Santa Clara County: Alvarado, Chavez Vie for Seat on Board of Supervisors

Two women are running in Tuesday's summertime special runoff election for the seat on the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors vacated in March by disgraced former Supervisor George Shirakawa.

Former San Jose Vice Mayor Cindy Chavez, who called herself a "non-profit director/mother" in her county ballot statement, opposes Teresa Alvarado, who described herself as an "engineer/communications manager" in the race to represent District 2.

The county Registrar of Voters will have four employees working at each of 52 polling places throughout District 2 while six other precincts are for mail-in ballots only, Rosas said.

Election officials have predicted that just about 20 percent of registered voters will end up casting ballots, registrar spokeswoman Elma Rosas said.

"Usually, with a special election, you will have a lower turnout," Rosas said. "The fact that it is during the summer, you have people on vacations."

Chavez and Alvarado won the most votes among seven candidates in a special election on June 4 in which no one garnered the minimum 50 percent of voters to win outright.

Chavez led the pack with 7,927 votes or 41.04 percent and Alvarado got 6,036 votes or 31.25 percent, forcing the two into Tuesday's runoff special election.

In their candidate statements on county voter pamphlets, both contenders mentioned their dedication to issues concerning families, children and health care.

Alvarado, 48, asked voters to choose her "so that we can make our streets safe for our children, secure quality health care for all, provide for our elderly and those most in need, and support the thousands of people who work every day to make a decent life for themselves and their loved ones."

Chavez, 49, mentioned that the community needed "safe, vibrant schools so our children can thrive, good paying jobs and affordable health care so families can succeed, and more police and sheriff deputies on the streets to stop the escalation of violence."

Alvarado won the endorsement of the San Jose Mercury News while teachers and other public sector labor organizations have backed Chavez.

Polls open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and all ballots must be in by the closing time to be counted, Rosas said.

Those who still have mail-in ballots on Election Day will have to deliver them in person at any polling place by 8 p.m., as it will be too late to send them by mail regardless of the postmark time, Rosas said.

District 2 includes the County Government Center where the Board of Supervisors meet, all of downtown San Jose and much of East San Jose, according to the county's website.

Election officers, who must be U.S. citizens, are being paid
"volunteer stipends" of $95 to $180 to work at polling places during the special election, according to the website.

The Board of Supervisors approved the election to replace
Shirakawa after he resigned March 1 in light of a 12-count criminal complaint filed that day by the district attorney's office.

The office charged that Shirakawa obtained more than $130,000 in public and campaign funds for personal use and to gamble at casinos.

He later pleaded guilty to four felony counts of perjury, one
felony count of misuse of public funds and seven misdemeanors for filing inaccurate campaign and government finance reports.

Shirakawa still has not been sentenced for the criminal
convictions.

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