Mayor David M. Smith has elected not to run again and Councilman Mike Morgan is in the thick of a runoff campaign for county supervisor.
Ten people are vying for the two open seats. Smith, for one, is not surprised at the level of interest in town politics.
“When an incumbent chooses not to run, everyone who’s ever had an interest in local politics comes forward, some who are serious and some whose motives are completely baffling,” the mayor said.
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“There won’t be any shortage of serious discussions and things that need to be decided,” said Smith, who said he has opted not to endorse anyone at this point.
The same could be said for trustees of the Ventura County Community College District, where one incumbent is running unopposed and another has decided not to seek another term. Four candidates are vying for outgoing trustee Timothy D. Hirschberg’s seat.
Hirschberg said increasing the transfer rate to four-year universities and broadening the selection of general-education classes should be top priorities for the board.
“The next trustee from my area should be as committed as I have been to focusing the curriculum on basic general-education courses, the meat and potatoes of community college education,” he said.
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Candidates
These are the candidates who have declared for seats on Ventura County school boards, city councils and other races in the Nov. 5 general election. Special districts and some uncontested school board races have been omitted.
Ventura County
Board of Education (two seats)
Trustee Area No. 3
Wendy Larner, incumbent
Janet Lindgren
Trustee Area No. 5
Paul H. Chatman
Ronald M. Matthews
Ventura County Community
College District (two seats)
Trustee Area No. 3
Robert Gonzales
James E. Niles
T. G. “Tom” Stafford
Lois Harrion
Trustee Area No. 5
Allan W. Jacobs, incumbent
Conejo Valley Unified
School District (two seats)
Dolores Didio, incumbent
Dorothy Beaubien, incumbent
Paul F. Finman
Debra J. Lorier
Elroi Reimnitz
Charles Rittenburg
Moorpark Unified
School District (three seats)
Tom Baldwin, incumbent
Gregory J. Barker, incumbent
Clint Harper, incumbent
Theodore Green Sr.
Matt Noah
Mesa Union
School District (two seats)
Carl B. Grether
Paula P. Hoffman
Timothy D. Osslund
Julie Sanchez
Ojai Unified
School District (two seats)
Tim Peddicord, incumbent
Karen A. McBride, incumbent
John G. Hartnett
Simi Valley Unified
School District (three seats)
Debbie Sandland, incumbent
Diane Collins, incumbent
Doug Crosse
Janice Di Fatta
Caesar O. Julian
Nan Mostacciuolo
Steven L. Steefek
Randall Sundeen
Elizabeth Walbridge
Oxnard Union
High School District (two seats)
Fred Judy, incumbent
Steve W. Stocks, incumbent
Annette Burrows
Art Hernandez
Don Miller
Santa Paula Union
High School District (two seats)
Robert M. Salas
Eric Barrigan
Eugene Marzec
Oxnard School District (two seats)
Susan E. Alvarez, incumbent
Everett Batey
Roy Caffrey
Francisco Dominguez
Pleasant Valley
School District (two seats)
Robert Rexford, incumbent
Ricardo Amador, incumbent
Virginia Norris
Rio School District (two seats)
Ernest J. Almanza
Camie Lawson
Anthony Ramos
Eleanor Torres
Camarillo City Council (two seats)
Rick Brush
Sherry Cole
Dennis Fandey
Al E. Fox
Kevin Kildee
Bill Liebmann
Richard Lundberg
Jan McDonald
Mona Schidel
Taylor Woods
Fillmore City Council (three seats)
Roger Campbell, incumbent
Scott Lee, incumbent
Evaristo Barajas
George Gonzalez Jr.
Steve McKinnon
Moorpark mayor
Patrick Hunter
Bernardo Perez
Edward Peters
Michael Wesner
Moorpark City Council (two seats)
Eloise Brown, incumbent
Christopher Evans
W. J. La Perch
Debbie Teasley
John Torres
Ojai City Council (two seats)
Paul B. Blatz
David Bury
Brandon M. Chase
Suza Francina
Ellen Hall
Rhonda L. Short-Moore
Oxnard mayor
Manuel L. Lopez, incumbent
Oscar Karrin
Anthony De La Cerda
Robert E. Taylor
Oxnard City Council (two seats)
Andres Herrera, incumbent
Bedford Pinkard, incumbent
Roy Lockwood
Emmett Whatley
John C. Zaragoza
Oxnard city clerk
Daniel Martinez, incumbent
Jackie Rodgers
Angie Varela
Port Hueneme
City Council (two seats)
Toni Young, incumbent
Valorie Morrison
Douglas Ernst
Murray Rosenbluth
Mary De Paolo
Allen Zeitzmann
Santa Paula
City Council (two seats)
Al Urias, incumbent
Robin Sullivan, incumbent
James Garfield
Gabriella Reeves
Simi Valley
City Council (two seats)
Bill Davis, incumbent
Barbara Williamson, incumbent
Mike McCaffrey
Dennis Serbick
Dave Weiner
Glenn Woodbury
Thousand Oaks
City Council (two seats)
Mike Markey, incumbent
Dan Del Campo
Lance Winslow
Marshall Dixon
Norman Jackson
Tom Lee
Linda Parks
Nick Quidwai
Ramaul Rush
David Seagal
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