Election night results will be found tonight on the Peninsula Daily News website at www.peninsuladailynews.com.
Full election stories with reactions from those who placed the measures on the special election ballot will be published in Thursday’s print edition of the PDN.
Voters are considering eight measures on the North Olympic Peninsula. None are county wide.
In Clallam County, approval has been requested for a $54 million bond for the Sequim School District and for two measures in the Crescent School District: a maintenance and operations levy that would collect about $520,000 in each of four years and a capital projects levy that would collect about $100,000 in each of four years.
In Jefferson County, the Port Townsend School District is requesting approval of a $40.9 million bond, while the Chimacum School District has placed a $29.1 million bond on the ballot, both construction bonds.
Maintenance and operations levies are proposed in the Quilcene and Brinnon school districts.
The four-year Quilcene measure would collect about $540,095 the first year of collection, $550,897 the second year, $561,915 the third year, and $575,153 the fourth year.
The two-year Brinnon measure would collect about $305,516 in 2017 and about $341,681 in 2018.
The Discovery Bay Volunteer Fire & Rescue is requesting a $530,000 bond, to be paid over 20 years, to replace its fire station.
About 200 voters in Jefferson County will weigh in on the Sequim School District bond.
Each bond requires a 60 percent supermajority for passage. Levies can be approved by a simple majority.

