I’ll be posting updates (below) about individual precinct results when I find the time. The precinct map is here; you can compare it with the elementary school attendance area map here.
The top three candidates will be elected. The final results are:
| Candidate | Votes | Percentage* |
|---|---|---|
√ Dorau | 3738 | 43% |
√ Lynch | 3121 | 36% |
√ Kirschling | 3041 | 35% |
| Hemingway | 2936 | 34% |
| Cook | 2671 | 31% |
| Barron | 2563 | 29% |
| Lewis | 2392 | 27% |
| Geerdes | 2019 | 23% |
| Tate | 659 | 8% |
*The third column won’t add up to 100% because every voter can cast up to three votes.
UPDATE 1:00 a.m. Time to call it a night. Congratulations to Tuyet Dorau, Chris Lynch, and Brian Kirschling. Thanks to Phil Hemingway, Karla Cook, Sara Barron, Jason Lewis, Gregg Geerdes, and Jim Tate for running.
UPDATE 12:55 a.m. According to the site meter, this blog had over three thousand page views today. I’m glad it’s serving some purpose, even if it’s just to pass the time when you’re waiting for results to come in.
UPDATE 12:45 a.m.: John Deeth with some good commentary here. He points out one striking fact: half the precincts were won by candidates who finished outside the top three.
UPDATE 12:15 a.m.: Does bullet voting pay? The Save Hoover group urged its supporters to use all three of their votes, because the goal was to push as many pro-Hoover candidates up as possible. But in other circumstances, bullet voting (i.e., using less than all three votes) made perfect sense. Voters in North Liberty and Coralville, for example, appear to have bullet voted for the two candidates from Coralville, Dorau and Lynch. What if they had used that third vote instead? I experimented by reallocating the unused votes from those precincts among the remaining seven candidates, in the same proportion as those candidates received in those precincts. The result: if those voters had used all three of their votes, they would have pushed Kirschling and Hemingway up just enough for them to pass Chris Lynch, who would then have lost by a handful of votes. Those bullet voters had exactly the effect they desired.
UPDATE 11:53: Over three thousand votes – more than Phil Hemingway received total – went uncast because people chose not to use all three of their votes.
UPDATE 9:37: By contrast, the voters at City High precinct used 94% of their votes, on average.
UPDATE 9:32: A relatively low rate of bullet-voting tonight. On average, people used 88% of their votes; usually that number is down closer to 80 -- as it was in Coralville and North Liberty.
Hemingway | 204 |
Lewis | 183 |
Barron | 176 |
Cook | 170 |
Dorau | 161 |
Kirschling | 152 |
Geerdes | 91 |
Lynch | 88 |
Tate | 72 |
Barron | 457 |
Hemingway | 391 |
Geerdes | 301 |
Lewis | 254 |
Dorau | 232 |
Kirschling | 227 |
Cook | 219 |
Lynch | 94 |
Tate | 58 |
Kirschling | 504 |
Cook | 429 |
Hemingway | 402 |
Barron | 329 |
Lewis | 306 |
Geerdes | 289 |
Dorau | 193 |
Lynch | 171 |
Tate | 53 |
Hemingway | 98 |
Cook | 57 |
Kirschling | 53 |
Geerdes | 38 |
Barron | 33 |
Lewis | 32 |
Lynch | 24 |
Tate | 8 |
Dorau | 6 |
Cook | 295 |
Kirschling | 292 |
Hemingway | 278 |
Barron | 250 |
Lewis | 218 |
Dorau | 196 |
Geerdes | 147 |
Lynch | 102 |
Tate | 86 |
Kirschling | 560 |
Cook | 514 |
Hemingway | 508 |
Dorau | 493 |
Lynch | 431 |
Barron | 398 |
Lewis | 370 |
Geerdes | 338 |
Tate | 134 |
Dorau | 892 |
Lynch | 814 |
Kirschling | 242 |
Barron | 208 |
Hemingway | 208 |
Cook | 199 |
Lewis | 158 |
Geerdes | 146 |
Tate | 69 |
Dorau | 747 |
Lynch | 719 |
Kirschling | 255 |
Hemingway | 169 |
Lewis | 167 |
Barron | 151 |
Cook | 146 |
Geerdes | 143 |
Tate | 48 |
Geerdes | 147 |
Hemingway | 135 |
Lewis | 116 |
Dorau | 111 |
Lynch | 105 |
Barron | 96 |
Kirschling | 67 |
Cook | 63 |
Tate | 17 |
Kirschling | 427 |
Lewis | 394 |
Cook | 384 |
Hemingway | 337 |
Barron | 316 |
Dorau | 249 |
Geerdes | 203 |
Lynch | 127 |
Tate | 52 |
Dorau | 454 |
Lynch | 443 |
Kirschling | 261 |
Hemingway | 205 |
Cook | 195 |
Lewis | 194 |
Geerdes | 174 |
Barron | 146 |
Tate | 62 |
UPDATE 9:00: Precinct-by-precinct commentary coming soon.
As far as I could tell, twelve incumbents have lost in the last thirty-four years. In 1987, three incumbents were turned out at once. Two lost in 1999.
UPDATE 8:57: Turnout was 11.88%, not quite double what it was two years ago.
UPDATE 8:51: Hemingway loses by 104 votes.
UPDATE 8:50: It's all in. The top three are Dorau, Lynch, and Kirschling. Numbers in a minute.
UPDATE 8:48: Kirschling beat Hemingway in North Liberty, so I would guess that he will do the same in Coralville. But we'll see.
UPDATE 8:36: Remember, Hemingway lost by 89 votes last time around.
