HomeMy WebLinkAbout2006-11-07 State Election WarrantCOMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
WILLIAM FRANCIS GALVIN
SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH
STATE ELECTION WARRANT
Middlesex, ss.
To any of the Constables of the Town of Reading, Greetings:
In the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, you are hereby required to notify and warn
the inhabitants of the Town of Reading, qualified to vote in State Election to vote at
Precincts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8
55 Walkers Brook Drive
(Former TASC Building)
'on TUESDAY, THE SEVENTH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2006, from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
for the following purpose:
To cast their votes in the State Election for the candidates for the following offices and
questions:
SENATOR IN CONGRESS FOR THIS COMMONWEALTH
GOVERNORILT. GOVERNOR FOR THIS COMMONWEALTH
ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR THIS COMMONWEALTH
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THIS COMMONWEALTH
TREASURER FOR THIS COMMONWEALTH
AUDITOR FOR THIS COMMONWEALTH
REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS 6" DISTRICT
COUNCILLOR . 6th DISTRICT
SENATOR. IN GENERAL COURT MIDDLESEX DISTRICT
REPRESENTATIVE IN GENERAL COURT. 20th & 30th MIDDLESEX DISTRICTS
DISTRICT ATTORNEY NORTHERN DISTRICT
CLERK OF COURTS MIDDLESEX COUNTY
REGISTER OF DEEDS MIDDLESEX SOUTH DISTRICT
6'' District
20th Middlesex District
30th Middlesex District
All Precincts
Precincts 1, 4, 6, 7 and 8
Precincts 2, 3, and 5
QUESTION 1: Law Proposed by Initiative Petition
Do you approve of a law summarized below, on which no vote was taken by the Senate or the
House of Representatives before May 3, 2006?
SUMMARY
This proposed law would allow local licensing authorities to issue licenses for food stores to
sell wine. The proposed law defines a "food store" as a retail vendor, such as a grocery store,
supermarket, shop, club, outlet, or warehouse-type seller, that sells food to consumers to be eaten
elsewhere (which must include meat, poultry, dairy products, eggs, fresh fruit and produce, and
other specified items), and that may sell other items usually found in grocery stores. Holders of
licenses to sell wine at food stores could sell wine either on its own or together with any other
items they sell.
The licensing authorities in any city or town of up to 5000 residents could issue up to 5 licenses
for food stores to sell wine. In cities or towns of over 5000 residents, one additional license
could be issued for each additional 5000 residents (or fraction of 5000). No person or business
could hold more than 10% of the total number of the licenses that could be issued under the
proposed law. Such licenses would not be counted when applying the laws that limit the number
of other kinds of alcoholic beverage licenses that may be issued or held. Any applicant for a
license would have to be approved by the state Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission, and
any individual applicant would have to be at least 21 years old and not have been convicted of a
felony.
In issuing any licenses for food stores to sell wine, local licensing authorities would have to
use the same procedures that apply to other licenses for the retail sale of alcoholic beverages.
Except where the proposed law has different terms, the same laws that apply to issuance,
renewal, suspension and termination of licenses for retail sales of alcoholic beverages which are
not to be consumed on the seller's premises, and that apply to the operations of holders of such
licenses, would govern licenses to sell wine at food stores, and the operation of holders of such
licenses. Local authorities could set fees for issuing and renewing such licenses.
A YES VOTE would create a new category of licenses for food stores to sell wine, and it would
allow local licensing authorities to issue such licenses.
A NO VOTE would make no change in the laws concerning the sale of wine
QUESTION 2: Law Proposed by Initiative Petition
Do you approve of a law summarized below, on which no vote was taken by the Senate or the
House of Representatives before May 3, 2006?
SUMMARY
This proposed law would allow candidates for public office to be nominated by more than
one political party or political designation, to have their names appear on the ballot once for each
nomination, and to have their votes counted separately for each nomination but then added
together to determine the winner of the election.
