How To Vote 2023 – WKUHerald.com https://wkuherald.com Breaking news, sports and campus news from Western Kentucky University Thu, 29 Feb 2024 02:50:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Historic RailPark & Train Museum to provide transportation service on Election Day https://wkuherald.com/73423/election/historic-railpark-train-museum-to-provide-transportation-service-on-election-day/ https://wkuherald.com/73423/election/historic-railpark-train-museum-to-provide-transportation-service-on-election-day/#respond Fri, 03 Nov 2023 20:14:49 +0000 https://wkuherald.com/?p=73423 The Historic RailPark & Train Museum will use the trolley from the BG Trolley Tours and Rentals on Election Day to provide free transportation to voting centers in Warren County.  

“We understand that there is a lot of talk in the community about voters not being able to make it to the polls,” Jamie Johnson, executive director for the Historic RailPark & Train Museum said. “We wanted to take this opportunity to pull the trolley out of its rentals for the day and offer it complementary to the community.”

The trolley will run from 8 a.m to 4 p.m on Election Day only, not on early voting days. The trolley will have four pick-up locations and two drop-off locations. 

The trolley will first stop at the Bowling Green Towers at 8 a.m on Tuesday and then will make a second pick-up stop at Cherry Hall. From there, the trolley will make its first drop-off stop at First Baptist Church. The trolley will then make two additional pick-up stops at Light of the World and Parker Bennett Community Center. The trolley will make its final drop-off stop at State Street Baptist Church. The trolley will be on a continuous loop where citizens are able to get on and off in order to cast their vote and then return to their original location.

Johnson said the locations will be posted to the Bowling Green KY Trolley Tours Facebook page on Tuesday. 

“The way we’re able to offer this to the community is because the Warren County Fiscal Court is the underlying sponsor of the trolley,” Johnson said, “Because of their financial support, we’re able to pull it out of rental commission for the day and allow the community to use it.”

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Warren County Election Education Commission brings awareness to upcoming election https://wkuherald.com/73420/election/warren-county-election-education-commission-brings-awareness-to-upcoming-election/ https://wkuherald.com/73420/election/warren-county-election-education-commission-brings-awareness-to-upcoming-election/#respond Fri, 03 Nov 2023 20:09:21 +0000 https://wkuherald.com/?p=73420 The Warren County Election Education Commission was formed earlier this year by the Warren County Fiscal Court and was commissioned by Judge Executive Doug Gorman.

The non-partisan task force works together to provide educational resources to citizens in Warren County about how to navigate elections. 

“We want to make sure that everyone that is interested in voting is able to vote and we don’t want anyone to not vote because they don’t know or are unaware,” Scott Lasley, WKU political science professor and member of the WCEEC, said.

The task force was established at the August fiscal court meeting, and members began organizing a plan in September and have been working on a tight deadline to provide information to citizens. 

“We got together to discuss with the county clerk to let her know some of the concerns that the NAACP had with the upcoming election,” Saundra Ardrey, political science professor, member of WCEEC and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said.  “Mainly we were concerned with access to some of the voting places since we have gone to these vote centers.” 

Ardrey said that due to change in precinct voting to the large vote centers, it can be hard for marginalized people without resources to have the ability to make it to a vote center on election day. 

Lasley said that the group has transitioned to focusing on how to vote early and how to vote on election day including information about the location of the vote centers and citizens having access to all centers. 

“That’s why the task force was formed, to educate the public on where to vote, how to vote, the procedures,” Ardrey said. “We’ve got folks in the Democratic party, the Republican Party, we’ve got community groups, that’s who I represent the NAACP, on the political action committee chair. We all work together to make sure that no matter where you stand that your voice is going to be heard.”

Ardrey has been representing the Warren County chapter of the NAACP since 1988 and was a former president of the chapter. 

