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Smith and Hirokawa to face-off in sheriff's race in November

Two department veterans emerge as clear top two in field of five

Santa Clara County voters set the stage Tuesday for a November showdown before Santa Clara County Sheriff Laurie Smith and her former undersheriff and would-be replacement, John Hirokawa.

With every precinct reporting Wednesday morning, the two law-enforcement veterans held significant leads in the heated race for the sheriff's position, which Smith has occupied since 1998. Five candidates vied for the job, with four vowing to bring a much-needed change of culture to a 2,025-person department that has been hit with a series of scandals over the last three years.

Smith had captured about 44 percent of the vote, while Hirokawa had 31 percent. The next closest candidate was Joe LaJeunesse, who served in the military police and who received 12 percent of the vote, according to early results.

Smith had needed more than 50 percent of the vote to keep her job outright.

The vote sets up what is likely to be a competitive November race. Though Smith enjoys all the advantages of an incumbent, including wider name recognition, Hirokawa has picked up several key endorsements during his campaign. These include nods of support from the Santa Clara County Deputy Sheriffs' Association and police unions in Mountain View, Palo Alto and San Jose. Retired Palo Alto Police Chief Dennis Burns supports Hirokawa's campaign, as does retired Santa Clara Superior Court Judge and former San Jose Police Auditor LaDoris Cordell.

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Despite his four-decade tenure in the Sheriff's Office, including a stint in charge of Department of Corrections, Hirokawa is campaigning as a fresh face and an agent of change -- someone who can improve jail safety and turn things around after a recent spate of troubling incidents, including a 2015 murder of an inmate by three deputies; the murder of one inmate by another in 2017; and a brazen escape by two inmates from the Palo Alto courthouse last November.

He told the Weekly last month that he plans to implement jail reforms, including increased treatment for inmates with drug addictions and mental illnesses. He also pledged to improve diversity within the department and review its quality of cultural awareness.

With the early results out, Hirokawa said he is feeling "really excited and highly optimistic" that he can win in November. The fact that Smith has received less than half of the votes suggests that the majority of the voters would like to see a new sheriff, he said. And with the candidate field slimming down from five to two, he said he believes he can get the support needed to defeat Smith.

"It would appear the majority of the voters want change and are looking for another candidate," Hirokawa said.

Hirokawa said that during his campaign, many people told him that they feel like the elected sheriff is not listening to them. And they are concerned, he said.

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Smith during the campaign also pledged to move ahead with jail reforms, which include implementing recommendations from a Blue Ribbon Commission study that followed the 2015 murder. She is pushing for additional beds for treatment of mentally ill inmates and said she wants to implement "mobile mental health units" that would be deployed to assist people with mental crises. Her campaign could not be immediately reached for comment Tuesday night.

Regional Measure 3

Santa Clara County voters also signaled strong support for Regional Measure 3, which would raise tolls at seven state bridges by $3 over the next six years to fund $4.5 billion in transportation improvements. These include the extension of BART to San Jose and Santa Clara; the extension of Caltrain to San Francisco's Transbay Terminal and an array of bus, bike and transit projects.

See Bridge-toll hikes poised to pass for the latest vote counts.

Ravenswood parcel tax and bond measures

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In San Mateo County's K-8 Ravenswood City School District, which serves East Palo Alto and eastern Menlo Park, two measures that would fund teacher retention, classroom learning, technology, facilities improvements and other educational needs have headed to victory based on results posted at about 8 a.m. Wednesday.

A renewed parcel tax, Measure Q, had 74.7 percent of yes votes with 100 percent of precincts reporting. It needed 66.7 percent to pass. The $196-per-parcel tax would be adjusted annually for inflation at a rate not to exceed 3 percent and last for eight years.

The estimated $1.2 million generated annually by the tax would fund improvements in reading and writing, classroom technology, reduced class sizes, teacher retention, student safety and career- and college-preparation programs.

A $70 million bond measure, Measure S, also looked to be cruising towards passage. Unofficial results showed 69.5 percent of voters favoring the measure, which needs 55 percent of votes to pass, as of Wednesday morning.

Measure S would authorize the district to issue bonds not to exceed $70 million. The bonds would pay for further repairs and upgrades, including for classrooms, labs, restrooms, gyms, multipurpose rooms, plumbing and electrical systems, parking lots, fire and safety systems, technology and the removal of hazardous materials such as asbestos and lead.

Election results will be updated as they become available.

Read more news from the June 5 primary election:

Voters recall Judge Aaron Persky

Palo Alto residents head to polls in California primary

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Gennady Sheyner
 
Gennady Sheyner covers the City Hall beat in Palo Alto as well as regional politics, with a special focus on housing and transportation. Before joining the Palo Alto Weekly/PaloAltoOnline.com in 2008, he covered breaking news and local politics for the Waterbury Republican-American, a daily newspaper in Connecticut. Read more >>

Follow on Twitter @paloaltoweekly, Facebook and on Instagram @paloaltoonline for breaking news, local events, photos, videos and more.

Smith and Hirokawa to face-off in sheriff's race in November

Two department veterans emerge as clear top two in field of five

Santa Clara County voters set the stage Tuesday for a November showdown before Santa Clara County Sheriff Laurie Smith and her former undersheriff and would-be replacement, John Hirokawa.

