Rick Shea Nonpartisan Candidate, San Diego County Office of Education District 5 San Diego County Office of Education District 5 Tenure 2015 - Present Term ends 2022 Years in position Report an officeholder change Elections and appointments Last elected June 5, 2018 Next election November 8, 2022 Appointed July 8, 2015 Contact Personal Facebook Rick Shea is a member of the San Diego County Office of Education in California, representing District 5. Shea assumed office in 2015. Shea's current term ends in 2022. Shea is running for re-election to the San Diego County Office of Education to represent District 5 in California. Shea is on the ballot in the general election on November 8, 2022. The primary for this office on June 7, 2022, was canceled. ## Contents * 1 Elections * 1.1 2022 * 1.2 2018 * 1.3 2016 * 2 Campaign themes * 2.1 2022 * 3 See also * 4 External links * 5 Footnotes ## Elections[edit] ### 2022[edit] See also: Municipal elections in San Diego County, California (2022) General election ##### General election for San Diego County Office of Education District 5 Incumbent Rick Shea is running in the general election for San Diego County Office of Education District 5 on November 8, 2022. Candidate | | Rick Shea (Nonpartisan) * * * Incumbents are bolded and underlined. | = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team. Nonpartisan primary election The primary election was canceled. Incumbent Rick Shea advanced from the primary for San Diego County Office of Education District 5. ### 2018[edit] See also: Municipal elections in San Diego County, California (2018) Nonpartisan primary election ##### Nonpartisan primary for San Diego County Office of Education District 5 Incumbent Rick Shea won election outright against Cheryl James-Ward in the primary for San Diego County Office of Education District 5 on June 5, 2018. Candidate Votes | | | ✔ | | Rick Shea (Nonpartisan) | 52.5 | 44,700 | Cheryl James-Ward (Nonpartisan) | 47.5 | 40,374 * * * Incumbents are bolded and underlined. The results have been certified. | Total votes: 85,074 | | = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team. ### 2016[edit] See also: Municipal elections in San Diego County, California (2016) San Diego County held elections for the county board of supervisors, the San Diego County Office of Education, San Diego Community College District, South Bay Irrigation District, and Southwestern Community College District in 2016. The general election was held on November 8, 2016. A primary election was held on July 7, 2016. The candidate filing deadline for this election was on March 11, 2016.[1] Incumbent Rick Shea defeated Mark Wyland in the San Diego County Office of Education District 5 general election.[2] San Diego County Office of Education, District 5 General Election, 2016 Candidate | Vote % | Votes Rick Shea Incumbent | 50.16% | 113,536 Mark Wyland | 49.84% | 112,810 Total Votes | 226,346 Source: San Diego Registrar of Voters, "County of San Diego Presidential General Election," December 8, 2016 Incumbent Rick Shea and Mark Wyland defeated Richard Smith in the San Diego County Office of Education District 5 primary election.[3] San Diego County Office of Education, District 5 Primary Election, 2016 Candidate | Vote % | Votes Rick Shea Incumbent | 44.89% | 56,638 Mark Wyland | 41.26% | 52,061 Richard Smith | 13.85% | 17,469 Total Votes | 126,168 Source: San Diego County Registrar of Voters, "2016 Primary Election Results," accessed September 12, 2016 ## Campaign themes[edit] ### 2022[edit] #### Ballotpedia survey responses See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection Rick Shea has not yet completed Ballotpedia's 2022 Candidate Connection survey. If you are Rick Shea, click here to fill out Ballotpedia's 2020 Candidate Connection survey. Who fills out Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey? * 694 candidates completed the survey in 2021. This number represented 13.5% of all 5,138 candidates Ballotpedia covered in 2021. Out of the 694 candidates who completed Ballotpedia's candidate survey, 147 won their election. Candidates from 36 states completed the survey. Noteworthy respondents included Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu. Read the 2021 report for more information about that year's respondents. * 4,745 candidates completed the survey in 2020. This number represented 16.4% of all 29,002 candidates Ballotpedia covered in 2020. Out of the 4,745 respondents, 743 won their election. Candidates from all 50 states completed the survey. Noteworthy respondents included U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff, U.S. Representative Kat Cammack, and U.S. presidential candidate Jo Jorgensen. Read the 2020 report for more information about that year's respondents. Help improve Ballotpedia - send us candidate contact info. ## See also[edit] 2022 Elections What's on the ballot? U.S. Congress U.S. Congress special elections State executives State legislatures State courts Ballot measures Municipal government School boards Election analysis hub Government Who represents me? U.S. Congress State executives State legislature State courts Ballot measures Municipal government School boards Newsletters The Heart of the Primaries The Daily Brew The Weekly Brew The Ballot Bulletin Checks and Balances Economy and Society Hall Pass Number of the Day Robe & Gavel Union Station ## External links[edit] * Search Google News for this topic Personal * Facebook ## Footnotes[edit] 1. ↑ San Diego County Registrar of Voters, "Candidate Filing Calendar," accessed September 7, 2016 2. ↑ San Diego County Registrar of Voters, "Primary Election Candidate List," accessed September 8, 2016 3. ↑ San Diego County Registrar of Voters, "Primary Election Candidate List," accessed September 8, 2016 v • e Largest U.S. Cities by Population Mayors • City council officials • Overlapping counties • Municipal partisanship A-C| Albuquerque • Anaheim • Anchorage • Arlington • Atlanta • Aurora • Austin • Bakersfield • Baltimore • Baton Rouge • Boise • Boston • Buffalo • Chandler • Charlotte • Chesapeake • Chicago • Chula Vista • Cincinnati • Cleveland • Colorado Springs • Columbus • Corpus Christi D-H| Dallas • Denver • Detroit • Durham • El Paso • Fort Wayne • Fort Worth • Fremont • Fresno • Garland • Gilbert • Glendale • Greensboro • Henderson • Hialeah • Honolulu • Houston I-M| Indianapolis • Irvine • Irving • Jacksonville • Jersey City • Kansas City • Laredo • Las Vegas • Lexington • Lincoln • Long Beach • Los Angeles • Louisville • Lubbock • Madison • Memphis • Mesa • Miami • Milwaukee • Minneapolis N-R| Nashville-Davidson • New Orleans • New York • Newark • Norfolk • North Las Vegas • Oakland • Oklahoma City • Omaha • Orlando • Philadelphia • Phoenix • Pittsburgh • Plano • Portland • Raleigh • Reno • Richmond • Riverside S-W| Sacramento • San Antonio • San Diego • San Francisco • San Jose • Santa Ana • Santa Clarita • Scottsdale • Seattle • Spokane • St. Louis • St. Paul • St. Petersburg • Stockton • Tampa • Toledo • Tucson • Tulsa • Virginia Beach • Wichita • Winston-Salem v • e State of California Sacramento (capital) | Elections | What's on my ballot? | Elections in 2022 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures Government | Who represents me? | U.S. President | U.S. Congress | Federal courts | State executives | State legislature | State and local courts | Counties | Cities | School districts | Public policy