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San Francisco County, CA November 4, 2008 Election
Proposition F
Holding All Scheduled City Elections Only in Even- Numbered Years
City of San Francisco

Charter Amendment - Majority Approval Required

Fail: 144,592 / 45.00% Yes votes ...... 176,692 / 55.00% No votes

See Also: Index of all Propositions

Results as of Jan 24 10:41am, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (580/580)
Information shown below: Fiscal Impact | Yes/No Meaning | Arguments |

Shall the City shift all City elections except special elections to even-numbered years after the November 2011 election?

Fiscal Impact from City Controller:
Should the proposed charter amendment be approved by the voters, in my opinion, it would decrease the cost of government by a minimum of $3.7 million over two years by consolidating elections and eliminating municipal elections in odd-numbered years. However, these savings would be reduced or eliminated if a special election is required in an odd-numbered year.

Under the amendment, there would be no further elections in odd-numbered years after November 2011 in San Francisco unless a special election is called. The amendment provides that the Mayor, Sheriff and District Attorney who are elected in November 2011 would serve five-year terms, moving the subsequent election for these offices to November 2016. The City Attorney and Treasurer who are elected in November 2009 would serve five-year terms, moving the subsequent elections for these offices to November 2014.

These changes would save the City approximately $4.8 million for the cost of running general municipal elections in odd-numbered years, offset by approximately $1.1 million for the cost of printing ballot cards and other materials that would be shifted from one year to the next, for a net savings of $3.7 million over two years beginning in Fiscal Year 2013-2014.

Meaning of Voting Yes/No
A YES vote on this measure means:
If you vote "yes," you want to change the Charter to shift all City elections except special elections to evennumbered years after the November 2011 election.

A NO vote on this measure means:
If you vote "no," you do not want to make this change to the Charter.

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Arguments For Proposition F Arguments Against Proposition F
For voters, the sheer number of elections in San Francisco is almost overwhelming. Over the last forty years, there have been up to three elections a year. Voter fatigue is apparent when you take a look at the numbers.

On average over the last 40 years, only 40% of registered voters cast ballots in municipal elections in odd-numbered years. On the other hand, in even-year elections, 70.45% of voters on average turn out to vote for the president; 61.35% of voters on average turn out to vote for governor.

Currently, the city holds municipal elections for the Offices of the Mayor, Sheriff, District Attorney, City Attorney and Treasurer in odd-numbered years, while holding general elections that include the offices of California State Governor and President of the United States in the even-numbered years.

By combining odd-year and even-year elections, Prop F will ensure that a much larger, more vibrant and more diverse body of voters will choose San Francisco's leaders and make decisions on policy that affect every resident. Combining the election cycles will increase civic participation, prevent voter burnout, and give a voice to more San Franciscans.

The numbers don't lie: The turnout in the November 2007 election was the lowest ever + 35%. That means a very low number of voters in San Francisco choose the elected officials who hold the offices of Mayor, Sheriff, and District Attorney.

When a minority of the voters elects the leaders, democracy is not working.

Additionally, this measure will save the city millions of dollars, more than $3 million every two years when elections are combined.

A healthier voter turnout means a healthier democracy.

Yes on Prop F.

Supervisor Jake McGoldrick
Supervisor Aaron Peskin, President
Supervisor Chris Daly
Supervisor Bevan Dufty
Supervisor Sophie Maxwell
Supervisor Gerardo Sandoval

Rebuttal to Arguments For
Voter turnout is NOT the only measure of "healthy democracy," and mixing our local contests into the shuffle of a huge federal election DECREASES citizen participation in local contests.

Picture mayoral candidate forums as we know them: numerous, well-attended, vocal, they allow the incoming officeholder to know the needs and priorities of real San Franciscans. Now picture mayoral forums in a year with a Presidential election: forums would be fewer, less attended, and the exchange between citizens and leaders would dwindle. Grassroots campaigns would suffer because local candidates would have to fight for airtime with Presidential and state candidates.

Picture the op-ed pages of area newspapers and blogs. In an odd-year, local outlets cover local issues, increasing participation in democracy. In a Presidential year, media focus is necessarily on national issues.

Healthier democracy? Hardly.

Lastly, Measure F would NOT save $3M per biennium. $3M is the total cost of an election, and much of that would get shifted to the even-year elections, not saved. Two significant costs of elections are ballot cards and printing costs/postage for the voter pamphlet--and both will cost more if we combine our elections. Moreover, there WILL be special elections in odd-numbered years, as we have an active citizenry and Board of Supervisors that knows how to get measures on the ballot. Special elections are costly: $3M in savings is an illusion.

Ensure citizen participation in local elections continues.

Vote No on F!

Supervisor Elsbernd
Supervisor Alioto-Pier
Supervisor Chu

Measure F prevents San Franciscans from focusing on local issues and risks damaging Elections Department operations.

San Franciscans currently have the unique opportunity to focus on City candidates and local ballot measures in off-year elections. Although voter turnout is lower, public knowledge of candidates is greater and input into city elections is higher when local campaigns are not forced to compete with state and federal candidates and measures for the attention of community forums, neighborhood organizations, and the media. As an example, if the mayoral election coincided with the presidential, a significant loss of voter focus and attention on our City's future would result. Citizen involvement, grassroots work and diverse voices would all suffer.

Additionally, long lapses between elections would irreparably damage the Elections Department. We now have a Department that conducts elections efficiently and equitably. Effective elections rely on a competent workforce--specifically, the ability to re-hire trained temporary workers when necessary-- which becomes difficult, if not impossible, with elections that are up to two years apart. If Measure F passes, skilled workers will be lost, and the Department will be forced to hire dozens of unskilled temporary workers for sensitive, important work: long layoffs between elections will ruin the readiness and human capital in a reliable Department.

Protect San Franciscans right to have their voices heard on local elections and ensure our Elections Department can continue to serve the public well.

Vote No on F!

Sean Elsbernd, Supervisor District 7
Michela Alioto-Pier, Supervisor District 2
Carmen Chu, Supervisor District 4
Ross Mirkarimi, Supervisor District 5

Rebuttal to Arguments Against
Opponents' arguments against Prop F do not stand up to scrutiny.

Opponents' arguments ignore the fact that only 35% of San Francisco voters showed up to "focus" on the last municipal election (November 2007). The leaders of San Francisco were chosen by 35% of registered San Franciscans.

We believe in a majoritarian democratic process. Prop F will ensure that local, statewide and national candidates ALL receive the greatest exposure to voters.

Opponents' arguments that the change will destroy Elections Department operations make even less sense. There is no evidence, anecdotal or otherwise, that operations will not carry on in the same efficient manner. In fact, the very idea that a department can't train temporary workers every two years instead of one is laughable at best.

The cost savings are not minimal, but millions every year without an election. Some opponents argue that there may need to be costly special elections in years without elections. In 2008, San Francisco held regular elections in February and June, and still needed to hold a special election in April. Special elections are rare, and will happen if needed, regardless of the number of elections in a year.

The arguments against Prop F are ignoring the facts. Combining the election cycles will increase civic participation, prevent voter burnout, and give a voice to more San Franciscans.

Vote Yes on Prop F.

Supervisor Jake McGoldrick
Supervisor Aaron Peskin
Supervisor Chris Daly
Supervisor Bevan Dufty
Supervisor Sophie Maxwell
Supervisor Gerardo Sandoval


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Created: January 24, 2009 10:41 PST
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