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June 2006 San Francisco general election

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TheJune 2006 San Francisco general elections were held on June 6, 2006, inSan Francisco,California. The elections included one seat to theSan Francisco County Superior Court and fourSan Francisco ballot measures.[1]

Superior Court

[edit]

Incumbent judge Lillian K. Sing won reelection.[1][2]

San Francisco County Superior Court Seat 8 election, 2006
CandidateVotes%
Lillian K. Sing (incumbent)79,95368.28
Eric M. Safire36,63731.29
Write-in5010.43
Invalid or blank votes40,28125.78
Total votes156,272100.00
Turnout{{{votes}}}37.11%

Measures

[edit]
Note: "City" refers to the San Francisco municipal government.

San Francisco voters voted in favor of Proposition B, requiring property sellers to disclose details of past evictions to potential buyers.[3]

Proposition A

[edit]

Proposition A would allocate $10 million from the city's General Fund for the next three fiscal years for violence prevention and intervention services, to establish a Homicide Prevention Planning Council to develop and annually revise a Homicide Prevention Plan, and to create the position of Survivors' Advocate and a Survivors' Fund under the auspices of the District Attorney.

Proposition A
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum failedNo69,06050.76
Yes66,98249.24
Invalid or blank votes20,23012.95
Total votes156,272100.00

Proposition B

[edit]

Proposition B would require landlords to, before offering to sell buildings of two or more residential units, disclose to all potential buyers the specific legal grounds for any evictions resulting in vacant lots at the time of sale, and to disclose whether the tenants were elderly or disabled.

Proposition B
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum passedYes71,44052.22
No65,37347.78
Invalid or blank votes19,45912.45
Total votes156,272100.00

Proposition C

[edit]

Proposition C would change the city's appointment process to the Transbay Joint Powers Authority by designating theMayor and two members of theBoard of Supervisors to represent the city.

Proposition C
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum failedNo93,90571.72
Yes37,03028.28
Invalid or blank votes25,33716.21
Total votes156,272100.00

Proposition D

[edit]

Proposition D would create the Laguna Honda Hospital Special Use District encompassing theLaguna Honda Hospital and Rehabilitation Center, limit the patients who can receive care at Laguna Honda Hospital and certain other facilities, and allow privately owned residential health care facilities to operate in "public" districts.

Proposition D
ChoiceVotes%
Referendum failedNo99,06073.66
Yes35,41826.34
Invalid or blank votes21,79413.95
Total votes156,272100.00

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"June 6, 2006 Final Election Results".SF Elections. RetrievedMarch 11, 2025.
  2. ^"Superior Court Office No. 8".The San Francisco Examiner. June 7, 2006. RetrievedMarch 11, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.
  3. ^Eslinger, Bonnie (June 7, 2006)."Prop. B: Eviction measure passes".The San Francisco Examiner. RetrievedMarch 11, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.

External links

[edit]
Elections and referendums inSan Francisco,California
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