Democrats will choose their nominees for U.S. Senate, Congress, the Texas Legislature, governor, Bexar County judge and many other county-level offices in the March 3 primary.

Early voting runs Feb. 17 through Feb. 27 and voters can choose from any Bexar County polling center.

Get to know the candidates seeking the Democratic Party’s nomination for each race below. Many candidates responded to our Q&A about their policy views, which can be viewed by clicking on their profiles. Judicial candidates are listed at the bottom of this guide.

Looking for the Republican primary voter guide? Click here.

The March 3 Democratic primary ballot will also include ballot propositions that enshrine policy views into the party platform if confirmed by voters, as well as precinct chair positions.

In any race where a candidate doesn’t take at least 50% of the vote, the top two finishers will advance to a May 26 primary runoff election.

Voter guide profiles are compiled by San Antonio Report staff using candidates’ filing paperwork, campaign materials and past news coverage. Names are listed in the order they will appear on the March primary ballot.

U.S. Senate

Texas finds itself at the center of the battle for the U.S. Senate majority this year, in part due to Republican U.S. Sen. John Cornyn‘s (R-Texas) expensive GOP primary fight.

Democrats need to flip four seats to take control of the 100-member chamber, and most of the Republican-held seats they could target are in deeply red states.

Democratic primary voters are choosing between two major U.S. Senate candidates who will help set the tone for the party’s strategy statewide in 2026. State Rep. James Talarico (D-Round Rock), a former teacher, wants to win the political middle, while U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Dallas) says the key is firing up the Democratic base.

Democrats running for Texas’ U.S. Senate seat

Congress

The party out of power in the White House typically picks up seats in a midterm election, but the U.S. House is the only chamber that’s considered likely to flip to Democrats’ control in 2026. That’s why President Donald Trump got Texas to redraw its maps outside of the Census cycle this year, creating five new GOP pickup opportunities that could help his party hold control of a chamber that’s been friendly to his agenda.

Under the new maps, Bexar County is divided between four congressional districts. One is considered deeply blue, two strongly favor Republicans, and the fourth leans Republican, but is considered a top battleground on the U.S. House map.

Texas’ 20th Congressional District

Democratic U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-San Antonio) is seeking an eighth term in 2026 and faces two Democratic primary challengers who each ran in San Antonio’s 2025 municipal election.

The winner will go up against Republican Edgardo Baez, a retired physician and first-time candidate, in the general election in November.

Democrats running for Texas’ 20th Congressional District

Texas’ 21st Congressional District

Incumbent Republican U.S. Rep. Chip Roy (R-Dripping Springs) is running for Attorney General instead of reelection, and a long list of candidates lined up to replace him.

The district remains very red, but redistricting expanded its reach into Bexar County, while removing a portion that stretched up to Austin.

Democrats running for Texas’ 21st Congressional District

Texas’ 23rd Congressional District

Republican U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-San Antonio) is seeking a fourth term in a district that stretches from San Antonio to El Paso, and faces a tough GOP primary.

Meanwhile, four Democrats from across the district are seeking to make this race competitive in November.

Democrats running for Texas’ 23rd Congressional District

Texas’ 35th Congressional District

Redistricting turned TX35 from a solidly blue Austin-to-San Antonio district to a potential GOP pickup opportunity on San Antonio’s Southeast side. Progressive incumbent Greg Casar (D-Austin) was drawn out of the district, and will instead compete for a more Austin-centric seat.

Though the redrawn district would have supported Trump by 10 percentage points in 2024, both national parties consider it a top battleground in the fight for control of the U.S. House.

Democrats running for Texas’ 35th Congressional District

Texas Governor

Gov. Greg Abbott is seeking a fourth four-year term in 2026, and nine Democrats are competing for their party’s nomination to take him on in November.

The two biggest-name contenders were Houston businessman Andrew White and state Rep. Gina Hinojosa (D-Austin), but White dropped out to endorse Hinojosa on Jan. 5. His name will still appear on the primary ballot in March.

