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Recount Asked for Defeated County Transportation Sales Tax

The Alameda County Transportation Commission said Thursday it has requested a recount on the narrow defeat of Measure B1, the one-cent sales tax boost that failed by a tiny margin to receive the necessary two-thirds approval.

The Alameda County Transportation Commission announced today, Thursday, that it has asked for a recount of the election results showing a narrow defeat of the proposed 1-cent sales tax increase for Alameda County transportation, Measure B1.

If only 400 votes – about 0.08 percent of ballots cast – had gone the other way, the county-wide measure on the Nov. 6 ballot would have passed.

But final election results certified Wednesday by the Alameda County Registrar of Voters show that the measure fell short of the required two-thirds approval. Measure B1 received 350,899 yes votes, or 66.53 percent of total votes cast. No votes totaled 176,504.

The measure was intended to address declining state and federal funding for local transportation and would have raised $7.8 billion between 2013 and 2043, according to an analysis by the Oakland League of Women Voters.

The executive director of the Alameda County Transportation Commission, Arthur Dao, said in a prepared statement:

“We have an obligation to the 66.53 percent of Alameda County voters who supported Measure B1 to leave no stone unturned. After receiving such strong support, we won’t turn away a critical $7.8 billion investment prematurely.”

Dao told Patch that the commission is requesting a "limited recount" for now, starting with precincts in Berkeley that showed high support but significant under-voting. Depending on the results of the limited recount, the agency may request a more extensive recount, he said. 

The measure would have extended the current half-cent sales tax approved as Measure B by Alameda County voters in 1986 and 2000 and due to expire in 2022. It would also have added an additional half-cent to the sales tax.

The League of Women Voters analysis, prepared before the election, outlined what the money would have been spent on: "More than three-fourths of the revenues would pay for improvements in three categories: transit, including paratransit; local streets and roads; and bicycle and pedestrian projects. Smaller amounts would go to freeways, transit-oriented development, freight transportation, and a student transit pass program."

A news release from the county transportation commission Thursday said:

"By placing Measure B1 on the ballot, Alameda CTC was responding to the need to develop new funding solutions for transportation — to update critical transportation infrastructure, fund mass transit and paratransit operations, increase transit choices and reduce congestion and pollution. Alameda CTC has already leveraged $756 million of current Measure B funds into $3.8 billion in capital improvements in Alameda County — more than $2.5 billion worth are under construction now — and has pumped $495 million back into local businesses in Alameda County in the past decade, creating nearly 5,100 jobs per year."

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
gretchen davidson May 21, 2013 at 12:00 pm
Yes I would love to take one off of your hands. Please email me at gretchen_davidson@yahoo.com toRead More discuss off board.
Elaine Binger May 20, 2013 at 07:30 am
Gretchen, I have several different sizes of rakes. If you want to come see them, let me know throughRead More Patch. Elaine
gretchen davidson May 16, 2013 at 02:50 pm
Was that what i heard in the middle of the night on Wednesday? I thought i was dreaming. It soundedRead More like some sort of loudspeaker.
Robin M. Blind May 15, 2013 at 09:16 pm
Gee...are you SURE that alarm IS coming from Portola Middle School? Um...I suppose that you ARERead More sure! Yes...it IS turbo-annoying but I had assumed that it was some stupid car alarm.
Bonnie MacKenzie May 11, 2013 at 11:55 am
Can you please be more specific about the nature of the problem for those of us who do not live inRead More the neighborhood?
John Stashik April 25, 2013 at 09:03 pm
Thanks for the press release, err... story. Now how about El Cerrito news? The Patch staff is lazy.
Dorothy Coakley April 8, 2013 at 08:02 pm
Good thought, Julian.
Julian April 8, 2013 at 11:32 am
I've spoken with him, he is educated, intelligent and articulate. He is also angry and sometimesRead More irrational. I dont know his story but his "street art" stands on its own legs. If you would like to help him, and yourself, buy and enjoy his art.
Rita Wilson April 7, 2013 at 09:51 pm
A neighbor of mine on Colusa tried to give him food when he was on Colusa, but he refused, so IRead More never tried. Dorothy, is that the shelter near the Berkeley Historical Society/Veteran's Building? Perhaps he would need a ride to it. Perhaps he's concerned about leaving his things there if he can't be there during the day. I'm afraid I don't know enough about it.
Dorothy Coakley March 27, 2013 at 04:36 pm
I did mention that I'm donating 10% of my royalties for "Midnight" to the EC's Open SpaceRead More fund, didn't I? I'm a Down-home Ten Percenter.
Dorothy Coakley March 27, 2013 at 04:31 pm
Lucy, I like the idea in principal, but in reality I think it would just give ECPD more work to do.Read More "People hanging out" doesn't necessarily translate to a friendly,fun-filled, folksy kind of environment. It *can* mean quite the reverse. "Midnight On the Ohlone" sounds like a new recording. Something like "I left my little babeeeeee, down by the tracks....and now I want her back....she's a needle in the haaaaaaay staaaaack...' Arhoolie awaits.
Lucy March 27, 2013 at 12:58 pm
What a great idea for pocket parks!!! I am all for them. Instead of spening a big amount on oneRead More (which we don't have space anyway), I would like to see many mini parks of $20,000 along the Bart tracks. With more visibility and people hanging out, it would make Bart paths safer too, especially the one around fairmont park. Really mini pocket parks just needs some play structures, benches and tables there.