School District to Again Seek Voter Approval for Levy
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Claremont school officials will try again to get voter approval of an assessment to pay for upkeep of school recreation facilities despite property owners’ rejection of a similar measure in a mail-in election two months ago.
The board of the Claremont Unified School District this week began laying the groundwork to hold a second mail-in election with results to be counted Dec. 1. The board has hired Shilts Consultants, an engineering firm, to prepare a new report on need for the Recreation Assessment District.
The first mail-in election was held in the wake of Proposition 218, an initiative passed by voters statewide in November that requires property owners or the local electorate approve assessments by two-thirds majority. The recreation assessment was set four years ago when only the school board vote was required to approve it.
Asked whether they wish to continue the assessment, 52.2% of property owners opposed the assessment. The assessment faced strong opposition from the Claremont Assn. for Better Government.
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