It’s official: All three school district levies pass on Peninsula

Voters in the Cape Flattery, Chimacum and Sequim school districts have officially approved levy proposals, according to ballot totals released Friday by the Jefferson and Clallam county auditor’s offices.

All three levy requests needed a supermajority of 60 percent voter approval to pass.

In Sequim, which crosses the Clallam-Jefferson county line, 65.9 percent of voters said yes to the district’s levy request.

The Sequim replacement levy is projected to increase levy revenue by $200,000 to $2.8 million in 2007 and by about 5 percent annually through 2010.

In both counties, 8,103 voters supported the Sequim levy request and 4,171 voted against it. Turnout was more than 63 percent.

In 2005, Sequim School District taxpayers were paying 98 cents for every $1,000 of a home’s value, meaning a homeowner with a house valued at $300,000 paid $294.

In 2007, the levy rate is estimated to drop to 83 cents, or about $249 a year for a home valued at $300,000.

The levy rate is projected to decrease by 1 cent every year afterward through 2010.

Chimacum turnout good

In the Chimacum School District, the levy passed by a 68.5 percent to 31.5 percent margin with 2,945 yes votes and 1,355 no votes. Turnout was more than 53 percent.

The Chimacum levy proposal asked voters to approve a three-year, $5.7 million maintenance and operations levy.

For a home valued at $200,000, a Chimacum School District taxpayer will pay an estimated $280 in 2007-08, $222 in 2008-09 and $220 in 2009-10.

The Chimacum tax rate is projected to drop from the current levy amount of $1.426 per $1,000 of assessed valuation to $1.10 in 2009-10 because of increasing construction within the Chimacum School District.

And in Cape Flattery, the levy request passed by the widest margin on the Peninsula — 71 percent to 29 percent with 311 yes votes and 127 no votes.

Turnout was at 42 percent in the 1,041-voter school district.

The Cape Flattery levy allows the school district to continue collecting $335,000 annually for the next four years.

The levy costs a homeowner $2.77 for every $1,000 of assessed value, meaning the owner of a house valued at $125,000 will pay about $345 a year to fund the levy.

Final official results, which will not vary much in either county, will be released on Friday.

More in News

Noah Glaude, executive director of the North Olympic Library System, welcomes a crowd to the ceremonial groundbreaking of the Sequim Library expansion on Wednesday. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim library breaks ground

3,800-square-foot expansion expected to be complete by spring 2025

Citizen of the Year Susie Brandelius with the Forks Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Lissy Andros, who caught up with Brandelius on Monday to present her award and flowers. (Christi Baron/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Forks chamber celebrates community awards

Citizen, volunteer, business of the year lauded

Flight operations set for this week

There will be field carrier landing practice operations for aircraft… Continue reading

Brinnon man in custody after search

A Brinnon man who was wanted after allegedly breaking into… Continue reading

The U.S. Coast Guard cutter Anacapa is being decommissioned after 34 years of service, the last of which had the ship homeported in Port Angeles. A ceremony Friday bid farewell to the vessel, which will make its final journey to the Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore, Maryland in the coming weeks. (Peter Segall / Peninsula Daily News)
Port Angeles-based cutter Anacapa decommissioned

110-foot vessel is one of few remaining Island-class cutters

PASD board approves pact with paraeducators

Two-year agreement hikes salary steps, wages

Acting city clerk Heather Robley, right, swears in new city council member Nicole Hartman on Monday after she was appointed to fill former mayor Tom Ferrell’s seat. Hartman will serve through certification of the 2025 general election. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Hartman named to Sequim council

PUD staffer to serve in former mayor’s seat

Poulsbo man dies in wreck south of Hood Canal Bridge

A Poulsbo man died in a vehicle collision in… Continue reading

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Clallam County to discuss Elwha River watershed

Meetings across Clallam and Jefferson counties

Department of Ecology declares statewide drought emergency

Clallam County PUD #1 is requesting that water utility… Continue reading

Clallam County Fire District Captain Marty Martinez sprays water on a hot spot of a fire that destroyed a house and adjoining RV in the 700 block of East Kemp Street near Port Angeles on Friday morning. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
One found dead in fire east of Port Angeles

House, garage destroyed in Kemp Street blaze

Government officials applaud the ribbon cutting at the Point Hudson breakwater in Port Townsend on Wednesday afternoon. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/For Peninsula Daily News)
Point Hudson breakwater opens centennial celebration

$12 million port project finishes on time, under budget