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HomeNewsLocal NewsSupporters of Merced’s Public Safety Tax Submit Signatures to Put Measure C...

Supporters of Merced’s Public Safety Tax Submit Signatures to Put Measure C Before Voters in March 2024

The petition drive, a first for Merced, was needed after the City Council blocked the measure

By BRIANNA VACCARI

Central Valley Journalism Collaborative l August 23, 2024

MERCED (CVJC) — A half-cent sales tax that funds public safety and street repairs in Merced moved a step closer to renewal this week when a coalition, led by former Mayor Mike Murphy, submitted the petitions needed to put the decision to voters next year.

The Committee for a Safer Merced presented nearly 5,000 signatures Monday to the city clerk for tabulation and then verification by the Merced County Registrar of Voters. If verified, the petitions will put Measure C to a citywide vote on the March 2024 ballot.

First approved in 2006 with a 20-year lifespan, Measure C so far has generated $105 million, city officials said. It’s expected to generate $8.8 million this fiscal year. 

Plans to gather signatures in support of renewing the tax took shape after the Merced City Council voted last year to block the tax renewal from being put on the November 2022 ballot.

Organizers kicked off their drive in April and said they met their goal of gathering the required signatures – representing 10% of the city’s nearly 40,000 registered voters – about two months before the deadline. The effort is poised to be the first signature-gathering petition drive to put a city ballot measure before Merced voters, officials confirmed. 

“This is a big group of people that we’re representing,” Murphy told the Merced City Council during its Monday evening meeting. “The stacks of petitions all represent people in households in our city and their desire for public safety.”

Measure C supporter Alison Kostecky asked council members for their support, saying the petitions indicate “it’s what the people want.” 

“Close to 5,000 registered voters in this city want this,” Kostecky said. “So we would really, really, really love everyone on this council’s endorsement and support moving forward and getting this measure passed and approved again.”

Without the half-cent tax, city officials estimate Merced could face a $7 million annual budget shortfall and lose stable funding for the police and fire departments. 

“We needed to act to ensure that we do not lose 30 police officers and fire firefighters in the next two years,” Raquel Rios, a member of the Merced Police Officers Association, said in a news release. “These signatures send a strong message that Merced wants to keep public safety as a priority.”

Merced Police Department already faces staffing challenges, starting with the top position. Current Interim Chief Greg Gundlach is the department’s fourth leader in five years. As the city continues its months-long search for a new permanent chief, the City Council recently agreed to increase the position’s salary.

Staffing constraints in January led the then-acting police chief to disband the department’s Disruptive Area Response Team, which supplemented patrol officers to address quality-of-life issues such as illegal gambling, blight, human trafficking, providing services for the unhoused and connecting with members of the community. Though restarted, DART still isn’t fully staffed.

The version of Measure C that could go before voters next year includes changes from the original tax and the failed 2022 proposal. Notably, it would become a special tax rather than a general tax, meaning revenue could only be used for the tax’s stated purpose.

If approved next year, Measure C would again have a 20-year lifespan and would be reviewed by a citizen’s oversight committee.

Staff in Merced’s City Clerk’s Office spent Tuesday tabulating the raw number of signatures before sending them to the Merced County Registrar of Voters to verify. It was unclear when verification by the registrar’s office would be complete.


The measure has support from a majority of the current council, including Mayor Matt Serratto. Councilmembers Sarah Boyle, Ronnie DeAnda and Shane Smith all attended the kick-off rally for the petition drive.

Councilmember Jesse Ornelas, the only councilmember to twice vote against putting the measure on the ballot, said he would have liked to have seen the measure address the need for affordable housing as a public safety issue. In the end, however, he said he’s leaving the measure’s fate up to Merced voters.

“To be honest, I’m really neither here nor there about it,” Ornelas told CVJC by phone Tuesday. “It’s something that, if they get the signatures for it, and people vote on it and it passes, I’m kind of in favor of democracy.” 

Brianna Vaccari is the governmental accountability/watchdog reporter for the Central Valley Journalism Collaborative, a nonprofit newsroom based in Merced. Sign up for CVJC’s free Substack list here and follow CVJC on Facebook.

This story was published in partnership with the Central Valley Journalism Collaborative, a nonprofit and nonpartisan community newsroom. To get regular coverage from the CVJC, sign up for CVJC’s free Substack list here and follow CVJC on Facebook.

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Felicia Roberts took an idea gathered a few people to reached into a minority community to highlight the positive, using a minority newspaper the Central Valley Voice. Roberts was joined by her sisters Carolyn Williams, Alleashia Thomas, niece Hermonie Lynn Williams, nephew Ron Williams, cousin Jerald Lester, Jay Slaffey, Greg Savage, Tim Daniels and the late J Denise Fontaine. Each individual played an important role in the birth of the newspapers. Since, then many have stood strong behind the success of the newspapers and its goal to fill a void in the Central Valley community The Central Valley Voice published their 1st issue in November 1991. Its purposed was to highlight the achievements of minorities in the Central Valley. The Voice focuses on the accomplishments of African Americans and Hispanics giving young people role models while diminishing the stereotypical pictures of gangs, crime and violence that permeate the minority communities. Since 1991, the Central Valley Voice has provided an important voice for the minority community throughout the Madera, Merced. Stanislaus and San Joaquin counties.
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