The proposed law would repeal an existing requirement that in order to appear on the state
primary ballot as a candidate for a political party's nomination for certain offices, a person
cannot have been enrolled in any other party during the preceding year. The requirement applies
to candidates for nomination for statewide office, representative in Congress, governor's
councillor, member of the state Legislature, district attorney, clerk of court, register of probate,
2
register of deeds, county commissioner,. sheriff, and county treasurer. The proposed law would
also allow any person to appear on the primary ballot as a candidate for a parry's nomination for
those offices if the party's state committee gave its written consent. The proposed law would
also repeal the existing requirement that in order to be nominated to appear as an unenrolled
candidate on the state election ballot, or on any city or town ballot following a primary, a person
cannot have been enrolled in any political party during the 90 days before the deadline for filing
nomination papers.
The proposed law would provide that if a candidate were nominated by more than one parry
or political designation, instead of the candidate's name being printed on the ballot once, with
the candidate allowed to choose the order in which the party or political designation names
appear after the candidate's name, the candidate's name would appear multiple times, once for
each nomination received. The candidate would decide the order in which the party or political
designation nominations would appear, except that all parties would be listed before all. political
designations. The ballot would allow voters who vote for a candidate nominated by multiple
parties or political designations to vote for that candidate under the party or political designation
line of their choice.
If a voter voted for the same candidate for the same office on multiple party or political
designation lines, the ballot would remain valid but would be counted as a single vote for the
candidate on a line without a party or political designation. If voting technology allowed, voting
machines would be required to prevent a voter from voting more than the number of times
permitted for any one office.
The proposed law would provide that if a candidate received votes under more than one party
or political designation, the votes would be combined for purposes of determining whether the
candidate had won the election. The total number of votes each candidate received under each
party or political designation would be recorded. Election officials would announce and record
both the aggregate totals and the total by party or political designation.
The proposed law would allow a political party to obtain official recognition if its candidate
had obtained at least 3% of the vote for any statewide office at either of the two most recent state
elections, instead of at only the most recent state election as under current law.
The proposed law would allow a person nominated as a candidate for any state, city or town
office to withdraw his name from nomination within six days after any party's primary election
for that office, whether or not the person sought nomination or was'nominated in that primary.
Any candidate who withdrew from an election could not be listed on the ballot for that election,
regardless of whether the candidate received multiple nominations.
The proposed law states that if any of its parts were declared invalid, the other parts would
stay in effect.
A YES VOTE would allow a candidate for public office to be nominated for the same office by
more than one political party or political designation at the same election.
A NO VOTE would make no change in the laws concerning nomination of candidates for public
office.
3
QUESTION 3: Law Proposed by Initiative Petition
Do you approve of a law summarized below, on which no vote was taken by the Senate or the
House of Representatives before May 3, 2006?
SUMMARY
. This proposed law would allow licensed and other authorized providers of child care in
private homes under the state's subsidized child care system to bargain collectively with the
relevant state agencies about all terms and conditions of the provision of child care services
under the state's child care assistance program and its regulations.
Under the proposed law, these family child care providers who provide state-subsidized child
care would not be considered public employees, but if 30% of the providers gave written
authorization for an employee organization to be their exclusive representative in collective
bargaining, the state Labor Relations Commission would hold a secret mail ballot election on
whether to certify that organization as the exclusive representative. Parts of the state's public
employee labor relations law and regulations would apply to the election and collective
bargaining processes. The proposed law would not authorize providers to engage in a strike or
other refusal to deliver child care services.
An exclusive representative, if certified, could then communicate with providers to develop
and present a proposal to the state agencies concerning the terms and conditions of child care
provider services. The proposed law would then require the parties to negotiate in good faith to
try to reach a binding agreement. If the agreed-upon terms and conditions required changes in
existing regulations, the state agencies could not finally agree to the terms until they completed
the required procedures for changing regulations and any cost items agreed to by the parties had
been approved by the state Legislature. If any actions taken under the proposed law required
spending state funds, that spending would be subject to appropriation. by the Legislature. Any
complaint that one of the parties was refusing to negotiate in good faith, could be filed with and
ruled upon by the Labor Relations Commission. An exclusive representative could collect a fee
from providers for the costs of representing them.
An exclusive representative could be de-certified under Commission regulations and
procedures if certain conditions were met. The Commission could not accept a decertification
petition for at least 2 years after the first exclusive representative was certified, and any such
petition would have to be supported by 50% or more of the total number of providers. The
Commission would then hold a secret mail ballot election for the providers to vote on whether to
decertify the exclusive representative.
The proposed law states that activities carried out under it would be exempt from federal
anti-trust laws. The proposed law states that if any of its parts were declared invalid, the other
parts would stay in effect.