Democrats running for Texas Governor

Lieutenant Governor

Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick is seeking a fourth term, and Democrats have been divided on who they want to go up against him. The most well-known candidate in the race is state Rep. Vikki Goodwin (D-Austin), but labor groups are backing Marcos Isaias Vélez, a leader in the United Steelworkers.

Democrats running for Texas Lieutenant Governor

Texas Attorney General

Incumbent Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) is running for U.S. Senate instead of reelection, creating a rare opening in a statewide position. Both parties fielded a number of candidates with long resumes in Texas politics.

Democrats running for Texas Attorney General

Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts

Former Comptroller Glenn Hegar took a position overseeing the Texas A&M University system in March, and Gov. Greg Abbott appointed state Sen. Kelly Hancock (R-North Richland Hills) to serve out the remainder of his term.

Hancock is among four Republicans now seeking the open position in 2026, while Democrats are choosing between three contenders to represent them in November.

Democrats running for Texas Comptroller

Commissioner of the General Land Office

Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham, a Republican said to have higher political ambitions, is seeking a second four-year term overseeing the state’s General Land Office. Two Democrats are vying to take her on this November.

Democrats running for Land Commissioner

Commissioner of Agriculture

Incumbent Republican Ag Commissioner Sid Miller is seeking a fourth term and faces a GOP primary challenger who has the backing of Gov. Greg Abbott. The winner will go up against Democrat Clayton Tucker, a rancher with a public policy background.

Democrats running for Texas Agriculture Commissioner

Railroad Commission of Texas

The Railroad Commission of Texas oversees the state’s oil and gas industry, and its three members serve staggered six-year terms. Just one of them, Republican Jim Wright, is up for reelection this year, while Democrats are nominating state Rep. Jon Rosenthal (D-Houston).

Democrats running for for Railroad Commissioner

Texas Senate races

Republicans controlled 18 out of 31 seats in the Texas Senate last legislative session, and the majority is not considered likely to change hands in 2026.

Four Texas Senate districts reach into Bexar County, and of those, two face contested races this year: Sens. Judith Zaffirini (D-Laredo) and Roland Gutierrez (D-San Antonio).

State Sen. José Menéndez (D-San Antonio) did not draw a primary challenger or Republican opponent in Texas Senate District 26, and the county’s lone Republican, state Sen. Donna Campbell (R-New Braunfels) isn’t up until 2028.

Senate District 19

Democratic state Sen. Roland Gutierrez (D-San Antonio), was first elected in 2020 and ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate in 2024.

He’ll face the winner of a three-way Republican primary in November.

Democrats running for Texas Senate District 19

Senate District 21

Democrat Judith Zaffirini (D-Laredo) is one of the longest-serving members of the Texas Senate, first elected in 1986.

She faces a Democratic primary challenger this year and drew one Republican opponent, Julie Dahlberg.

Democrats running for Texas Senate District 21

Senate District 26

Democratic state Sen. José Menéndez (D-San Antonio), a former councilman and Texas House member, did not draw a primary challenger or Republican opponent.

Democrats running for Texas Senate District 26

Texas House races

Republicans control 88 out of 150 Texas House seats, giving them so much power that the biggest fights are often between factions of the Republican Party rather than with Democrats.

All 150 seats are up for reelection in 2026. Very few districts are considered competitive in November, but two that Democrats hope to flip, HD118 and HD121, are in San Antonio.

House District 116

Longtime incumbent state Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer (D-San Antonio) is seeking a fifth consecutive term and does not face a primary challenger this year. Martinez Fischer was once the leader of House Democrats’ strategy, but lost that role last session.

He drew one Republican opponent, Rhett Rosenquest Smith, who works in security.

