Alameda County agency to pay for recount of votes on narrowly-defeated Measure B1 transportation tax Crimes & Incidents, posted by Editor, Pleasanton Weekly Online, on Dec 1, 2012 at 12:02 pm
The Alameda County Transportation Commission has submitted a recount request for Measure B1 to the county's Registrar of Voters and anticipates a recount will begin as soon as Monday.
Read the full story here Web Link posted Saturday, December 1, 2012, 11:51 AM
Posted by Jill, a resident of the Another Pleasanton neighborhood neighborhood, on Dec 1, 2012 at 4:44 pm
Whoever ordered this should be fired. If a recount is desired, the Yes campaign should be paying. This should be illegal to use taxpayer funds for this.
Posted by Larry, a resident of Livermore, on Dec 4, 2012 at 12:45 pm
Now now, let's not get upset when "your" government uses your money for the recount. On second thought, isn't the group requesting the recount supposed to pay. O' I just remembered, this is another tax increase isn't it. So we will pay to see if we can sway the results so we can all pay more taxes to keep the unions working and pay for their retirement. Something sounds wrong here. Are we getting screwed again??
Posted by anon, a resident of the Another Pleasanton neighborhood neighborhood, on Dec 5, 2012 at 9:41 am
LOL. Is there ever a day that goes by that the lot of you on here all the time DON'T get yourselves all flustered up about everything in the world?? Take a deep breath and just relax... you'll be fine.
Now I'm sure even this post will ruffle you all up some more... hahaha
Posted by mooseturd, a resident of the Pleasanton Valley neighborhood, on Dec 5, 2012 at 10:13 am mooseturd is a member (registered user) of PleasantonWeekly.com
This reminds me of flipping coins with a small child. They often demand a reflip. When it comes out like they want, then it's a valid flip. Well, I may not like the outcome of the recount and will demand another flip.
Posted by anon, a resident of the Another Pleasanton neighborhood neighborhood, on Dec 5, 2012 at 12:58 pm
mooseturd, not sure that's a fair analogy... since any election count done relatively quickly on that day could have some margin of error, if the percentage difference between winning and losing is small, then it's reasonable it could be within the error rate. In that case, the recount is more like a double-check on the results with a more careful accounting. They wouldn't do a recount if the initial result was say 60% approval since the likelihood that it was 66.67% is just too low. But given this is currently at around 66.51% or something like that, it's clearly within a likely margin of error.
Therefore, trying to use a coin analogy, I think this is more like trying to read a flipped coin from 25 feet away the first time and asking for the second look at the coin to be with a zoom lense instead. There's no change in the underlying raw data (the actual votes or the first flip of the coin).
Posted by ?, a resident of the Another Pleasanton neighborhood neighborhood, on Dec 5, 2012 at 10:36 pm
Who is checking the checkers?
Considering the massive amount of money contributed by the yes on B1 campaign, including the unions that will benefit greatly, the endorsements of most democratic politicians in the county, and the fact the no on B1 campaign was essentially unfunded, is anyone else concerned that Measure B1 money will find a way to tilt the outcome in their favor.
Again, I hope some taxpayer organization is monitoring the recount. What I expect is a disappointing outcome via a short-circuiting of the process. When Billions of taxpayer dollars at stake their is nothing the unions, The ACTC, and Haggerty won't do to ensure their future funding.