Oregon

NOVEMBER 6, 2018
General Election

Partisan contests in this election included those for Governor, US House, about half the State Senate seats, and all State Representatives. Ballot measures included numbers 102 through 106 (a number of counties also had county-level measures related to the Second Amendment).

Precinct results are included for all counties except Baker, Crook, Grant, and Tillamook. Precinct boundaries are available for all counties and included in the shapefiles.

Official ballot measure summaries:
102: Amends Constitution: Allows local bonds for financing affordable housing with nongovernmental entities. Requires voter approval, annual audits
103: Amends Constitution: Prohibits taxes/fees based on transactions for 'groceries' (defined) enacted or amended after September 2017
104: Amends Constitution: Expands (beyond taxes) application of requirement that three-fifths legislative majority approve bills raising revenue
105: Repeals law limiting use of state/local law enforcement resources to enforce federal immigration laws
106: Amends Constitution: Prohibits spending 'public funds' (defined) directly/indirectly for 'abortion' (defined); exceptions; reduces abortion access
Second-Amendment Preservation Ordinances: County-specific measures on ballot in Baker, Columbia, Douglas, Jackson, Klamath, Lake, Lincoln, Linn, Umatilla, and Union Counties; specific language varied by county

JANUARY 23, 2018
Special Election

Special election for Measure 101 (Approves temporary assessments to fund health care for low-income individuals and families, and to stabilize health insurance premiums.)

Precinct results included for the following counties:
Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Curry, Deschutes, Douglas, Gilliam, Hood River, Jackson, Jefferson, Josephine, Klamath, Lane, Linn, Marion, Multnomah, Polk, Sherman, Union, Wasco, Washington, Yamhill

Downloads:
Metadata (.pdf)
Excel (.xlsx)
GeoJSON (.geojson)
Google Earth (.kmz)
Shapefiles (.shp)

NOVEMBER 8, 2016
General Election

Partisan contests in this election included those for the Attorney General, Governor, President, Secretary of State, Treasurer, US House, US Senate, about half the State Senate seats, and all State Representatives. Ballot measures included numbers 94 through 100.

Precinct results are included for all counties except Tillamook, where only the Presidential contest results were obtainable at the precinct level. Precinct boundaries are available for all counties and included in the shapefiles.

Official ballot measure summaries:
94: Amends Constitution: Eliminates mandatory retirement age for state judges
95: Amends Constitution: Allows investments in equities by public universities to reduce financial risk and increase investments to benefit students
96: Amends Constitution: Dedicates 1.5%of state lottery net proceeds to funding support services for Oregon veterans
97: Increases corporate minimum tax when sales exceed 25 million; funds education, healthcare, senior services
98: Requires state funding for dropout-prevention, career and college readiness programs in Oregon high schools
99: Creates "Outdoor School Education Fund," continuously funded through Lottery, to provide outdoor school programs statewide
100: Prohibits purchase or sale of parts or products from certain wildlife species; exceptions; civil penalties

FILE TYPE HELP

The .geojson, .kmz, and .shp files download as .zip files; unpack them to use them.

Precinct result maps are available in .kmz (Google Earth) format. These files can be opened with the free programs Google Earth and ArcGIS Earth.

Precinct result maps are also available in .geojson format. This format can be opened with ESRI's ArcGIS products and is often used in web mapping applications.

Shapefiles contain the full resolution precinct boundaries. They can be opened with QGIS (free) and with ESRI's ArcGIS products.

Excel files contain precinct results in spreadsheet form and can be opened with Microsoft Excel, Open Office (free), or Google Docs (free).

Metadata is provided in .pdf format. Adobe Acrobat is typically used to open these files. Most computers already have the free Acrobat Reader installed.