UPDATE 8:35: So we're just waiting on Coralville. Lynch will probably leap into the top three, pushing either Kirschling or Hemingway out. Hemingway needs to gain 70 votes on Kirschling have a chance.
UPDATE 8:33: The Save Hoover endorsees, Barron, Hemingway, and Geerdes, are the top three at the City High precinct.
UPDATE 8:25: Results are coming in too fast for me to keep up with. Stay tuned.
UPDATE 8:09: Early votes, which will make up probably around 15% of the total, are in, with Kirschling, Cook, and Hemingway in the top three.
UPDATE 7:38: Might as well get ready for the votes to come in.
UPDATE 6:53: The 6:00 turnout figures are in. It’s impossible to make any projection based on them, because the auditor hasn’t reported 6:00 numbers in the past. But, counting early voters, 9.6% of the voters have now already voted. Lemme’s turnout rate is 21.3%, way ahead of its closest competitors, Hills (14.3%) and Mercer Park (13.7%). In sheer numbers, Coralville still leads, with 1056 voters already (counting early voters). North Liberty, Horace Mann, and Lemme are close behind. The west side, Coralville and North Liberty precincts, taken together, account for about 44% of the total votes so far cast.
UPDATE 6:45: So last night the school board adopted its class size policy on maximum class sizes at different grade levels. The superintendent described the policy as setting “aspirational goals” for class sizes, because, as the article says, there are “building and financial limitations that could prevent all classes from meeting the policy.”
This board’s achievements consist of an awful lot of aspirational goal-setting. The board adopted diversity goals without any discussion of what it would take to meet them, then adopted a long-term facilities “plan” that included $100 million more in spending than the board has access to, and now has set class size goals that it can’t afford to implement. Meanwhile, two years went by without the board installing air conditioning in the schools that need it, and the board has again fallen behind in the process of reviewing the Superintendent’s contract, because of the “busy school board schedule.”
UPDATE 6:30: It’s taking a while to get the 6:00 turnout numbers fully up on the auditor’s website. They won’t give us much to go by, anyway, since this is the first year they’ve done 6:00 numbers.
UPDATE 5:22: In the comments here, John Deeth points out that the newly drawn City High precinct contains some areas that have a high concentration of U of I students, who are less likely to vote in local elections. So the relatively low turnout at City doesn’t necessarily reflect a low turnout in the Longfellow and Hoover neighborhoods that are part of that precinct.
More turnout numbers shortly after 6:00.
UPDATE 5:03: In other news, I see that some schools are doing their part to prepare kids for adulthood in this era of NSA surveillance.
UPDATE 3:22 p.m.: The 3:00 turnout numbers are in. If the pattern is similar to the last two school elections, it looks like we will hit about 12.5% turnout. My guess (using my patented combination of dubious assumptions and questionable multipliers) is that you’ll need about 2,450 votes to win one of the three available seats.
Keep in mind that turnout in the last school board election was just shy of 6%, and that was considered high.
Patterns are similar to this morning. Fourteen percent of the Lemme precinct has now voted (including early voters), almost 5 percentage points ahead of its nearest competitor (Mercer Park). In terms of sheer numbers, Coralville is the only precinct to have already turned out over 700 voters (again, including early voters); Horace Mann and Lemme have broken 600.
Precincts that contain parts of the Hoover attendance area have turned out at a rate of 7.5%; non-Hoover precincts have turned out at a rate of 5.9%. (Compare that to the February RPS vote, when there was no significant difference between Hoover and non-Hoover precincts.
But this is all just reading tea leaves. It’s hard to make historical comparisons because these are newly drawn precincts, especially on the east side. And it’s hard to make comparisons across precincts, because some precincts have a lot of U of I students who are less likely to vote in local elections.
News coverage of turnout is here, here, here, and here. John Deeth’s commentary is here.
UPDATE 11:42 a.m.: The 11:00 turnout numbers are in. Looks to me like we could be headed closer to 12% or 13% turnout by the end of the day, a little higher than my estimate from this morning. If so, my guess is that you’d need over 2500 votes to win.
Turnout patterns are pretty similar to what they were at 9:00. Lemme is voting at a much higher rate than other precincts. Again, is that because it’s the home of Karla Cook and the heart of the far east side, or because it’s directly across the street from Hoover? Mercer Park is also voting at a high rate. It also includes neighborhoods most directly affected by the Hoover closure, and is the home precinct of Phil Hemingway and Jim Tate as well.
In sheer numbers, Horace Mann has turned out the most voters (including early voters) so far -- 430. It’s another Hoover precinct. Coralville is close behind, as are West High and Lemme.
UPDATE 10:34 a.m.: Based on the 9:00 a.m. turnout and the early voting, this election looks likely to break some records for turnout (at least for a school board election that is not accompanied by a bond referendum). Eight-hundred and twenty-six people voted this morning, and another 1,385 had already voted early. My rough guess is that that could put us in the neighborhood of almost 9,000 total voters, as compared to 4,492 two years ago. That would be 11% or 12% turnout.
My nerdy, numbers-crunching-informed (and probably wrong) guess is that it will take almost 2,400 votes to win one of the three available seats.
So far, the Lemme precinct has turned out at the highest rate. It’s the home precinct of Karla Cook, but also contains a big chunk of the Hoover attendance area. It’s a relatively small precinct, though, making up only about 6% of the total voters. In terms of sheer numbers, Horace Mann precinct has turned out the most – 332 voters (including early voters). Mann precinct is the home of Brian Kirschling, but it also contains a big chunk of Hoover. West High and Coralville have also turned out almost 300 voters each.
One of the things that will make numbers-parsing difficult tonight is that the Hoover attendance area is spread out relatively evenly over four precincts: City High, Horace Mann, Lemme, and Mercer Park.
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