A YES VOTE would allow licensed and other authorized providers of child care in private
homes under the state's subsidized child care system to bargain collectively with the state.
A NO VOTE would make no change in the laws concerning licensed and other authorized family
child care providers.
4
QUESTION 4
THIS QUESTION IS NOT BINDING
Shall the state representative from this district be instructed to vote in favor of a resolution
calling upon the President and Congress of the United States to end the war in Iraq immediately
and bring all United States military forces home from Iraq?
• 20th Middlesex Representative District
And you are directed to serve this Warrant by posting an attested copy thereof in at least one (1)
public place in each precinct of the Town not less than seven (7) days prior to November 7,
2006, the date set for the State Election in said Warrant, and to publish this Warrant in a
newspaper published in the Town.
Hereof fail not and make return of this warrant with your doings thereon at the time and place of
said voting.
Given under our hands this l Oth day of October, 2006.
Be foy hairman
James E. Bonazoli, ice Chairman
Step en.-' oldy, cretary
Richard W.`Schubert
BOARD OF SELECTMEN
Thomas. H. Freeman , Constable
A true copy. Attest:
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
Middlesex, ss. Officer's Return, Reading:
By virtue of this Warrant, I, on October 18 2006, notified and warned the inhabitants of the
Town of Reading, qualified to vote in elections and Town affairs, to meet at the place and at the time
specified by posting att ested copies of this State Election Warrant in the following public places within
the Town of Reading:
Precinct 1 J. Warren Killam School, 333 Charles Street
Precinct 2 Registry of Motor Vehicles, 275 Salem Street
Precinct 3 Reading Police Station, 15 Union Street
Precinct 4 Joshua Eaton School, 365 Summer Avenue
Precinct 5 Town Hall, 16 Lowell Street
Precinct 6 . Austin Preparatory School, 101 Willow Street
Precinct 7 Reading Library, Local History Room, 64 Middlesex Avenue
Precinct 8 Mobil on the Run, 1330 Main Street
The date of posting being not less than seven (7) days prior to November 7, 2006, the date set for the
State Election in this Warrant.
I also caused an attested copy of this Warrant to be published in the Reading Chronicle in the
issue of October 25 2006.
Thomas H. FreeTn( m , Constable
A true copy. Attest-
ervl A. Jo son. Town
6
STATE ELECTION
November 7, 2006
Pursuant to the Warrant and the Constable's Return thereon, a State Election was held for all
eight precincts at 55 Walkers's Brook Drive. The Warrant was partially read by the Town Clerk, Cheryl A.
Johnson, when on motion of Warden Stanley Robinson, Precinct 5, it was voted to dispense with the further
reading of the Warrant, except the Constable's Return, which was then read by the Town Clerk. The ballot
boxes were examined by the respective Wardens and Police Officer on duty and each found to be empty
and registered 00.
The Town Clerk declared the polls open at 7:00 a.m. and closed at 8:00 p.m., with the following results:
10248 ballots (62%) of registered voters cast as follows:
SENAT
OR IN CONG
RESS
Candidate
Pet 1
Pct 2
Pct 3
Pct 4
Pct 5
Pct 6
Pct 7
Pct 8
Total
Edward M. Kennedy
855
751
725
869
756
825
843
729
6353
Kenneth G. Chase
490
384
402
452
410
478
435
468
3519
All Others
1
0
2
0
3
0
4
1
11
Blanks
43
44
44
60
46
42
41
45
365
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
GOVERNO
R AND
LIEU
TENAN
T GOVERNOR
Candidate
Pct 1
Pct 2
Pct 3
Pct 4
Pct 5
Pct 6
Pct 7
Pct 8
Total
Healey arid Hillman
642
489
500
596
487
569
533
605
4421
Patrick and Murray
661
584
552
673
607
655
667
535
4934
Mihos and Sullivan
54
79
90
67
73
80
79
65
587
Ross and Robinson
20
14
14
24
27
24
30
22
175
All Others
0
1
0
2
1
0
3
0
7
Blanks
12
12
17
19
20
17
11
16
124
Total
1389
1179,
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
- 1 -
11 ATTORNEY GENERAL 11
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4 .