Democrats running for Texas House District 116

House District 117

State Rep. Philip Cortez (D-San Antonio) has held the seat on and off since 2012. He was one of the only Democrats who didn’t leave the state to break quorum and stall Republicans’ redistricting effort last year, and now faces a Democratic primary challenger, Robert Mihara, over that issue in 2026.

Republicans have one candidate, Ben Mostyn, who ran for the seat in 2024.

Democrats running for Texas House District 117

House District 118

This Southside seat is considered one of the most competitive Texas House districts in the state. Incumbent Republican John Lujan (R-San Antonio) flipped it for Republicans, but is running for Congress instead of reelection.

Republicans are choosing from three candidates running to replace him. The winner will face Democrat Kristian Carranza, who ran against Lujan in 2024.

Democrats running for Texas House District 118

House District 119

Incumbent Democratic state Rep. Liz Campos (D-San Antonio), a former legislative staffer, is running for a fourth term.

She faces a Democratic primary challenge from attorney Ryan Ayala, a political newcomer who picked up a big labor endorsement.

The winner will face Republican Melva Rivera Perez, a retired operational planner.

Democrats running for Texas House District 119

House District 120

Democratic state Rep. Barbara Gervin-Hawkins (D-San Antonio) is seeking a sixth term in her Eastside district. She drew two Democratic primary challengers this year, Democratic activist Bently Paiz and special education teacher Jordan Brown, who is backed by major unions.

No Republicans filed to run in this district in 2026.

Democrats running for Texas House District 120

House District 121

Republican state Rep. Marc LaHood (R-San Antonio) won the seat by defeating an incumbent from his own party, Steve Allison, in 2024. This year LaHood faces his own GOP primary challenger, David McArthur, in a race that’s centered around tort reform.

The winner will face Democrat Zack Dunn, a prosecutor, in a race likely to draw big money from Texas Democrats.

Democrats running for Texas House District 121

House District 122

Republican state Rep. Mark Dorazio (R-San Antonio), a leader in the party’s conservative wing, won the seat in 2022. This year he faces a GOP primary challenge from security company owner Willie Ng, who served on the board of Texas’ chamber of commerce.

The winner of the March primary will face Democrat Shelly Nickels, a hospital medical director.

Democrats running for Texas House District 122

House District 123

Democratic state Rep. Diego Bernal (D-San Antonio), an attorney and former San Antonio City Council member, won the seat in a 2015 special election.

Bernal is once again running unopposed in both the Democratic primary and general election in 2026.


Democrats running for Texas House District 123

House District 124

Democratic state Rep. Josey Garcia (D-San Antonio), a U.S. Air Force veteran, is seeking a third term representing the Southwest side. She did not draw a primary challenger this year.

Garcia faces a rematch in November with Republican Sylvia Soto, a teacher who ran unsuccessfully for the seat in 2024.

Democrats running for Texas House District 124

House District 125

Longtime Democratic state Rep. Ray Lopez (D-San Antonio) is retiring this year, creating an opening in his reliably blue Westside seat. The Democratic primary includes a former constable, former Republican, SAISD union leader and Lopez’s chief of staff.

Two Republicans, Ricardo Martinez and Charles “Chuck” Mercer, are vying for their party’s nomination.

Democrats running for Texas House District 125

Bexar County District Attorney

District Attorney Joe Gonzales, a Democrat who has held the role since 2018, isn’t seeking reelection this year. Eight Democrats are competing for the party’s nomination to replace him, and the winner will go up against the lone Republican filer, Ashley Foster, in November.

Democrats running for Bexar County DA

Bexar County Judge

Incumbent Bexar County Judge Peter Sakai, a Democrat, faces a primary challenge from former Mayor Ron Nirenberg. The winner will go up against Republican Patrick Von Dohlen, who is running unopposed for his party’s nomination, in November.

Democrats running for Bexar County Judge

District Clerk

Incumbent Gloria Martinez defeated a fellow Democrat to win the seat in 2022, and now faces four primary challengers this March. Republicans did not field a candidate for this race.

