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North Texas Election Results: School Districts

Voters in North Texas went to the polls on Saturday to elect school board trustees and city council candidates, as well as decide whether to approve two property tax amendments to the Texas constitution.

These are the current total number of votes for school council elections in Colin, Dallas, Denton and Taranto counties. More complete results will be available once all votes have been counted.

Note: The numbers on this page are entered manually and will not update automatically on your screen. You will need to refresh your browser periodically to see the updates.

Alan

Board of Trustees President Amy Gnad defeated contender Joe Boylan. Vice President Kelly Rowley will run in the May 24 election against El Hollande. Place 2 will also be determined by a runoff between Sam Abiog and Cristina Cabral.

Place 2

  • Bill Parker: 2074
  • Sam Abiog: 3108 *
  • Christina Cabral: 2224 *

Place 4

  • Amy Gnad: 4401 (current President and Chairman of the Board)
  • Joe Boylan: 2610

Place 5

  • El Holland: 3023 *
  • Snober Lahani: 2039
  • Kelly Rowley: 2290 * (current President and Vice President)

* He will go to the runoff on May 24

Arlington

Two incumbents took the lead in Arlington, where the election focused heavily on raising teachers’ salaries and offsetting losses due to the pandemic. However, issues such as critical racial theory and the mandate of the mask have emerged in voter forums, according to a KERA report.

Place 4

  • Daphne Jackson: 2778
  • David Wilbanks (incumbent President): 4628
  • Anita Scott: 1552

Place 5

  • Kelly R. Burke: 3672
  • Justin Chapa (acting): 5489

Carol (Southlake)

In Southlake, two candidates, backed by the Southlake Families Conservative Political Action Committee, Alex Sexton and Andrew Yeager, took a significant lead for two seats on the school board. Jaeger is 7th for Carroll ISD after winning a special election in November.

Place 6

  • Laura Durant: 1458
  • Alex Sexton: 4164

Place 7

  • Stephanie Williams: 1493
  • Andrew A. Jaeger: 4150

Carrollton-Farmers Branch

The three best votes will be chosen.

  • James Allen: 1446
  • Ileana Garza-Rojas: 3030
  • Kim Brady: 2904
  • Tara Hrbacek: 3,124
  • Randy Shackman: 3116

Cedar Hill

Place 1

  • Gail A. Sims (no resistance)

Place 2

  • Herd DeAundra: 448
  • Karma Morgan: 535

The bastard

Place 1

Place 2

Place 3

  • Carol Lacey McGuire: 1022
  • Anthony Hill: 2082

Dallas

quarter 4

Dallas ISD trustee Carla Garcia lagged behind contender Camille White in their second game for the spot, which includes parts of Southeast Dallas, Pleasant Grove, Balch Springs and Sigoville.

  • Camille D. White: 268
  • Carla Garcia: 204

DeSoto

Place 1

  • Cynthia Watson-Banks: 1064
  • Shanta Duren: 488
  • Rickill Wesson: 896

Place 2

  • Terence M. Gore: 823
  • Chassis Makkisik: 1594

Duncanville

Place 1

  • Tom Kennedy: 1156
  • Jacqueline (Jackie) Culton: 1345

Place 2

  • Coach Phil McNealy (no resistance)

Place 3

  • Janet Veracruz (no resistance)

Frisco

Frisco saw very close school council competitions. Incumbent President Gopal Ponangi survived Angela Dunford’s 1-place challenge. And for place 3 Stephanie Elad won with difficulty Dustin Pascal.

Place 1

  • Angela Dunford: 7,259
  • Gopal Ponangi (incumbent President): 7634

Place 2

  • Natalie Hebert (incumbent President): 5936 *
  • Marvin Lowe: 5989 *
  • Kelly Card: 3095

Place 3

  • Dustin Easter: 6452
  • Timothy Soto: 771
  • Stephanie Hellas: 7646

garland

Place 1

  • Robert Duckworth: 3143
  • Larry Glick: 4708

Place 2

Place 3

  • Linda Griffin (no resistance)

Grand Prairie

In the Grand Prairie ISD, incumbent President Burke Hall overtook contender Amber Moffitt in a three-man race, possibly in a runoff later this month.

District 6

  • Emily Lyles (Chair): 830
  • Chris Riddick: 596

The widest place 7

  • Burke Hall (incumbent President): 1301
  • Patty Harris: 706
  • Amber Moffit: 1315

Grapevine-Coliville

The competitions were too close to call the Grapevine-Colleyville ISD, where the board was discussing restricting students’ access to race and gender information. According to a controversial proposal, any material in the field of human sexuality will be labeled as “potentially pornographic”.

Place 3

  • Louis Sallins: 4249
  • Tami Nakamura: 4772

Place 4

  • Katie Florence-Spradley: 4841
  • David Stein: 4098

Irving

Area 5

  • Jim Scrivner: 121
  • AD Jenkins (acting): 457

Lancaster

district 3

  • Topics S. Whitfield: 87
  • Sharonda Fenke Bates: 45

district 3

  • Chenik Luis: 21
  • Desia Rene Lee: 80
  • Carolyn Ann Morris: 125

Louisville

Place 3

  • Samuel Griffith: 1602
  • Sheila P. Taylor: 6930 *
  • Pam Johnson: 5853 *

* He will go to the runoff on May 24

Place 4

  • Stacey L. Barker: 6033
  • Catherine sells: 8056

Place 5

  • Chris Bowen: 6740
  • Jenny Proznik: 7474

Richardson

The question of critical racial theory crept into the elections in this suburban school district. Some Richardson voters received letters decorated with baby CRT blocks.

“RISD schools cannot teach the basics if they are too busy teaching nonsense of ‘critical race theory,'” the flyers said.

district 2

  • Aaron Lynn (acting president): 659
  • Sherry Clemens: 1536
  • Vanessa Pacheco: 1562

Area 5

  • Keel Brown: 624
  • Rachel McGowan: 2955
  • Jan Stel: 2220