The task force provides information through posters, door hangers that were distributed to campaigns to include with their own literature, social media campaigns, members of the task force speaking with TV and radio stations and an added page on the Warren County website

“We’ve been working with organizations like the College Democrats or Republicans on getting them essentially literature that they can hang with their candidates’ information when they’re door knocking,” Connor Ferguson, senior, business management, Gordon Ford College of Business Senator for the Student Government Association said. “We supplied these organizations with door hangers and print-outs with general voting knowledge on them.”

Ferguson was approached by Student Body President Sam Kurtz after Lasley surveyed about adding a college-aged representative to the task force. Ferguson has experience with political campaigns at the state and federal level through working as a press intern in D.C over the summer and working on campaigns personally. 

The task force has been working swiftly to provide information to the public and is hoping for better strategy and tactics moving into the future. 

“You know, we probably haven’t quite been as successful as we’d hoped, but we’re trying to figure out strategies to get the information out,” Lasley said. “We’ve been working as fast and as quickly as we can because of the short timeline.”

Ferguson said that there were ideas that they generally didn’t have time for such as getting involved with festivals in Bowling Green. He is hopeful that the organization will be able to table at cultural festivals in the coming years, tailgating for WKU and organizing a QR Code to have available at different events that individuals can scan and receive voting information. 

“I think that what is good about this committee and the makeup of it is that it’s going to have a pretty good retention rate,” Ferguson said. “I think the current people sitting on the task force are hoping to stick around for election years to come.”

Ardrey said that a goal she has for the task force is to increase the number of vote centers in Warren County to give marginalized people higher access. 

“We have been working with the secretary of state as well as the county clerk to make sure that we can increase the accessibility,” Ardrey said. “We’re going to make sure we get the resources, the machines and the money in order to do all of that, especially for the people that don’t have a car. We need more voting centers closer to these folks.”

Ferguson has a goal to increase the knowledge on campus regarding voting and the resources available. 

“We want people to be able to reach out to us to talk on campus,” Ferguson said. “I’ve done the best I can whether it be through SGA or my fraternity and using Greek life as a little inroad of letting students on campus know that they can come to me with questions.”

Lasley said one of the biggest things the group is doing is reinforcing the idea that citizens need to make a plan to vote on election day. 

“Folks that have a plan to vote and they think about what day and where, they end up being more likely to go and vote,” Lasley said. 

The task force has organized a trolly system that will be available on Election Day, Tuesday Nov. 7, from 8 a.m – 4 p.m in response to the concern of citizens having access to the vote centers.

The trolly makes a stop every 30 minutes and takes an hour to make a complete loop. The stops include: The Bowling Green Towers, Cherry Hall, La Luz Del Mundo and Parker Bennett Community Center. The trolly will not run on early voting days. 

Warren County offers five early election locations including: Ephram White Park, Living Hope Baptist Church, Michael O Buchanon Park, Phil Moore Park and Sugar Maple Square. Early vote centers are open Nov, 2, 3, 4 from 8 a.m to 4 p.m. 

On Election Day, there are 12 vote centers in Warren County including: Cumberland Trace Elementary, Eastwood Baptist Church, First Baptist Church, Smiths Grove Methodist Church, State Street Baptist Church, Warren Central High and Warren County Cooperative Extension. Election Day locations are open from 6 a.m to 6 p.m. 

“I think it’s something that Warren County should be proud of that there is a body of community members coming around for this because ultimately Warren County and Western Kentucky in general always play a very big role in our elections,” Ferguson said. “I’d want the community to be proud that we have this.”

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‘Every vote in this county is important’ https://wkuherald.com/73200/election/every-vote-in-this-county-is-important/ https://wkuherald.com/73200/election/every-vote-in-this-county-is-important/#respond Thu, 19 Oct 2023 17:00:42 +0000 https://wkuherald.com/?p=73200

Warren County and Bowling Green are poised to play a pivotal role in this year’s Kentucky gubernatorial election, with a teetering split between registered Democratic and Republican voters as well as its historical swing-vote tendency.

“Democrats know they are going to win Louisville and Lexington, but for a statewide candidate to do well, they’ve got to do well in these other counties, and certainly Warren County is one of those,” Scott Lasley, a Republican who serves as magistrate for Warren County’s first district, said.

