Politics & Government
Los Alamitos City Council, Los Al USD 2020 Election Results
In District 1, Tanya Doby held a narrow lead over Dean Grose.

LOS ALAMITOS, CA — The polls are now closed in Los Alamitos. From Los Alamitos City Hall to the White House, Tuesday’s election is crucial. Voters have marked their ballots for their chosen leaders, on tax measures, and proposals that will shape California for generations to come.
Now that everyone's cast their votes, the question is: So who won? What passed or failed?
SCROLL TO FIND RESULTS for this race in real-time below.
Find out what's happening in Los Alamitos-Seal Beachfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In Los Alamitos, preliminary election results for the School District and the Los Alamitos City Council filtered in. As of Wednesday at 8:30 a.m., the early results show leaders in three separate city council district races.
In District 1, Tanya Doby was ahead by a narrow margin, just 50.58 percent lead over Dean Grose, at 49.42 percent.
Find out what's happening in Los Alamitos-Seal Beachfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In District 2, the Los Alamitos City Council candidate Ron Bates led the pace at 68.42 percent over Kate Hallman's 31.58 percent.
In District 3 of Los Alamitos, Jordan B. Nefulda ran unopposed.
In the Los Alamitos Unified School District Area 2, Chris Forehan held a 44 percent lead over Paurvi Trivedi's 38.51 percent of votes counted. Jody L. Roubanis was behind at 17.48 percent.
In Area 5 of the Los Alamitos Unified School District, Meg Cutuli held a strong preliminary lead over Matt Filler.
More residents voted to approve Los Alamitos's Y-City Quality of Life measure, in preliminary results, at 51.82 percent to 48.18 percent, opposed.
Patch is here to help you find the results of all your local elections starting with real-time results from across Orange County.
Can't see the widget? Click here for all Orange County election results. Be sure to refresh this page for the latest.
More than 1.7 million people are registered to vote here in Orange County, according to the latest voter registration numbers from Secretary of State Alex Padilla's office.
According to the Registrar of Voters, due to the switch to vote centers, instead of voting precincts, there is no way to immediately track how many ballots cast on Tuesday remain to be counted. State law also allows the counting of mail ballots received as late as 17 days after election day.
Want to double-check that they've counted your absentee/ mail-in ballot? Track it here.
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