Design by Betsy Burrow
Results Updated by Amanda Monahan
Today, voters in Malibu head to the polls to vote for City Council members, Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District Board of Education members and Measures MM and QS. Scroll down for results, info about the candidates and an explainer of Measure MM and QS.
The Graphic will report results for Malibu Elections based on the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk Office.
For more information, go to the Malibu City Website.
Malibu City Council has five candidates running for City Council — Bruce Lee Silverstein, C. Channing Frykman, Haylynn Conrad, Paul Grisanti, Steve Uhring and write-in candidate Andy Lyon. There are three seats up for grabs.
Results
Silverstein: 24.77%
Frykman: 12.22%
Conrad: 20.10%
Grisanti: 19.50%
Uhring: 23.41%
Bruce Lee Silverstein:
- Incumbent
- Occupation: Attorney
- Allocate funds to the needs of residents, such as schools
C. Channing Frykman:
- Occupation: Volunteer Pediatrician
- Biggest priority is PCH safety
- Wants to create a Malibu Unified School District
Haylynn Conrad:
- Biggest priority is fire safety
- Wants to design PCH as local boulevard, not major highway
- Advocates expiditing permit processing
Paul Grisanti:
- Incumbent
- More law enforcement and stricter punishment on PCH
- Address high cost of living and unemployment in Malibu
Steve Uhring:
- Incumbent
- Urges the improvement of PCH safety
- Advocates clarification in Malibu’s municipal planning
Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District Board of Education has four candidates — Christine Falaguerra, Jennifer Smith, Jon Kean and Maria Leon-Vazquez. There are three seats up for grabs.
Results
Falaguerra: 14.35%
Smith: 30.26%
Kean: 28.18%
Leon-Vazquez: 27.21%
Measure MM will allow the Santa-Monica Malibu Unified School District to borrow $395 million to construct new buildings, repair and renovate existing public schools in Malibu.
Results:
Yes: 59.42%
No: 40.58%
Measure QS will allow the Santa-Monica Malibu Unified School District to borrow $395 million to construct new buildings, repair and renovate existing public schools in Santa Monica.
Results:
Yes: 62.60%
No: 37.40%
Last updated at 11:49 p.m.