Local elections
State Senate District 13: Jerry Hill (incumbent)
State Assembly District 24: Marc Berman
State Assembly District 22: Kevin Mullin (incumbent)
San Mateo County Board of Supervisors District 5: David Canepa
Peninsula Health Care District board (two four-year seats): Rick Navarro, Frank Pagliaro
South San Francisco Unified School District (one two-year seat): John Baker
Sequoia Healthcare District board (two four-year seats): Kim Griffin, Kathleen Kane
San Mateo County Harbor District board (three four-year seats): Sabrina Brennan, Tom Mattusch, Virginia Chang Kiraly
San Mateo County Harbor District board (one two-year seat): Ed Larenas
Half Moon Bay City Council (two four-year seats): Adam Eisen, Carol Joyce
Local measures
Measure K — Twenty-year extension of countywide half-cent sales tax: YES
Measure Q — Rent control and just cause eviction tenant protections in San Mateo: NO
Measure R — Rent control and just cause eviction tenant protections in Burlingame: NO
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Measure M — $56 million bond for Burlingame schools: YES
Measure U — $85 parcel tax for Redwood City schools: YES
Measure I — Half-cent sales tax increase in Belmont: YES
Measure L — City charter amendment eliminating requirement city of San Mateo maintain its own fire department, allowing city to form new shared entity: YES
State propositions
Proposition 51: NO. Authorizes $9 billion in general obligation bonds for public school buildings, charter schools, vocational education facilities and community college campuses.
Proposition 52: YES. Extends a law passed by the state Legislature that imposes fees on hospitals to fund health care for low-income Californians through the state’s Medi-Cal program.
Proposition 53: NO. Requires voter approval before revenue bonds exceeding $2 billion can be issued.
Proposition 54: YES. Requires the Legislature to publish bills for at least 72 hours before a vote and to post videos of legislative proceedings online.
Proposition 55: YES. Extends for 12 years higher tax rates for those making more than $250,000 and couples making more than $500,000, raising about $4 billion to $9 billion per year for schools, community colleges, Medi-Cal and budget reserves.
Proposition 56: NO. Raises cigarette taxes by $2 to $2.87 per pack and hikes taxes on other tobacco products and nicotine products used with electronic cigarettes.
Proposition 57: NO. Gives corrections officials more say in when criminals are released and strips prosecutors of the power to decide when juveniles should be tried as adults.
Proposition 58: YES. Gives school districts the option of bringing back bilingual education by rolling back a voter-approved 1998 ban on teaching English learners in any language other than English.
Proposition 59: NO. A nonbinding measure that asks whether California lawmakers should push for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would overturn the Citizens United Supreme Court case, which threw out restrictions on corporate and union political contributions.
Proposition 60: NO. Requires porn actors to wear condoms while filming and producers to pay for vaccinations and medical exams for porn actors.
Proposition 61: NO. Prohibits the state from paying more than the Department of Veterans Affairs for prescription drugs.
Proposition 62: NO. Repeals the death penalty in California and replaces it with a maximum sentence of life in prison without parole.
Proposition 63: NO. Enacts several gun-control measures, including background checks for ammunition sales and a ban on high-capacity magazines.
Proposition 64: YES. Legalizes marijuana use and possession for those 21 and older while creating standards for licensing.
Proposition 65: NO. Requires a 10-cent grocery bag fee be used for environmental programs, rather than to grocers and other retail stores.
Proposition 66: YES. Speeds up the appeals process so death-row inmates are executed more quickly.
Proposition 67: YES. Enacts a statewide ban on single-use plastic grocery bags and requires large retailers to charge at least 10 cents for recycled paper bags and reusable bags.

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