Election Day 2009: Election day november 2009
Where I live in upstate NY, there are a handful of interesting items
and posts to vote on. I live in the Town of Union and we are voting on
county clerk and a town justice. In Broome County, the most
interesting vote going on will be the one facing the residents of the
Village of Johnson City. They are voting whether to dissolve the
village or not.
NYS has two constitutional amendments on the ballot statewide. The
first amendment is to allow the state to trade forest lands with
National Grid. Other than the fact that National Grid has already used
the land prior to the vote, there does not seem to be a down side to
this vote. The state will get more land than it gives up and this will
benefit the Adirondack Park.
The second amendment allows the legistlature to pass legislation to
allow prisoners in state and local prisons to do volunteer work for
non-profits. I have a problem with this as, whether it appears to be
volunteer or not, I am not sure that our non-profits are where
prisoners should be. I am really torn on this amendment. First, I do
not know if this is what inmates should be doing. Second, I hate
giving legislators more power than they already have.
Probably, the two results I am going to be closely following
tomorrow are two in which I cannot vote. I am watching what happens in
the Village of Johnson City. Why, you may ask, since I don’t live in
the village? I live in the greater Town of Union and that is the
municipality that will take over the Village of Johnson City if the
voters approve dissolution. I do not see folding a village into the
town as a good thing for the town. There is a reason there is a
village of Johnson City.
The other election I am intrigued by is one that could, and has in
the past, warranted its own posts. I may still manage one on it
later. That election is the special election for the 23rd
Congressional district in upstate NY. The district was left without
representation when President Obama tapped John McHugh as Secretary of
the Army. The election, until October 31st, was a three way election
between a sitting NYS assemblywoman who was the Republican nominee, a
businessman who is the Conservative nominee and an unknown Democrat
nominee. The NYS assemblywoman, when it was clear that she was not
going to win, actually withdrew from the contest on Saturday.
Unfortunately for the Conservative nominee, ballots cannot be reprinted
in that amount of time so people may still vote for her. This
district, which is larger than some states, has been Republican for
decades. On top of that, its congressional representative is one of
only three Republicans in the NYS delegation.
Whether there are small local races in your area or you are in the NY 23rd, do not forget to vote tomorrow.
In an off-year election cycle, a single special election for an
upstate congressional seat wasn't supposed to get much attention. But a
lot of things happened that weren't supposed to in New York's 23rd
Congressional race.
Tuesday's race started about five weeks ago with three candidates,
and ends with two - Democrat Bill Owens and surprise contender
Conservative Doug Hoffman. Republican Dierdre Scozzafava
(skoh-zuh-FAH'-vuh) abruptly quit the race over the weekend and backed
Owens after Hoffman's backers accused her of being too liberal for the
largely Republican district because of her support of abortion rights
and same-sex marriage.
Hoffman started in a distant third and was viewed as a spoiler at
best, cutting away at Scozzafava and opening the door for Owens.
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