Pet 5
Pct 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Martha Coakley
917
817
770
947
835
911
941
783
6921
Larry Frisoli
413
321
356
368
328
391
329
401
2907
All Others
1
0
1
0
1
l
0
0
4
Blanks
58
41
46
66
51
42
53
59
416
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
SECRETARY OF STATE
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
William Francis Galvin
1028
880
854
993
878
943
982
882
7440
Jill E. Stein
202
171
198
191
198
224
192
182
1558
All Others
6
3
0
1
1
0
6
3
20
Blanks
153
125
121
196
138
178
143
176
1230
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
TREASURER
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pct 8
Total
Timothy P. Cahill
1033
863
854
997
872
976
984
903
7482
James O'Keefe
174
187
186
177
196
182
166
146
1414
All Others
0
2
0
1
0
2
2
2
9
Blanks
182
127
133
206
147
185
171
192
1343
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
AUDIT
OR
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pct 8
Total
A. Joseph DeNucci
998
839
833
941
839
'917
909
817
7093
Rand Wilson
197
190
185
206
216
215
216
209
1634
All Others
1
2
0
2
0
1
3
1
10
Blanks
193
148
155
232
160
212
195
216
1511
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
REP IN CON
GRESS - 6TH DISTR
ICT
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pct 6
Pet 7
Pct 8
Total
John F. Tierney
906
811
765
908
807
871
885
757
6710
Richard W. Barton
400
301
341
370
338
385
353
400
2888
All Others
0
0
1
2
1
1
0
0
5
Blanks
83
67
66
101
69
88
85
86
645
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
-2-
CO
UNCIL
LOR - 6TH DISTRICT
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pct 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Michael J. Callahan
589
542
541
569
544
588
576
467
. 4416
William John Barabino
406
318
329
390
321
418
370
391
2943
Rosemary A. Macero
81
79
78
74
91
72
80
73
628
Ted Sarandis
115
102
89
126
98
97
107
110
844
All Others
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
Blanks
198
138
136
222
161
170
189
, 202
1416,
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
SENATOR IN GENERAL COUR
T
Candidate
Pct 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pct 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Richard R. Tisei
1082
907
880
1030
902
_996
959
968
7724
All Others
5
6
8
7
9
9
12
2
58
Blanks
302
266
285
344,
304,
340
352
273
2466
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
REP IN GENERAL COURT - 20
TH MIDDLESEX DISTRICT
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pct 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Bradley H. Jones, Jr.
1050
1028
994
958
964
4994
Ben Tafoya
1
5
1
2
2
11
All Others
6
9
9
8
4
36
Blanks
332
339
341
355
273
1640
Total
1389
1381
1345
1323
1243
6681
REP IN GENERAL COURT - 30
TH MIDDLESEX DISTRICT
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pct 4
Pet 5
Pct 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Patrick Natale
853
839
861
2553
All Others
10
6
6
22
Blanks
316
328
348
992
Total
1179
1731
1
1215
3567
DIST
RICT ATTOR
NEY - NORTHERN DISTRICT
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Gerard T. Leone, Jr.
927
825
803
866
809
877
867
796
6770
All Others
3
5
1
5
3
3
9
6
35
Blanks
459
349
369
510
403
465
447
441
3443
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
CLERK OF COURTS - M
IDDLESEX COUNTY
Candidate
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Michael A. Sullivan
940
825
815
887
828
892
881
800
6868
All Others
2
4
2
3
2
2
13
4
32
Blanks
447
350
356
- 491
385
451
429
439
3348
(Total 1 1389 11791 11731 1381 12151 13451 1323 12431 102481
REGISTER OF DE
EDS - MIDDLESEX SOUTH
ERN D
ISTRI
CT
Candidate
Pct 1
Pct 2
Pct 3
Pct 4
Pct 5
Pct 6
Pct 7
Pct 8
Total
Eugene C. Brune
900
821
809
824
812
857
823
742
6588
All Others
2
4
2
5
4
2
8
5
32
Blanks
487
354
362
552,
399
.486
492
496
3628
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
QUESTION 1- LAW PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION
Do you approve of a law summarized below, on which no vote was taken by the Senate or the
House of Representatives before May 3, 2006?
