Politics & Government
Lamorinda Voters Split On School Bonds, Sales Tax Hike Voted Down
Critics of Measure J argued past tax measures to improve transportation in Contra Costa have had a negligible effect.

LAMORINDA, CA — School bonds were on the ballot in both Lafayette and Moraga, with different results. Unofficial election results show that the bond measure passed in Lafayette, but was defeated in Moraga.
Voters in the Lafayette School District were supporting a seven-year, $290-a-year parcel tax to provide $3,011,360 annually in dedicated funding for neighborhood schools.
Passage of Measure L, which required a two-thirds vote, received 69.5 percent.
Find out what's happening in Lamorindafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Moraga's Measure M, which required a two-thirds vote to pass, fell just short, garnering 65.04 percent approval. The measure would have continued an existing $192-per-parcel tax to support school science, technology, engineering, math, arts and music programs, to maintain class sizes and keep schools safe. The parcel tax raises about $1 million a year.
However, since the hair-thin results are unofficial and mail-in ballots are accepted with election day postmarks, the results could reverse.
Find out what's happening in Lamorindafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Final but unofficial election results for Measure J, a 35-year half-cent sales tax to raise money for local roads, buses, rail, ferries and other transportation improvement projects in Contra Costa County, fell far short of the two-thirds approval needed to pass, and in fact didn't even make 50 percent.
Measure J would have raised an estimated $103 million over the 35 years to "directly benefit Contra Costa County residents."
Measure J would focus on improving major roadways that suffer from the worst traffic, including Interstate Highways 680, 580 and 80; state Highways 4 and 24; and arterials including Ygnacio Valley Road, Kirker Pass Road, Vasco Road, Bollinger Canyon Road, Central Avenue and Richmond Parkway.
It also would address issues such as safety at Contra Costa-area BART stations and the better synchronization of traffic lights on major roadways.
The need for more freeway expansion and improvement, better BART service, and a ferry boat service serving Contra Costa's north-shore cities, is almost universally acknowledged. But critics have challenged Measure J's lack of specifics, and contend that similar past tax measures to improve transportation in Contra Costa have had negligible effect on the county's increasing traffic volumes.
— Patch editor Bea Karnes and Bay City News contributed to this story
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