Skip to main content
VOTE YES

Vote YES to renew critical funding for our local schools

In order to get the best education possible, our students need schools that are equipped to meet their diverse needs, including transportation, special education, infrastructure repairs, and more. If approved by voters this election, Yelm School District Proposition 1 renews a school support levy for these types of educational enrichment programs and operations that are essential to the quality of our local schools.

The district’s previous Educational Programs and Operations (EP&O) Levy – which covered an estimated 14% of the entire budget – expired at the end of 2024. However, any replacement levy passed in 2025 will only be able to start collecting in January 2026 at the earliest. The failure to pass a levy sooner will take a toll on our students and teachers across our nine schools in the upcoming school year. It is essential to pass this levy now to get back on track with district budget needs and mitigate the consequences of the upcoming gap in funding.

The tax would renew at a rate of $2.50 per $1,000 in assessed property value, costing the homeowner of an average-priced $494,000 home approximately $1,235 annually for four years. These levy funds are directed towards basic needs such as nurses and counselors, athletics programming, special education services, safety staff, arts and electives, technology maintenance, and more. Our students deserve the opportunities in order to build the best foundation for successful futures.

When our schools are fully funded, our entire community benefits. Vote Yes on Yelm School District Proposition 1 to continue critical funding for our local students.

Last updated: 2025-01-21

In order to get the best education possible, our students need schools that are equipped to meet their diverse needs, including transportation, special education, infrastructure repairs, and more. If approved by voters this election, Yelm School District Proposition 1 renews a school support levy for these types of educational enrichment programs and operations that are essential to the quality of our local schools.

The district’s previous Educational Programs and Operations (EP&O) Levy – which covered an estimated 14% of the entire budget – expired at the end of 2024. However, any replacement levy passed in 2025 will only be able to start collecting in January 2026 at the earliest. The failure to pass a levy sooner will take a toll on our students and teachers across our nine schools in the upcoming school year. It is essential to pass this levy now to get back on track with district budget needs and mitigate the consequences of the upcoming gap in funding.

The tax would renew at a rate of $2.50 per $1,000 in assessed property value, costing the homeowner of an average-priced $494,000 home approximately $1,235 annually for four years. These levy funds are directed towards basic needs such as nurses and counselors, athletics programming, special education services, safety staff, arts and electives, technology maintenance, and more. Our students deserve the opportunities in order to build the best foundation for successful futures.

When our schools are fully funded, our entire community benefits. Vote Yes on Yelm School District Proposition 1 to continue critical funding for our local students.

Last updated: 2025-01-21

Washington

Not in Washington? Click here to change your state.

Election Day November 4, 2025
Find Drop Box Locations
Ballot Drop Boxes

Statewide Ballot Measures

VOTE APPROVED

Approve 8201 to grow WA Cares Funding!

SJR 8201 will grow Washington’s long-term care fund for aging people and people with disabilities, keeping premiums low, without costing taxpayers a single penny. Also known as the “Allow Investment of Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Fund Amendment," SJR 8201 is a constitutional amendment adding accountability protections to our long-term care fund, requiring that 100% of investment income be used for long-term care.

If passed, SJR 8201 would increase the state’s long-term care fund for vulnerable Washingtonians by at least $67 billion over the next 50 years by allowing the nonpartisan Washington State Investment Board to diversify investments. In the state legislature, 128 legislators voted in favor of the measure, and only 16 were opposed. Additionally, it has the support of groups such as the Washington State Nurses Association, the Washington State Council of Fire Fighters, Planned Parenthood, and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Vote APPROVED on SJR 8201 to protect and grow our state’s independent long-term care fund for aging adults and people with disabilities.

Last updated: 2025-10-09

SJR 8201 will grow Washington’s long-term care fund for aging people and people with disabilities, keeping premiums low, without costing taxpayers a single penny. Also known as the “Allow Investment of Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Fund Amendment," SJR 8201 is a constitutional amendment adding accountability protections to our long-term care fund, requiring that 100% of investment income be used for long-term care.

If passed, SJR 8201 would increase the state’s long-term care fund for vulnerable Washingtonians by at least $67 billion over the next 50 years by allowing the nonpartisan Washington State Investment Board to diversify investments. In the state legislature, 128 legislators voted in favor of the measure, and only 16 were opposed. Additionally, it has the support of groups such as the Washington State Nurses Association, the Washington State Council of Fire Fighters, Planned Parenthood, and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Vote APPROVED on SJR 8201 to protect and grow our state’s independent long-term care fund for aging adults and people with disabilities.

Last updated: 2025-10-09

Locate My Guide

Find your guide by automatically detecting your location or by entering your voting address.