Linn County will mail out ballots for the May 20 election beginning on April 30.
In the Sweet Home School District, voters will decide on whether to renew a local option levy for the swimming pool.
If approved, the levy would provide funding for five years, beginning in 2014 and expiring in 2019 to the School District to operate the swimming pool.
The tax is 32 cents per $1,000 of assessed value. It will raise about $103,500 in the first year and nearly $110,000 in the final year.
The existing two-year levy will expire on June 30.
The district requested the local option levy after a round of budget cuts that included the swimming pool. A committee explored options to keep the swimming pool open, including a possible aquatics district.
The effect of property tax limitations, if an aquatics district were approved, would have reduced law enforcement funding, so the committee proposed and voters approved a local option levy two years ago.
Also on May 20, voters will decide primary elections.
In Linn County, incumbent John Lindsey is facing Chanz Keeney of Holley in the Republican primary for county commissioner position 1.
Keeney is the Holley representative on the Sweet Home School Board.
For state offices, House District 17 has two uncontested primary elections. Democrat Richard Harisay of Sublimity and incumbent Republican Sherrie Sprenger of Scio are unopposed. District 17 includes Sweet Home and areas north, east and west of the city limits. It also includes Stayton, Lebanon and the North Santiam Canyon, along Highway 22.
In House District 11, incumbent Democrat Phil Barnhart will run unopposed in the primary and general elections. Around Sweet Home, District 11 includes the area southwest of the city limits along Highway 228. The district reaches to the Springfield area.
In Senate District 6, primaries are uncontested. Running are incumbent Democrat Lee Beyer and Republican Michael P. Spasaro. District 6 includes the same areas as House District 11 in addition to House District 12, a Springfield district.