Warren County was a predominantly Democratic stronghold up until the 1990s when candidates such as Mike Buchanon, the former Warren County judge executive, started winning elections to hold office as a Republican.

Brett Guthrie, also a Republican, was elected in 1998 to represent the 32nd district in the Kentucky Senate until 2008, when he was elected to represent Kentucky’s Second Congressional District in the U.S House of Representatives. He has been reelected to the seat every two years since.

Historically, the Kentucky governor’s seat was predominantly Democratic, but since the 2003 election, has alternated between Democratic and Republican winners.

Andy Beshear, the current Kentucky governor, won the office in the 2019 election by a slim margin of 5,136 votes statewide against incumbent Gov. Matt Bevin, a Republican.

Warren County was a battleground in that election, with Beshear winning the county by a margin of 1,131 votes against Bevin, according to the State Board of Elections.

William Compton, a Democrat and city commissioner for Plum Springs, said approximately one fifth of the votes of Beshear’s margin of victory in his initial campaign for governor came from Warren County.

“Every vote in this county is important,” Compton said.

As of Sept. 5, Warren County was visited most by both gubernatorial candidates of Kentucky throughout the state with five visits each.

In Warren County, the split between registered Republicans and Democrats is slim, with the Republicans leading by 1,343 voters. Warren County has the potential to swing either way, putting that opportunity in the hands of the voters.

Republican Warren County Judge Executive Doug Gorman outlined the issues that candidates should focus on if they intend to win Warren County in what is anticipated to be a close race.

Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron leaves the stage after speaking at the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce’s 77th Annual Meeting Dinner. Cameron is running against current governor Andy Beshear in the 2023 gubernatorial election.

“There are three things really important for Warren County: the economy, healthcare and education,” Gorman said. He believes whichever candidate can have the most impact on those subjects will win.

Gorman also spoke to the importance of casting a vote.

“For us to have the best environment and the best voter experience, we need to continue to try to increase the number of registered voters to vote,” Gorman said.

Kevin Modlin, a WKU political science professor, is curious to see if the vote in Warren County this year is affected by Republicans who may have only voted Beshear in the past due to Bevin’s comments about teachers during his tenure as governor.

Unlike Compton, Modlin said voting for a particular candidate is often about party identity and association more than a particular candidate’s platforms.

“If I were interested in wanting to know how this would go, I would be looking at those tendencies,” Modlin said. “We are people of habit.”

WKU’s presence in Bowling Green may contribute to the county’s party split. Students have the ability to vote, request absentee ballots or register to vote in their college town.

Jeanie Smith, chair of the Warren County Democratic Party, maintains that young voters are critical to the gubernatorial election process.

“Young people could determine every election in America,” Smith said. “I would encourage people to understand the power of a vote.”

The division in Kentucky with the governor race can be seen in Warren County with the different signs up showing support for each candidate. A sign showing support for Attorney General Daniel Cameron is seen in front of a house on Smallhouse Road. (Ella Galvin)

Smith also discussed the closeness of votes in the gubernatorial race 2019.

“In the last gubernatorial election, Warren County was the only Democratic county west of I-65,” Smith said.

Smith also believes that education will be an extremely important platform for this race.

“If we are looking at the state, we had a Democratic stronghold that was very important to the governor’s election,” Smith said. “I think that’s particularly important because Warren County values education and Governor Beshear is a pro-education, pro-teacher governor. Warren Countians know, it doesn’t matter your political party, we love our schools, and we love our teachers, and we want to make sure that they stay really strong and healthy.”

Gov. Andy Beshear gives a speech at Spencer’s Coffee downtown during his reelection tour stop in Bowling Green this past spring. (Ale)

Additionally, Smith advises citizens of Warren County to plan out their voting location and method, as Warren County has 12 polling locations, even though counties of similar size often have many more places to vote. Smith attributes this to voter suppression and said that lower income citizens who don’t have access to transportation will find it more difficult to get to a polling location to vote.