Summary - This proposed law would allow local licensing authorities to issue licenses for food stores to
sell wine. The proposed law defines a "food store" as a retail vendor, such as a grocery store, supermarket,
shop, club, outlet, or warehouse-type seller, that sells food to consumers to be eaten elsewhere (which
must include meat, poultry, dairy products, eggs, fresh fruit and produce and other specified items), and
that may sell other items usually found in grocery stores. Holders of licenses to sell wine at food stores
could sell wine either on its own or together with any other items they sell.
The licensing authorities in any city or town of up to 5000 residents could issue up to 5 licenses for
food stores to sell wine. In cities or towns of over 5000 residents, one additional license could be issued
for each additional 5000 residents (or fraction of 5000). No person or business could hold more than 10%
of the total number of the licenses that could be issued under the proposed law. Such licenses would not be
counted when applying the laws that limit the number of other kinds of alcoholic beverage licenses that may
be issued or held. Any applicant for a license would have to be approved by the State Alcoholic Beverages
Control Commission, and any individual applicant would have to be at least 21 years old and not have been
convicted of a felony.
In issuing any licenses for food stores to sell wine, local licensing authorities would have to use the same
procedures that apply to other licenses for the retail sale of alcoholic beverages. Except where the pro-
posed law has different terms, the same laws that apply to issuance, renewal, suspension and termination
of licenses for retail sales of alcoholic beverages which are not to be consumed on the seller's premises,
and that apply to the operations of holders of such licenses, would govern licenses to sell wine at food
stores, and the operation of holders of such licenses. Local authorities could set fees for issuing and
renewing such licenses.
A Yes Vote would create a new category of licenses for food stores to sell wine, and it would allow
local licensing authorities to issue such licenses.
A No Vote would make no change in the laws concerning the sale of wine.
Pct 1 Pct 2 Pct 3 Pct 4 Pct 5 Pet 6 Pct 7 Pct 8 Total
Yes 514 448 425 486 437 432 471 433 3646
No
834
701
714
837
696
873
815
750
6220
Blanks
41
30
34
58
82
40
37
60
382
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
QUESTION - 2 LAW PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION
Do you approve of a law summarized below, on which no vote was taken by the Senate or the
House of Representatives before May 3, 2006?
Summary - This proposed law would allow candidates for public office to be nominated by more than one
political parry or political designation, to have their names appear on the ballot once for each nomination,
and to have their votes counted separately for each nomination but then added together to determine the
winner of the election.
The proposed law would repeal an existing requirement that in order to appear on the state primary
ballot as a candidate for a political parry's nomination for certain offices, a person cannot have been
enrolled in any other party during the preceding year. The requirement applies to candidates for nominaatior
for statewide office, representative in Congress, governor's councillor, member of the state Legislature,
district attorney, clerk of court, register of probate, register of deeds, county commissioner, sheriff, and
county treasurer. The proposed law would also allow any person to appear on the primary ballot as a
candidate for a parry's nomination for those offices if the party's state committee gave its written consent.
The proposed law would also repeal the existing requirement that in order to be nominated to appear as an
unenrolled candidate on the state election ballot, or on any city or town ballot following a primary, a person
cannot have been enrolled in any political parry during the 90 days before the deadline for filing nomination
papers.
The proposed law would provide that if a candidate were nominated by more than one. party or political
designation, instead of the candidate's name being printed on the ballot once, with the candidate allowed to
choose the order in which the parry or political designation names appear after the candidate's name, the
candidate's name would appear multiple times, once for each nomination received. The candidate would
decide the order in which the parry or political designation nominations would appear, except that all parties
would be listed before all political designations. The ballot would allow voters who vote for a candidate
nominated by multiple parties or political designations to vote for that candidate under the party or political
designation line of their choice.
If a voter voted for the same candidate for the same office on multiple party or political designation lines,
the ballot would remain valid but would be counted as a single vote for the candidate on a line without a
party or political designation. If voting technology allowed, voting machines would be required to prevent
a voter from voting more than the number of times permitted for any one office.
The proposed law would provide that if a candidate received votes under more than one parry or
political designation, the votes would be combined for purposes of determining whether the candidate had
won the election. The total number of votes each candidate received under each party or political
designation would be recorded. Election officials would announce and record both the aggregate totals and
the total by party or political designation.
The proposed law would allow a political party to obtain official recognition if its candidate had obtained
at least 3% of the vote for any statewide office at either of the two most recent state elections, instead of at
only the most recent state election as under current law.
