Tracy, California — a community worth representing

Your Neighborhood.
Your Voice.

Tracy is represented through four City Council districts, and District 1 deserves a representative who knows the neighborhoods, understands the concerns, and will stay connected to the people who live there.

Local government at its most direct.

Tracy's City Council includes four districts, each electing one representative to serve on the governing body of the city. City Council makes the decisions that matter most to daily life — zoning, development, public safety funding, parks and recreation, city services, infrastructure maintenance, and the city budget.

District 1 covers a significant portion of Tracy's established residential neighborhoods — areas that have been home to families for decades. These neighborhoods form the character of the city. They deserve a council seat that understands that character and protects it.

City Budget

How your tax dollars are spent on services and infrastructure

Land Use & Zoning

What gets built, where, and at what density

Public Safety

Funding for police, fire, and emergency services

Parks & Recreation

Maintenance and investment in community green space

Development Agreements

Standards and conditions for new development

City Services

Trash, water, streets, lighting, and neighborhood maintenance

Tracy, California — District 1 community

15,000 residents in 1980.
Nearly 100,000 today.

Tracy is one of California's fastest-growing cities. The families who built it — and who continue to call it home — deserve a voice in what it becomes.

Tracy grew from 15,000 to nearly 100,000 residents.
Who guides what comes next?

Growth Without Oversight

When development moves faster than city services, neighborhoods feel the impact first — through traffic, overcrowding, infrastructure strain, and delayed planning. Local government should identify pressure points early and work proactively instead of reacting after residents are already frustrated.

A Louder Voice for District 1

District 1 residents deserve an engaged, accessible representative who understands the unique needs of their part of Tracy and brings those concerns into the conversations where decisions are made.

The Decisions That Stay

Zoning decisions, development contracts, and infrastructure plans don't reverse easily. What gets decided now shapes Tracy for decades.

District 1 deserves a representative who actually represents.

Robin Cole moved to District 1 in 1980. She has lived through every change — the growth, the growing pains, the wins, and the moments when residents were left without a voice. She is running because she knows what good representation looks like, and she knows when it's been missing.

View Her Campaign Priorities →

01

Accessible Leadership

Robin believes effective representation starts with listening, staying engaged, and maintaining open communication with District 1 residents.

02

Thoughtful Decision Making

Robin’s approach is simple: understand the issue, hear from the community, review the facts, and make decisions that serve Tracy’s long-term interests.

03

Show up for District 1.

District 1 residents shouldn’t have to go to City Hall to be heard. Robin will stay connected to the neighborhoods she has called home for 45 years.

04

Prioritize quality of life.

Infrastructure, safety, parks, and services — the things that determine whether your neighborhood feels like home. These are her first-tier priorities.

District 1 deserves a voice that shows up.

Robin Cole is running to ensure District 1 has engaged, accessible representation at City Hall.