.
Feedback

Malibu School Board Candidates Fall to Santa Monica Incumbents

UPDATED 5:30 a.m.: Voters select three incumbents out of six candidates for the SMMUSD Board of Education and approve Measure ES, which is meant to provide a portion of $1 billion of needed improvements at schools in Santa Monica and Malibu.

The incumbents took an early lead and held onto it overnight over Malibu challengers in the race for three seats on the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District Board of Education.

The earliest results, based on absentee ballots, showed incumbents Ben Allen, Maria Leon-Vazquez and Jose Escarce in the lead. More results were not released until the early morning Wednesday, which confirmed the incumbents' victory.

Dense fog delayed reporting of the results on Tuesday night, according to county officials. Helicopters carrying ballots to be counted in Norwalk were grounded late Tuesday at the Puente Hills Mall in the City of Industry.

With so few ballots counted, candidates were hesitant to speak out on the early results.

“I hope that my returns stay the way they are,” Allen said just before 10 p.m. Tuesday. “And I hope the Prop. 30 returns get better. Honestly I think it [not passing] will make life on the school board very difficult.”

Malibu candidates Craig Foster, Karen Farrer and Seth Jacobson trailed behind, but on Tuesday night Foster was only 100 votes away from Escarce, who called the race "unpredictable" after the first round of results came out.

"I’m only going to wait and see what happens," Escarce said. "... It will go one way or the other."

Foster remained optimistic on Tuesday night.

"I am happy that with so few votes in, it is pretty close," Foster said. "We hope as more ballots are counted we gain ground."

Farrer said Tuesday night she hoped to learn more when additional results come out.

"I have a feeling that what the preliminary results look like are similar to the final," Farrer said.

Those preliminary results did turn out to be a mirror of the final results with the incumbents gaining ground as the results trickled in.

Measure ES, a $385 million bond measure that will go toward facility and technology improvements, won handily with 67.7 percent of the vote. It needed 55 percent approval to pass.

Before the final resulsts were in, Allen said he was encouraged by the vote.

"I'm just happy it is looking this strong at this stage," he said.

SANTA MONICA-MALIBU BOARD OF EDUCATION & MEASURE ES RESULTS

Candidate Votes % Ben Allen 17,889 24.57 Karen Farrer 9,305 12.78 Craig Foster 11,653 16.01 Seth Jacobson 6,859 9.42 Jose Escarce 12,803 17.59 Maria Leon-Vazquez 14,294 19.63

 

Measure ES Votes % Yes 21,981 67.73 No 10,472 32.27

ORIGINAL POST: Malibu voters will head to the polls Tuesday to decide who will fill three seats on the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District Board of Education.

Three Malibu challengers, Craig Foster, Karen Farrer and Seth Jacobson, are hoping to unseat incumbents Ben Allen, Jose Escarce and Maria Leon-Vazquez.

All three Malibu candidates, which are running on a reform slate, have said they will task the superintendent with increasing student achievement in schools across the district, reduce class sizes and close the achievement gap between different demographic groups. They have said they will pay for their ideas by reducing the administrative bureaucracy and creating an independent Malibu School District.

Allen has said he will set high academic expectations and standards, look to preserve programs that are at the core of the district such as art and athletics and address the needs of both Malibu and Santa Monica.

Leon-Vazquez has said she will work to create a culture of inclusion and trust among all families, modernize school facilities, increase revenue through district-wide fundraising and close the achievement gap.

Escarce has said he will seek to preserve programs while balancing the budget, promote teachers' professional development and strengthen intervention programs.

Voters will also decide whether to approve a $385 million bond measure that will go toward facility and technology improvements. The measure needs 55 percent of voter support to pass.

If Measure ES passes, 20 percent of the funds are already slated to go toward Malibu schools.

Measure ES is meant to provide a portion of more than $1 billion of needed improvements at schools in Santa Monica and Malibu, according to assessments by the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District. 

Projects for Measure ES funding will be selected through a district-wide facility assessment and draft Master Plan, according to SMMUSD Superintendent Sandra Lyon.

"Passage of these three measures will ensure the resources that our local schools need," Lyon said in a letter to the community on Oct. 11.

In Malibu, about $70 million is needed to upgrade science labs, parts of the auditorium, an expanded outdoor eating and lunch shelters, gym and locker room upgrades, and mechanical infrastructure upgrades at Malibu High School.

Nearly $500 million is needed for improvements at Santa Monica High School.

At elementary schools across the district about $93 million is needed to replace temporary classrooms with permanent ones.