Democrats running for Bexar County District Clerk

Bexar County Clerk

Bexar County Clerk Lucy Adame-Clark faces two Democratic primary challengers. Republicans did not field a candidate for this race.

Democrats running for Bexar County Clerk

Bexar County Precinct 2 Commissioner

Commissioner Justin Rodriguez (Pct. 2), a Democrat who previously served in the Texas House, has held the seat since 2019 when then-Judge Nelson Wolff appointed him to replace the late Commissioner Paul Elizondo. Rodriguez will face Republican challenger David Sherwood Hill, who is also running unopposed for his party’s nomination, in November.

Democrats running for Bexar County Pct. 2 Commissioner

Bexar County Precinct 4 Commissioner

Bexar County Commissioner Tommy Calvert (Pct. 4), a Democrat who has held the seat since 2014, doesn’t face a primary opponent or Republican challenger this year.

Democrats running for Bexar County Pct. 4 Commissioner

Justice of the Peace for Bexar County’s Pct. 1

Justice of the Peace Sylvia Ruiz isn’t seeking reelection in 2026. Two Democrats are vying to fill her seat in the March 3 primary. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for Bexar County Pct. 1 Justice of the Peace

Justice of the Peace for Bexar County’s Pct. 3

Incumbent Julie Bray Patterson, a Republican who was first elected in 2022, is unopposed in her bid for a second term.

Democrats running for Pct. 3 Justice of the Peace

None

Justice of the Peace for Bexar County’s Pct. 4

Justice of the Peace Michele Garcia, a Democrat elected in 2022, declined to seek reelection while battling cancer. She died in December. Four Democrats are running for the seat in the March primary. No Republicans filed for the race.

Democrats running for Bexar County Pct. 4 Justice of the Peace

Bexar County Democratic Party Chair

The Bexar County Democratic Party and Republican Party of Bexar County each elect their party chairs on the March primary ballot. After years of contentious fights for these positions, both incumbents are running unopposed for a second two-year term in 2026.

Candidates for Bexar County Democratic Party Chair

Judicial races

Texas Supreme Court

The Texas Supreme Court is comprised of nine members who serve staggered, six-year terms. All seats are currently held by Republicans, four of whom are up for reelection in 2026. Democrats are choosing from the following candidates to run against them in November.

Texas Supreme Court — Chief Justice

Republican Chief Justice Jimmy Blacklock was appointed to the chief justice position by Gov. Greg Abbott in 2025, after the previous chief justice, Nathan Hecht, reached the state’s judicial age cap. Blacklock is unopposed in the Republican primary, and two Democrats are vying to run against him in November.

Democrats running for Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court

Texas Supreme Court — Place 2

Justice James P. Sullivan was appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott to fill this position when Justice Jimmy Blacklock was promoted to chief justice in January of 2025. Sullivan is now running to hold it for the rest of Blacklock’s unexpired term, and does not face a GOP primary challenger.

Democrats running for Texas Supreme Court — Place 2

Texas Supreme Court — Place 7

Incumbent Republican Justice Kyle Hawkins was appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott in October 2025 to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice Jeff Boyd. Hawkins is unopposed in the GOP primary and will face the winner of a two-way Democratic primary in November.

Democrats running for Texas Supreme Court — Place 7

Texas Supreme Court — Place 8

Incumbent Republican Brett Busby is unopposed in the GOP primary. One Democrat, Gisela Triana, is running for the seat in November.

Democrats running for Texas Supreme Court — Place 8

Texas Court of Criminal Appeals

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals is the highest appellate court for criminal cases in Texas. It’s comprised of nine members who serve staggered six-year terms.

All seats are currently held by Republicans, but they experienced big turnover in last cycle’s primary last election after Attorney General Ken Paxton campaigned against long-serving Republican judges who said he didn’t have broad authority to prosecute election fraud.

