School board elections in all Tracy-area districts brought
out several new names this year and all but one incumbent back for re-election.
Five candidates — three of them incumbents — will run for
four spots on the seven-member Tracy Unified School District Board of Trustees.
When 15-year trustee Joan Feller retired earlier this year
for health reasons, she left an unexpired two-year term up for grabs.
Eight-year trustee Kelly Lewis will run in her place against
newcomer Mark Spector, a Bay Area software engineer.
Lewis planned to end his career as trustee this year, but
when the two-year spot opened, he decided to give it a shot.
“I wanted to see a few of the things we started finished,”
he said of his decision to run again for the 16,500-student district, which
this year saw a spate of new construction paid for by a 2006 $51 million school
bond.
Board President James Vaughn ends his first term on the
school board this year and has registered to run for re-election along with
four-term incumbent Tom Hawkins.
Newly retired Tracy Adult School Principal Walter Gouveia
announced early this summer his decision to run after stepping down from 29
years as a district counselor-then-administrator.
Father-of-three Greg Silva will also run for a full four-year
term.
The 22-year
resident has served on several school commissions, including the Measure E
oversight committee, a group that keeps the district accountable for its $51
million bond money.
Meanwhile, five candidates will vie for two seats on the
Lammersville Elementary School District Board of Trustees in a year when
district leaders are making headway in establishing independence from the
neighboring Tracy school district.
It’s also the first year Lammersville, being the area’s
youngest district, made it to the general election ballot.
“It’s pretty exciting,” said Noel Balzarini of the
district’s superintendent’s office.
Board President Matthew Balzarini will retire from the
five-member school board and run instead for the inaugural Mountain House Community
Services District governing board.
Incumbent Yolanda Salsedo filed for re-election for the
near-1,800-student district.
In addition to the active trustee, candidates for the
Mountain House school district include retired office manager Melissa Engelbert,
school teacher-vice principal Benjamin Fobert, professor-and-university
psychologist James Hiramoto and Pulte Homes certified public accountant Colin
Clements.
Most candidates cited unification, wanting to be involved in
their kids’ education and setting the tone for a growing district as the crux
of why they chose to run.
Plans to someday build a new high school need to be tempered
with wise money management, Clements said, adding that the addition of a
secondary-level school in the unincorporated community “would be an ideal
capstone for the district.”
He said he’d also like to see more transparency among board
members about why decisions — especially those financial in nature — are made.
Hiramoto, who heads the psychology department at Alliant
International University in San Francisco, said he believes his background in
public education gives him an outlook valuable to help guide a young school
district.
At Jefferson School District, two of five trustees’ terms
expire this year and both incumbents, Debbie Wingo and Peter Carlson, have
pulled papers to run again against Tracy childcare provider Jacqueline Thomas.
Wingo and Carlson have both been trustees for the
2,400-student district since 1996.
Banta and New Jerusalem elementary school districts each have
three-member boards and since no new candidates filed before the early August
deadline, sitting trustees will be automatically reappointed.
• To view the registered candidates, visit the San Joaquin
County Registrar of Voters Office Website at http://www.sjcrov.org/uploads/candidatelist.pdf.
• To reach Tracy Press reporter Jennifer Wadsworth, call
830-4225 or e-mail jwadsworth@tracypress.com.
