Politics & Government

Supervisor Seifert Wins, Reagan Seems Out

It was a mixed bag for county races.

By Bay City News Service
          Three supervisorial races in Solano County on Tuesday ended with
one incumbent being re-elected, another being ousted, and a third race
heading to a runoff, according to unofficial results.
          District 2 incumbent Linda Seifert garnered 66 percent of the
vote, easily beating her challenger, former Benicia mayor and current Benicia
Unified School District board member Steve Messina.
          Seifert began her current term representing District 2 -- which
includes Benicia, Cordelia, Green Valley and portions of Vallejo -- in
January 2009 after being elected the previous June.
          In District 5, incumbent Mike Reagan appears to have been defeated
by former county supervisor Skip Thomson, who garnered 56 percent of the
vote, according to preliminary tallies.
          Reagan has served on the board since 2005, representing an area
that encompasses more than 300 square miles of eastern Solano County,
including Rio Vista, Travis Air Force Base, eastern portions of Vacaville and
Suisun City, and the northeastern portion of Fairfield.
          The District 1 race to fill the seat now held by Barbara Kondylis
will head to a runoff election, with no candidate winning at least half the
vote.
          Five candidates were vying for Kondylis' job in a race that
included former Vallejo mayor Tony Intintoli; current Vallejo City
Councilwoman Erin Hannigan; former county supervisor Lee Sturn Simmons;
community activist Katy Miessner; and businesswoman Susan B. Anthony.
          Preliminary results from Tuesday's election showed Intintoli and
Hannigan leading the pack, with 29 and 27 percent of the vote, respectively,
and Miessner not far behind with 25 percent.
          The top two vote-getters will compete for the open seat in
November.
          Miessner has the support of Kondylis, who has held the seat since
1992.
          Solano County voters also gave sweeping approval to a sales tax
measure to support libraries.
          Measure L, which extends an existing tax, needed two-thirds
approval to pass and received 80 percent support from voters, according to
unofficial results.
          The eighth-cent sales tax, which was originally approved by 68
percent of voters in 1998 as Measure B, has enabled libraries to restore
hours, purchase more books and materials -- such as CDs, DVDs and magazines
and newspapers -- and increase children's programs, according to proponents
of Measure L.
          The sales tax revenue can only be used for public library
operations, programs and acquisitions.
          The countywide measure will extend the tax for another 16 years
and will take effect Oct. 1, 2014, immediately after Measure B expires.
          Although the current sales tax does not expire for another two
years, the measure was put before voters now because otherwise, libraries
would have to pay the cost of a special election in 2013, as there are no
countywide elections next year.
          In 2010, the sales tax generated more than $6 million for
libraries in the county.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Suisun City