The proposed law would allow a person nominated as a candidate for any state, city or town office to
withdraw his name from nomination within six days after any party's primary election for that office, whethe
or not the person sought nomination or was nominated that primary. Any candidate who withdrew from
an election could not be listed on the ballot for that election, regardless of whether the candidate received
multiple nominations.
The proposed law states that if any of its parts were declared invalid, the other parts would stay in effect.
A Yes Vote would allow a candidate for public office to be nominated for the same office by more than
one political party or political designation at the same election.
A No Vote would make no change in the laws concerning nomination of candidates for public office.
11 Question 2
Pct 1
Pct 2
Pct 3
Pct 4
Pct 5
Pct 6
Pct 7
Pct 8
Total
Yes
379
310
333
338
319
334
372
328
2713
No
891
778
739
888
740
901
809
790
6536
Blanks
119
91
1
, 101,
155,
156
, 110
, 142
, 125
999
Total
13891
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
QUESTION 3 - LAW PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION
Do you approve of a law summarized below, on which no vote was taken by the Senate or the
House of Representatives before May 3, 2006?
Summary - This proposed law would allow licensed and other authorized providers of child care in private
homes under the state's subsidized child care system to bargain collectively with the relevant state agencies
about all terms and conditions of the provision of child care services under the state's child care assistance
program and its regulations.
Under the proposed law, these family child care providers who provide state-subsidized child care would
not be considered public employees, but if 30% of the providers gave written authorization for an employee
organization to be their exclusive representative in collective bargaining, the state Labor Relations
Commission would hold a secret mail ballot election on whether to certify that organization as the exclusive
representative. Parts of the state's public employee labor relaltions law and regulations would apply to the
election and collective bargaining processes. The proposed law would not authorize providers to engage in
a strike or other refusal to deliver child care services.
An exclusive representative, if certified, could then communicate with providers to develop and present
a proposal to the state agencies concerning the terms and conditions of child care provider services. The
proposed law would then require the parties to negotiate in good faith to try to reach a binding agreement.
If the agreed-upon terms and conditions required changes in existing regulations, the state agencies could no
finally agree to the terms until they completed the required procedures for changing regulations and any cost
items agreed to by the parties had been approved by the state Legislature. If any actions taken under the
proposed law required spending state funds, that spending would be subject to appropriation by the
Legislature. Any complaint that one. of the parties was refusing to negotiate in good faith could be filed
with and ruled upon by the Labor Relations Commission. An exclusive representative could collect a fee
from providers for the costs of representing them.
An exclusive representative could be de-certified under Commission regulations and procedures if
certain conditions were met. The Commission could not accept a decertification petition for at least 2 years
after the first exclusive representative was certified, and any such petition would have to be supported by
50%0 or more of the total number of providers. The Commission would then hold a secret mail ballot
election for the providers to vote on whether to decertify the exclusive representative.
-6-
The proposed law states that activities carried out under. it would be exempt from federal anti-trust laws.
The proposed law states that if any of its parts were declared invalid, the other parts would stay in effect.
A Yes Vote would allow licensed and other authorized providers of child care in private homes under the
state's subsidized child care system to bargain collectively with the state.
A No Vote would make no change in the laws concerning licensed and other authorized family child care
providers.
11 Question 3 11
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pet 4
Pet 5
Pet 6
Pct 7
Pet 8
Total
Yes
477
465
445
467
458
462
484
419
3677
No
779
616
631
760
600
749
694
689
5,518
Blanks
133
98,
97
154,
157
134
145
135
1053,
Total
1389
1179
1173
1381
1215
1345
1323
1243
10248
QUESTION - 4 THIS QUESTION IS NOT BINDING
Shall the state representative from this district be instructed to vote in favor of a resolution calling upon
the President and Congress of the United States to end the war in Iraq?
Question 4
Pet 1
Pet 2
Pet 3
Pct 4
Pct 5
Pet 6
Pet 7
Pet 8
Total
Yes
665
659
678
689
575
3266
No
561
542
519
458
522
2602
Blanks
163
180,
148
176
146
813
Total
1389
0
0
1381
0
1345
1323
1243
6681
A true copy: Attest
E
f
heryl Johnso
Town C erk
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