- Home - Kim Marra Stephenson For Supervisor
Determine what we pay our local workers, and how we prioritize our budget and economic goals who puts people first! As your next Supervisor, I will fight for: ACCESS FOR ALL to county services that are reachable, putting people over politics, and holding government accountable Mark your calendars!
- Kim Marra Stephenson running for District 3 county supervisor seat
Camarillo resident Kim Marra Stephenson announced she is again running to represent District 3 on the Ventura County Board of Supervisors She is challenging sitting Supervisor Kelly Long, who was first elected to the seat in 2016, and was re-elected in 2020
- Three for 3: Schmidt, Stephenson challenge Long for District 3 . . .
Heather Schmidt shook up the race for District 3 Ventura County Supervisor by throwing her hat in the ring and ensuring the March 5 primary would not be a rematch of the November 2020 contest where incumbent Kelly Long beat challenger Kim Marra Stephenson
- Kim Marra Stephenson - Facebook
Kim Marra Stephenson, Santa Barbara, CA 1,490 likes Teacher, Mother, Bridge Builder Candidate for Ventura County Supervisor Ready to work for all
- County supervisor candidates face off in last pre-primary debate
Challenger Kim Marra Stephenson came out swinging against incumbent Kelly Long in Tuesday night's debate for 3rd District Ventura County Supervisor, criticizing Long's record as
- Ventura County District 3 supervisor race kicks off with first debate
Her opponents are Kim Marra Stephenson, a teacher in Oxnard and former high school principal in Camarillo who ran against Long in 2020, and Heather Schmidt, a public policy consultant who ran for
- Meet Kim - Kim Marra Stephenson For Supervisor
Kim Marra Stephenson is a dedicated teacher, mother, and community leader, whose roots run deep in Ventura County Kim’s family has lived in Ventura County for over 40 years
- District 3 Supervisor Candidates their views and priorities
Candidate Kim Marra Stephenson is currently a resident of Camarillo and has not previously held a public office However, she said she is the only candidate who speaks Spanish She received her bachelors in psychology from UCLA and her doctorate in educational psychology from Stanford University
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