Full article at https://www.kpbs.org/news/2018/oct/01/lawsuit-challenging-sd-unified-election-rules-also

Lawsuit Challenging SD Unified Elections Seeks To Invalidate This Year’s Board Races

Monday, October 1, 2018

By Megan Burks

Various groups have pushed for changes to San Diego Unified School Board elections over the years. Now, one is looking to force reform through the courts.

Parents for Quality Education has filed a lawsuit alleging the district’s election process violates the California Voting Rights Act. The 2001 law prohibits citywide elections if they are shown to dilute the vote of minority communities.

Currently, trustees are elected in a citywide runoff after competing in a local, sub-district primary. The lawsuit seeks to restrict runoff voting to sub-districts, too. It also asks the court to block the San Diego County Registrar of Voters from certifying the outcome of two school board races next month.

“It is time for the community to vote for candidates that truly represent the interest of the community,” said Margaret Sanborn, one of the plaintiffs.

Many have argued the citywide runoff disenfranchises voters in communities of color because it scares off potential candidates — citywide campaigns can be expensive and tend to favor incumbents — and because the sub-district vote often has little bearing on the citywide outcome.

In 2016, for example, LaShae Collins lost to Sharon Whitehurst-Payne in the runoff after winning the primary in the district’s southeastern section. And this year, two write-in candidates advanced to the runoff after announcing their candidacy two weeks before the vote.

Tom Keliinoi received 2,763 votes in the primary, compared to competitor Kevin Beiser’s 36,038. And Marcia Nordstrom received 2,518, compared to incumbent Michael McQuary’s 29,447. All four will appear on the ballot in November.

The lawsuit comes after a Grand Jury report recommended local-only elections for school board; after some City Council members and various community members, including those now associated with Parents for Quality Education, pushed for a ballot proposal on local-only elections; and after a San Diego Unified community survey suggested a majority favored the change.

But sitting board members and some on the committee that administered the survey said more research is needed before the district can move to local-only elections. They worry the change might actually disenfranchise voters further. It would mean residents in historically disenfranchised neighborhoods south of Interstate-8 would have a say in just two races, not five. And a large proportion of parents who send their children to schools outside of their sub-district would not have a say in who represents their school.

The lawsuit was filed Friday in San Diego Superior Court and names the district, the candidates running for school board, the registrar of voters, and the city, which sets the district’s election rules, as defendants. The plaintiffs are Parents for Quality Education; Sanborn, a Pacific American Community Cultural Center board member and a former charter school director; and Ricardo Castillo, a teacher at Cherokee Point Elementary School and 26-year resident of City Heights.