Two remaining GOP judges who signed onto that ruling, Bert Richardson and David Newell, are retiring instead of seeking reelection this year. A third Republican Justice, Kevin Patrick Yeary, is seeking a third term.

Texas Court of Criminal Appeals — Place 3

Incumbent Republican Justice Bert Richardson is running for a lower court instead of seeking reelection. Four Republicans are running to take his place, and the winner will face Democrat Okey Anyiam in November.

Democrats running for Texas Court of Criminal Appeals — Place 3

Texas Court of Criminal Appeals — Place 4

Incumbent Republican Justice Kevin Patrick Yeary is unopposed in the GOP primary. He will face Democrat Audra Riley in November.

Democrats running for Texas Court of Criminal Appeals — Place 4

Texas Court of Criminal Appeals — Place 9

Incumbent Republican Justice David Newell is retiring and two Republicans are running to take his place. The winner will face Democrat Holly Taylor in November.

Democrats running for Texas Court of Criminal Appeals — Place 9

Texas’ 15th Court of Appeals

The 15th Court of Appeals was created during the 2023 legislative session and has jurisdiction over cases involving the state, state leaders, challenges to state law, and cases from the state’s new business court. Its three inaugural justices, all Republicans, were appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott. They’re on the ballot for the first time in 2026.

Texas’ 15th Court of Appeals — Chief Justice

Incumbent Republican Justice Scott Brister is unopposed in the GOP primary. He will face Democrat Jerry Zimmerer in November.

Democrats running for Texas’ 15th Court of Appeals — Chief Justice

Texas’ 15th Court of Appeals — Place 2

Incumbent Republican Justice Scott Field is unopposed in the GOP primary. He will face Democrat Tom Baker in November.

Democrats running for Texas’ 15th Court of Appeals — Place 2

Texas’ 15th Court of Appeals — Place 3

Incumbent Republican Justice April Farris is unopposed in the GOP primary. She will face Democrat Marc Meyer in November.

Democrats running for Texas’ 15th Court of Appeals — Place 3

4th Court of Appeals

The 4th Court of Appeals is based in San Antonio, but hears appeals to cases from a 32-county region that includes parts of the Hill Country and South Texas. Its seven members serve staggered six-year terms.

Democrats held the majority of the seats going into the last election, but Republicans spent big money flipping nearly Democrat-held appellate court seat in the state in 2024, including electing three new Republicans on the 4th Court of Appeals. This year just one seat, currently held by a Democrat, is on the ballot.

4th Court of Appeals — Chief Justice

Incumbent Democratic Chief Justice Rebecca Martinez is not seeking reelection. Two Democrats are running to fill her seat, and the winner will face Republican Bert Richardson in November.

Democrats running for Texas’ 4th Court of Appeals — Chief Justice

State District Courts

Each Texas county is served by at least one state district court, but large counties like Bexar County have many of them, specializing in criminal, civil and juvenile cases. Judges serve four-year terms, with roughly half of the courts up for reelection in midterm years. 

Democrats flipped the last remaining Republican-held district court judgeships in 2022, and have since started challenging one another in primaries. This year there’s just one open seat, in the 226th Criminal District Court, where Republican Judge Ben Robertson, is running for a different bench seat in 2026.

45th Civil District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Mary Lou Alvarez faces one primary opponent. No Republicans filed for this seat.

Democrats running for the 45th Civil District Court

144th Criminal District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Michael Mery faces one primary opponent. No Republicans filed for this seat.

Democrats running for the 144th Criminal District Court

150th Civil District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Monique Diaz is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 150th Civil District Court

186th Criminal District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Kristina Escalona is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 186th Criminal District Court

187th Criminal District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Stephanie R. Boyd faces one Democratic primary challenger. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 187th Criminal District Court

224th Civil District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Marisa Flores faces one Democratic primary challenger. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 224th Civil District Court

225th Civil District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Christine Vasquez-Hortick is unopposed in the Democratic primary. She faces Republican Benjamin Robertson in November.

