The Prince George’s County Election District 1 2018 voters guide includes campaign emails, social media, and websites of each Prince George’s County Election District 1 candidate for County Executive, County Council, State’s Attorney, Sheriff, Judges, and Board of Education.
Should voters need additional information about their preferred candidate’s profile. An active social media is a good representation of how connected the candidate would be if elected. Vote in Maryland’s General election with ease with kBoulevard’s candidate guide for the Prince George’s County Election District 1 2018.
The Prince George’s County Election was on Tuesday, November 6, 2018. Top issues for this election include accountability, COVID responses, and teacher salaries. Check out kBoulevard’s Prince George’s County Election District 1 2018 voters guide.
Learn more about the Prince George’s County Election District 1 2018 and where to vote, visit Maryland Board of Elections.
Economy
Focus on transit-oriented development and redevelopment
Education
Securing funding from the state for improving school system and facilities
Healthcare
Securing state fund for the new Regional Medical Center
Transportation
Focus on transit-oriented development
Pubic Safety
Providing equitable funding and resources for public safety departments
Safeguard funding such as the ‘Disparity Grant’
Angela Alsobrooks (D)
Strengthening the environmental initiatives
Jerry Mathis (R)
(Withdrew 8/24/18)
Felicia Folarin (R)
Mel Franklin (D)
Calvin Hawkins (D)
These candidates are running unopposed in the general election.
District 1
Tom Dernoga (D)
Aisha Braveboy (D)
Bruce Johnson Jr. (I)
*is a Write In Candidate
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Mahasin El Amin (D)
Register of Wills
Cereta A. Lee (D)
County Sheriff
Melvin C. High (D)
Judges – Orphans’ Court
(Vote for 3)
Wendy Cartwright (D)
*note this profile dates back to 2006
Athena Groves (D)
*note this profile is dated to 2010
Vicky Ivory-Orem (D)
Question 1
Constitution Amendment
(Ch. 357 of the 2018 Legislative Session)
Requiring Commercial Gaming Revenues that are for Public Education to Supplement Spending for Education in Public Schools
For
Against
Question 2
Constitutional Amendment
(Ch. 855 of the 2018 Legislative Session)
Same-Day Registration and Voting at the Precinct Polling Place on Election Day
For
Against
The Washington Informer – Cover Story on Casino Ballot Question F
Charter Referendum
(CB-30-2018)
Public Works and Transportation Facilities Bonds
$148,287,000
For
Against
Charter Referendum
(CB-31-2018)
Library Facilities Bonds
$16,796,000
For
Against
Charter Referendum
(CB-32-2018)
Public Safety Facilities Bonds
$56,053,000
For
Against
Charter Referendum
(CB-33-2018)
County Buildings Bonds
$97,564,000
For
Against
Charter Referendum
(CB-34-2018)
Community College Facilities Bonds
$81,187,000
For
Against
Combined Charter Referendum (Questions A – E): $399,887,000
PG County gov’t has a debt limit of 6% of the County’s assessable base of real property* ($87.5 billion as of July 2017)
PG County outstanding bonded debt: $1.3 billion, that is an 7.5% decrease from the previous year
The interest on long-term debt accounts for 2% of the County’s expense budget
Bonds are typically held by private citizens, businesses, and other governments
Government bonds allow the government to borrow money, usually for CIP (roads, public works, facilities, etc.…)
*plus 15% County assessable base of personal property (4.1 billion as of July 2017)
Question F
Charter Amendment
(CB-35-2018)(DR-2)
Council Member Residency Requirement
For
Against
This charter amendment expressly adds that the nine districts are “compact, contiguous, and equal in population”
It’s common for representative offices to have residency requirements.
Question G
Charter Amendment
(CB-36-2018)
Nondiscrimination – County Personnel and Contracting
For
Against
This amendment addresses the language in the County Charter:
To include “marital and familial status” to ensure nondiscrimination regardless of status/dependents
change [physical or mental handicap] to “disability” which is consistent with modern terminology
Question H
Charter Amendment
(CB-38-2018)
County Council Member Full-Time Position
For
Against
This charter amendment’s purpose is classify that membership on the Council be considered a full-time position for the purpose of determining compensation.
There is no actual clarification in the charter
compensation is based on the ‘Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) and 2/3 votes from the council members themselves
Question I
Charter Amendment
(CB-39-2018)
County Auditor – Appointment, Responsibilities and Authority
For
Against
This charter amendment proposes:
County Auditors be appointed to 5yr terms, and subject to renewal and can be removed for cause
Not all government agencies will receive a complete financial audit for the proceeding fiscal year
County Auditor be empowered to conduct investigations into fraud, waste, and abuse
Question J
Charter Amendment
(CB-40-2018)
County Personnel – Temporary Appointment
For
Against
This amendment proposes that temporary administrative appointments (head of any agency) be limited to no more than year
Question K
Charter Amendment
(CB-41-2018)
Charter Review Commission – Length of Term
For
Against
This charter amendment proposes a set length of term for the charter review:
An appointment is made no later than one year prior to the beginning of each fourth year of a term
The Charter Review Commission will commence its work at the discretion of the Chair of the Commission
made up of highly qualified personal representing both public and private. The Commission reviews the County charter, scope of reviews are varied.
The commissions review for 2017-18 focused on:
Here we provide a sample of regional statistics that correlate directly with offices up for election.
.83%
Employment growth rate
(2015-2016)
4th in taxes paid to MD
4th largest tax base in MD
4th in funding received from MD
9.1%
Poverty Rate
6.2% decrease in PG County
$79,184
Median household income, 3.1% increase
$3,116,934,200
PG County Expenditure (2017)
61.7%
Education
(53.5% statewide average)
20.7%
Public Safety
8.7%
Debts, Pensions Funds, County Salaries
2.2%
Non-Departmental
Funding for gov’t offices
.9%
Health and Human Services
.7%
Infrastructure & Development
15th
Ranked for education spending in the state
23rd
County public schools rank in MD
(out of 24)
961
Avg SAT score for county grads
(state avg 1046)
$284,800
Housing average assessed value
4.6% increase
60.3%
Home ownership
.9% decline
$3,000
Avg County property taxes
60% households pay, 33% increase from 2015
$1,555
Avg rent in PG County
One bedroom, 16% increase
(2014-16)
↓ 15%
Violent crime total
↓ 22%
Overall crime total per 100,000
↓ 22%
Property crime total
Repave neighborhood streets and sidewalks
Official Government Resources:
Prince George’s County 2018 General Election Ballot (This link is a 420-page pdf)
Sources:
Prince George’s County Comprehensive Annual Financial Report 2016-17
Prince George’s County 2017 Strategic and Fiscal Policies
Prince George’s County Budget Overview FY 2016-2017
Prince George’s County Brief Economic Facts
Prince George’s County Board of Education Comprehensive Annual Financial Report 2017
Maryland Office of the Comptroller – Maryland by the Numbers
Maryland Public Schools 2015-16 Financial Data – Expenditures
Maryland Association of Counties – 2018 School Funding Per Student County-by-County
Maryland Crime Control & Prevention – Crime Data (Present)