With every precinct reporting Wednesday morning, the two law-enforcement veterans held significant leads in the heated race for the sheriff's position, which Smith has occupied since 1998. Five candidates vied for the job, with four vowing to bring a much-needed change of culture to a 2,025-person department that has been hit with a series of scandals over the last three years.

Smith had captured about 44 percent of the vote, while Hirokawa had 31 percent. The next closest candidate was Joe LaJeunesse, who served in the military police and who received 12 percent of the vote, according to early results.

Smith had needed more than 50 percent of the vote to keep her job outright.

The vote sets up what is likely to be a competitive November race. Though Smith enjoys all the advantages of an incumbent, including wider name recognition, Hirokawa has picked up several key endorsements during his campaign. These include nods of support from the Santa Clara County Deputy Sheriffs' Association and police unions in Mountain View, Palo Alto and San Jose. Retired Palo Alto Police Chief Dennis Burns supports Hirokawa's campaign, as does retired Santa Clara Superior Court Judge and former San Jose Police Auditor LaDoris Cordell.

Despite his four-decade tenure in the Sheriff's Office, including a stint in charge of Department of Corrections, Hirokawa is campaigning as a fresh face and an agent of change -- someone who can improve jail safety and turn things around after a recent spate of troubling incidents, including a 2015 murder of an inmate by three deputies; the murder of one inmate by another in 2017; and a brazen escape by two inmates from the Palo Alto courthouse last November.

He told the Weekly last month that he plans to implement jail reforms, including increased treatment for inmates with drug addictions and mental illnesses. He also pledged to improve diversity within the department and review its quality of cultural awareness.

With the early results out, Hirokawa said he is feeling "really excited and highly optimistic" that he can win in November. The fact that Smith has received less than half of the votes suggests that the majority of the voters would like to see a new sheriff, he said. And with the candidate field slimming down from five to two, he said he believes he can get the support needed to defeat Smith.

"It would appear the majority of the voters want change and are looking for another candidate," Hirokawa said.

Hirokawa said that during his campaign, many people told him that they feel like the elected sheriff is not listening to them. And they are concerned, he said.

Smith during the campaign also pledged to move ahead with jail reforms, which include implementing recommendations from a Blue Ribbon Commission study that followed the 2015 murder. She is pushing for additional beds for treatment of mentally ill inmates and said she wants to implement "mobile mental health units" that would be deployed to assist people with mental crises. Her campaign could not be immediately reached for comment Tuesday night.

Regional Measure 3

Santa Clara County voters also signaled strong support for Regional Measure 3, which would raise tolls at seven state bridges by $3 over the next six years to fund $4.5 billion in transportation improvements. These include the extension of BART to San Jose and Santa Clara; the extension of Caltrain to San Francisco's Transbay Terminal and an array of bus, bike and transit projects.

See Bridge-toll hikes poised to pass for the latest vote counts.

Ravenswood parcel tax and bond measures

In San Mateo County's K-8 Ravenswood City School District, which serves East Palo Alto and eastern Menlo Park, two measures that would fund teacher retention, classroom learning, technology, facilities improvements and other educational needs have headed to victory based on results posted at about 8 a.m. Wednesday.

A renewed parcel tax, Measure Q, had 74.7 percent of yes votes with 100 percent of precincts reporting. It needed 66.7 percent to pass. The $196-per-parcel tax would be adjusted annually for inflation at a rate not to exceed 3 percent and last for eight years.

The estimated $1.2 million generated annually by the tax would fund improvements in reading and writing, classroom technology, reduced class sizes, teacher retention, student safety and career- and college-preparation programs.

A $70 million bond measure, Measure S, also looked to be cruising towards passage. Unofficial results showed 69.5 percent of voters favoring the measure, which needs 55 percent of votes to pass, as of Wednesday morning.

Measure S would authorize the district to issue bonds not to exceed $70 million. The bonds would pay for further repairs and upgrades, including for classrooms, labs, restrooms, gyms, multipurpose rooms, plumbing and electrical systems, parking lots, fire and safety systems, technology and the removal of hazardous materials such as asbestos and lead.

Election results will be updated as they become available.

Read more news from the June 5 primary election:

Voters recall Judge Aaron Persky

Palo Alto residents head to polls in California primary

Comments

Engineer
Green Acres
on Jun 6, 2018 at 6:17 am
Engineer, Green Acres
on Jun 6, 2018 at 6:17 am

Not sure how a longtime department senior leader is going to shake it up. Where was Hirokawa when the problems he is criticizing were happening? I wish there was an outsider still in the race.

I count LaDoris Cordell's support negative for Hirokawa. Her hysterical attacks on the Persky recall were embarrassing. She looks like she has a similar ax to grind about Smith.


Mil
Old Palo Alto
on Jun 6, 2018 at 1:36 pm
Mil, Old Palo Alto
on Jun 6, 2018 at 1:36 pm

It's time for change. The county needs a new sheriff with a vision to improve the sheriff department. Hirokawa fits the bill and signals to be the agent of positive change that the county seeks. We need someone who understands that mental illness needs prompt treatment and not a flow of character.


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