Democrats running for the 225th Civil District Court

226th Criminal District Court

Incumbent Republican Judge Benjamin Robertson is running in a different court. Two Democrats are vying to fill his seat. No Republicans filed for the race in November.

Democrats running for the 226th Criminal District Court

227th Criminal District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Christine Del Prado is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 227th Criminal District Court

285th Civil District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Nadine Melissa Nieto is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 285th Civil District Court

288th Civil District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Cynthia Marie Chapa is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 288th Civil District Court

289th Juvenile District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Rose Sosa is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 289th Juvenile District Court

290th Criminal District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Jennifer Peña is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 290th Criminal District Court

436th Juvenile District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge William “Cruz” Shaw faces one Democratic primary challenger. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 436th Juvenile District Court

437th Criminal District Court

Incumbent Democratic Judge Joel Perez is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for the seat.

Democrats running for the 437th Criminal District Court

Bexar County Courts-at-Law

Judges in the 15 Bexar County Courts serve four-year terms, and all of them are up for reelection in 2026. In a blue county, Democrats control every county bench seat, and few Republicans signed up to run against them.

This year there are two open seats, in County Court at Law No. 8 and No. 9, where incumbents are retiring. Several incumbent Democrats also face primary challengers.

County Court at Law No. 1

Incumbent Helen Petry Stowe is unopposed in the primary. She faces Republican Bob Behrens, a former judge, in November.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 1

County Court at Law No. 2

Incumbent Melissa Saenz is unopposed in the Democratic primary and did not draw a Republican challenger.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 2

County Court at Law No. 3

Incumbent David Rodriguez is unopposed in the Democratic primary and did not draw a Republican challenger.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 3

County Court at Law No. 4

Incumbent Alfredo Ximenez is unopposed in the Democratic primary. He faces Republican Jason Roland Garrahan in November.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 4

County Court at Law No. 5

Incumbent Andrea Arevalos is unopposed in the Democratic primary and did not draw a Republican challenger.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 5

County Court at Law No. 6

Incumbent Erica Dominguez is unopposed in the Democratic primary and did not draw a Republican challenger.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 6

County Court at Law No. 7

Incumbent Melanie Lira is unopposed in the Democratic primary and did not draw a Republican challenger.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 7

County Court at Law No. 8

Two Democrats are vying for their party’s nomination to replace retiring Judge Mary Roman. The winner will face Republican Celeste Brown in November.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 8

County Court at Law No. 9

Three Democrats are running for their party’s nomination to replace retiring Judge Gloria Saldana. The winner will face Republican Daphne Previti Austin in November.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 9

County Court at Law No. 10

Incumbent Cesar Garcia faces two Democratic primary challengers. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 10

County Court at Law No. 11

Incumbent Erica Peña is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 11

County Court at Law No. 12

Incumbent Yolanda Huff faces one Democratic primary challenger. The winner will face Republican Deborah Dietzmann in November.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 12

County Court at Law No. 13

Incumbent Rosie Speedlin Gonzalez faces one Democratic primary challenger. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 13

County Court at Law No. 14

Incumbent Carlo Rodriguez Key faces one Democratic primary challenger. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 14

County Court at Law No. 15

Incumbent Melissa Vara is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for County Court at Law No. 15

Probate Courts

Bexar County has three probate courts that handle wills and the distribution of assets after a person’s death. They serve four-year terms, and two of them are on the ballot in 2026.

Probate Court No. 1

Incumbent Oscar J. Kazen is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for Probate Court No. 1

Probate Court No. 2

Incumbent Veronica Vasquez is unopposed in the Democratic primary. No Republicans filed for this race.

Democrats running for Probate Court No. 2

San Antonio Report government and politics reporter Andrea Drusch built our primary voter guides. Questions? Email andrea@sareport.org.