To authorize an independent redistricting commission to redraw council district lines every 10 years in the City of Los Angeles.
To strengthen the Ethics Commission by boosting its budget, increasing penalties for wrongdoing and giving it the power to hire its own lawyer.
To allow certain peace officers and park rangers to transfer their pension plans.
To strengthen and update the city’s governance powers, including clarifying the roles of elected officials and commissioners.
To clarify and amend city charter language on administration and operations.
To amend the City Charter to establish an independent redistricting commission to redraw Board of Education district lines every 10 years in the Los Angeles Unified School District.
To enact a three-quarter-cent sales tax to fund public safety and city services.
To require voter approval for major modifications to the Artesia Boulevard Corridor Specific Plan.
To maintain locally-generated funding for public safety, community services and accountability.
Unexpired term ending Dec. 14, 2026
Special election
Unexpired term ending Dec. 14, 2026
Special election
To establish Bellflower as a charter city.
Special election
Unexpired term ending Dec. 21, 2026
To make city attorney an appointed rather than elected position, and require that an appointee have at least 10 years of municipal law experience.
To limit members of the City Council to 3 terms of 4 years.
To establish a quarter-cent sales tax to fund public safety and general city services.
Special election
To allow no more than 2 storefront cannabis dispensaries and tax cannabis businesses up to 10% of gross receipts, raising roughly $2.5 million a year for city spending.
To increase and indefinitely extend the city’s sales tax to three-quarter percent.
Special election
To enact a 1/4% sales tax to fund city services.
Special election
To enact a three-quarter-cent sales tax to fund essential city services for 20 years.
Special election
To maintain locally-generated funding for police, emergency/disaster response, senior citizens, parks, transportation, recreation and economic/job development.
Special election
Special election
To protect Lancaster’s financial stability and maintain essential services by amending city’s sales and use tax.
Special election
To reduce Harbor and Public Utilities Commissioner terms to four years, increase penalties for violations for department rules and create transparency in the hiring process at the port.
Special election
To amend the Long Beach City Charter to reorganize the Civil Service system.
Special election
To eliminate the gas utility tax exemption for electrical coroporations and government agencies that use gas for electricity.
Special election
To adopt a 0.5 cent sales tax to fund general city services in Manhattan Beach.
Special election
To establish city clerk as an appointed position.
To establish city treasurer as an appointed position.
To remove Angie Jimenez of District 5 from the City Council.
To update the business license tax rate to fund $1.2 million a year in city services.
To increase the transient occupancy tax paid by hotel and short-term rental guests from 12% to 13%.
To automatically increases the sales tax rate to the maximum permitted.
To update the business license tax to apply to gross receipts, raising $350,000 a year to fund city services.
Special election
To require special elections for certain City Council vacancies; set residency rules for appointed offices; and revise restrictions on changing campaign contribution limits.
To amend the city charter in regards to the organizational meeting of the City Council, the vice mayor’s election and acting mayor.
To establish term limits for the mayor and council members.
To allow fire and police trustees to be selected.
To issue $195 million in bonds for Pasadena Central Library’s earthquake retrofits, repairs and upgrades.
To change eviction rules; add rent control exemptions; handle board member misconduct; and make other clerical updates to the city charter.
To require that by 2030, at least 10% of unrestricted general-purpose city revenue go to programs and services for children and youth.
To authorize $93.3 million in bonds to fund firefighters, paramedics and police.
Special election
To amend the City Charter sections relating to “Major Changes in Allowable Land Use.”
Special election
To allow for compensation of Redondo Beach Unified School District board members.
Special election
To extend the Special Public Safety Tax for Paramedic Services, Fire Protection and Prevention, and Police Protection until 2029.
Special election
To approve a tax on nonresidential parcels, raising $6 million over 25 years for road repairs and groundwater protection.
Modernizes the business license tax to exempt small businesses and lower rates for retailers and restaurants. The tax would increase for auto dealers and corporate headquarters.
To increase the Parking Facility Tax by 8% except at city-owned lots and structures.
To use at least half of the additional revenue from Measure K (if passed) to protect public safety.
To impose a public safety special tax until July 2032.
Special election
Unexpired term ending Dec. 8, 2026
To create a 1/4% sales tax to replace the county-controlled Measure H tax.
Special election
To restrict multiunit housing in areas and retain height limits in single-family neighborhoods, protecting the city’s character while improving affordable housing opportunities.
To allow for mayor and council members’ compensation, require public, independent audits of all city spending and amend the city charter on election and ethics rules.
Special election
To redirect 1/4 cent per dollar of a potential district sales tax to the city to fund general services.
Special election
Source: www.latimes.com