Terry November 6, 2012 at 01:44 pm
i think we all support our local slate as being the best for malibu. that is why it is incomprehensible to me why laura rosenthal on the ben allen literature says "I am proud to support his reelection to the school board." does she really support
us here in malibu??
John Mazza November 6, 2012 at 09:26 pm
Vote the local slate and show your support for Malibu. It is time we had some voice on the school.,
Jessica E. Davis (Editor) November 7, 2012 at 06:13 am
Results have been very slow in coming in due to dense fog in the area. I have updated the story as much as I can tonight and I'll be back on in the morning.
Hans Laetz November 7, 2012 at 11:26 am
Measure ES, with 100 percent:
ES - SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT BONDS - YES 21,981 67.73% NO 10,472 32.27% School board race, 100 percent: BEN ALLEN 17,889 24.57 MARIA LEON-VAZQUEZ 14,294 19.63 JOSE ESCARCE 12,803 17.59 CRAIG FOSTER 11,653 16.01 KAREN FARRER 9,305 12.78 SETH JACOBSON 6,859 9.42 Congratulations to Seth, Karen and Craig, who were not only up against SMRR but a city seven times larger than Malibu. They did much better than could be reasonably hoped.
Craig Strachan November 7, 2012 at 12:39 pm
They did well, and running was the honorable thing for them to do. I think it was Craig Foster who said you can't complain about lack of Malibu representation on the board unless candidates from Malibu are willing to run.
I just wonder where this result leaves unification. What inference will the County Board of education be entitled to draw from these results?
Ann Tomkins November 7, 2012 at 01:06 pm
I'm happy that both Measure ES and Prop. 30 passed as it will be good for the kids. However, the failure to elect even one representative from Malibu to the school board despite three excellent candidates leads to the conclusion that it may be time for Malibu to leave the district. Taxation without representation doesn't work well. If we can't solve the representation issue then we need to figure out how to split the district in a way that will ensure adequate resources for the children in Santa Monica and Malibu.
Thank you Craig, Karen and Seth for your efforts.
Terry November 7, 2012 at 01:23 pm
u all did a great job for malibu. you can be very proud of your accomplishments
Beate Nilsen November 8, 2012 at 07:29 pm
Re. "based on absentee ballots,"
Santa Monica City Hall sends faulty voting materials to Malibu: The City Clerk’s office discovered the error when a Malibu voter called and compared the two documents, said Sarah Gorman, Santa Monica’s City Clerk. http://www.malibutimes.com/news/article_bbf87d2e-2370-11e2-9cf9-0019bb2963f4.html

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Malibu Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Rainbow in Malibu 20112
Yvonne Carrison June 17, 2013 at 09:24 am
Luv the rainbow over our heavenly canyon, we are truly blessed to live here! Gratitude
Snookie Ravioli June 17, 2013 at 08:32 am
I doubt it matters much. The Malibu mayor is no more than the presiding officer of the councilRead More meetings. In a council-manager form of government, which Malibu has, the mayor has very little power--a good thing in Malibu considering its history. The mayor in Malibu is a ceremonial position and s/he has no more actual power than the other council members. The game of musical chairs is not a bad thing in the Malibu council. Consider the alternative!
Snookie Ravioli June 17, 2013 at 08:44 am
A follow-up to Tom Brady's idea of annelected mayor. That woukd require a change in the form ofRead More government in Malibu to a Mayor-Manager form. The Mayor-Manager form is best for larger cities. Most cities the size of Malibu have the Council-Manager form because experience shows it works best for small cities. Having an elected mayor with the power of an elected mayor could create more problems than it solves. It would completely change the political environent in Malibu, and not for the better. Having weak, rotating mayors serves Malibu well.
Dee Rivellino June 17, 2013 at 06:07 pm
How do I explain why we have such a turnover in Mayors.? Because in intelligent communities theRead More answer would sound very pathetic. ..Well, let me start from the beginning when no one on the first, second, third, fourth, etc. Councils could decide how long the Mayor should serve ..so some genius came up with rotation and actually that's ok because all the Mayor does anyway is pose for pictures with the current flock of so called Celebrities. This goes on the list of why Malibu is always so different from other normal town around us.(An article I wrote months ago in the Surfside news) The Council meets, accomplishes little, a new Mayor is selected and life goes on. ... Elected officials(that's a joke too since only less than 3,000 people ever show up to vote out of 13,000 residents).. You can't ask questions like why our Mayor moves like the waves of the Ocean when most of the people in Malibu have no clue whats going on behind those thick doors at City Hall....the ones NOT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. Good for Burt, its only taken him 18 months to ask the hard questions.
Ted Vaill June 11, 2013 at 12:24 pm
Sounds like a great father, like his son. My father died in 1989, of cancer, but was a happy,Read More positive man to the end. My mother remarried nine years later, and remarked before she died at age 98 that she was blessed to be married to two wonderful men.
Max June 12, 2013 at 01:46 am
Dear Burt, A very toughing piece about your dear father. If only more fathers these days had theRead More values and character that your father had, this world would be a much better, more caring and loving place. I, too, had a father that was very giving and supportive of me. As both of my parents were holocaust survivors, my upbringing was greatly influenced by their horrific experiences in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Germany: losing 80% of our families, being in over a dozen different concentration camps and facing death and torture continuously. It’s amazing that they were able to lead “normal” lives upon immigrating to the US. Never finishing high school in Poland and not speaking a word of English, he attended night school (Fairfax High), worked during the days in the subcontractor business (he manufactured venetian blinds, screens and louver windows, all from scratch, decades before they were imported), became a citizen (as did my late Mom) and raised a family. They eked out a living (lower middle class), sent my younger brother and I to Hebrew school every day after public school classes, encouraged us to strive in school and somehow supported my hobby of being a radio amateur and my brother in violin studies. My parents always wanted me to become an electronics engineer (probably based on the dream my father had before WW2). Several of his proudest moments were when I got accepted into the physics grad schools of Princeton, Harvard, Caltech, Stanford and UCLA; when I received my PhD from Caltech; when I authored a cover feature article in Scientific American; and when I married my Beshert (soul mate). As a kid, I had a mild connection to you, Burt. I loved rulers, be they the fancy compact metallic ones that retracted by the push of a button, the ones that had a mechanical crank to reel in the ruler or the foldable wooden rulers (that I always associated with a magic trick), which I would use in school, the lab and measuring Ham radio antennas that I built as a kid. All this was influenced by my dear father, equipped with rulers of all kinds, which he used on a daily basis when precisely measuring windows and door frames, manufacturing venetian blinds, screen doors, etc. As a 5-year old, my father would take me to his 2-man shop and, as they worked, I would run around the place with various rulers and magnets in tow, measuring everything in sight and picking up nails and hardware. I guess the only difference between us is that you became a ruler and I became one who is ruled. Happy Father’s Day, Burt!
Sandra Peltola June 8, 2013 at 08:14 am
Time to support Vital Zuman Farm, 60 years of service to the community. If you have not been to theRead More farm, you must, before another season goes by! Get your nature on, see the crops growing, meet friends, eat good food, listen to music outdoors, view exceptional art; ALL AT VITAL ZUMAN FARM on Saturday June 22, 2013 from 12:00 noon till 6:00pm. More Info: 310-924-2210
Far Infrared Sauna w/LED Lights
Lisa Knickmeyer, L.Ac., DA June 7, 2013 at 01:05 pm
Endermologie is perfect for the summer! It increases fat cell metabolism, addresses trapped fat andRead More streamlines the body and treats fat resistant to diet and exercise.
Super Dume
Mizzy Pacheco June 7, 2013 at 05:37 pm
Thanks. Moon rise.
Ashley W. Lewis June 9, 2013 at 05:06 pm
Ashley Lewis Thanks for sharing the beautiful photo of the fabulous moon and rocks. Curious whatRead More kind of camera and lens was used?
Mizzy Pacheco June 9, 2013 at 08:29 pm
Thanks, that was taken with a canon 5d mark ii with the cannon f4 70-200mm set at about 125mm
Lois Livoti June 5, 2013 at 03:52 pm
Wow - how fantastic to see Jim Palmer's Malibu Vineyards on the map for world class wine making.Read More Also I want to congratulate you on your recent "Best of Class" award and 95 point rating from the Los Angeles International wine competition for your 2010 Malibu Vineyards Estate Syrah. Well done!!!!
kim devane June 6, 2013 at 10:15 am
Well done Jim! You are putting Malibu on the map for world class wine. Congratulations! kim &Read More larry
This sycamore tree on Trancas Canyon Road was six inches -- and five votes -- away from getting ground up to make way for four more unsafe, angle parking places on Trancas Canyon Rd. Now, can we get rid of the numbskull loading zone at PCH's corner?
J. Flo June 4, 2013 at 02:11 pm
I found the meeting, the speakers and the Planning Commission to be very impressive. Well-thoughtRead More out, intelligent.
Hans Laetz June 4, 2013 at 07:33 pm
So interesting to hear the applicant's lawyer explain that the billboard was appropriate becauseRead More "this is a commercial area." Oh, dear dear dear. That sort of explains the whole problem.
Proud Elitist June 10, 2013 at 06:54 am
First the Paige Sports Arena sign at Univ Missouri Columbia comes down. Next Trancas sign comesRead More down. Girl, you got some bad luck with signs.