Lasley also emphasized the importance of research before voting.

“Try to figure out what issues are important to you, and what issues are important to the candidates,” Lasley said. “Part of it is also trying to figure out who is going to have a greater effect on policy. Try to take some more time to learn about the candidates and read articles.”

Both Cameron and Beshear have a wide variety of platforms that are important to them to continue to grow the commonwealth of Kentucky.

“Listen, when we’re talking about workforce, it’s about hope. It’s about providing what’s needed. It’s about a message of public education, health care, and childcare,” Beshear said.

Beshear believes strongly in public education, free universal pre-K, and continuing to grow the state’s economy. Under Beshear, Kentucky has legalized sports betting, expanded Medicaid applicability and created new jobs through the construction of a new Ford plant.

Cameron, Kentucky’s attorney general, has a platform that focuses on similar goals. He wants to continue to grow Kentucky’s job force and gain more employment, but intends on doing this in a few different ways.

A yard sign showing support for gubernatorial incumbent and Democratic nominee Gov. Andy Beshear is seen at a home in Bowling Green. (Alexandria Anderson)

“If you expanded Medicaid coverage to able-bodied individuals, why we didn’t condition that to have some sort of work requirement, particularly if we think about it in the lens of wanting to keep the program solid for means medically necessary,” Cameron said at a gubernatorial forum hosted by the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce.

Cameron also wants to eliminate Kentucky individual income tax, while continuing to grow Kentucky’s community and lower its crime rate.

“I want to make sure we can keep our taxes as low as we can to make sure that our education system is as good as it can be and make sure that we have that low crime so that people want to stay here or bring their families here and decide to move here and thrive,” Cameron said.

Despite who wins this gubernatorial election, Bowling Green Mayor Todd Alcott said legislators will continue on with their job as always.

“Regardless of the politics of our next governor, we want our governor to be part of our team, and continue to be the shining example to our nation, of how leadership transforms prosperity,” Alcott said.

News Reporter Bailey Reed can be reached at bailey.reed740@topper. wku.edu

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‘Your vote still matters’: the importance of voter registration https://wkuherald.com/72993/news/your-vote-still-matters-the-importance-of-voter-registration/ https://wkuherald.com/72993/news/your-vote-still-matters-the-importance-of-voter-registration/#respond Thu, 05 Oct 2023 17:49:35 +0000 https://wkuherald.com/?p=72993

The deadline to register to vote in this year’s general election is Oct. 10, and there are many key elements students must be aware of before going to the polls this election cycle.

Democratic Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear is up for reelection, challenged by current Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron.

All Kentucky constitutional offices are included on the ballot this election year, such as Lieutenant Governor, Commissioner of Agriculture and more.

Kentucky has 3,476,659 registered voters as of August, according to the Kentucky State Board of Elections. 1,527,360 of those voters are registered Democrat while 1,597,434 are registered Republican.

In Warren County, a total of 92,083 people out of the approximately 140,000 citizens are registered voters. Republicans total 41,413 while Democrats total 40,070, Warren County Clerk Lynette Yates said.

In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Warren County moved away from closed precinct voting locations to large voting centers where voters can cast their ballot at any center that is convenient for them.

Warren County will offer 12 unique voting centers this election cycle stretching throughout the county. In the 2022 general election, the county offered 8 voting centers, and had a “little over 12%” voter turnout, Yates said.

Tracy Harkins, member and representative of the Kentucky Women’s Network-Barren River Branch, works closely with the Warren County Voting Project. The organization was formed after a significant drop in voter turnout from the 2022 election cycle and when the county did not return to precinct model polling locations.

“Prior to COVID, Warren County had 47 voting locations,” Harkins said.

Buttons and informational pamphlets are seen at a Political Science Department table during Rock the Vote in front of Cherry Hall mid-September to encourage students to vote. (Hudson Hatcher)

In 2020, the number of polling locations decreased to five and has since been increased to 12. However, the number of locations still not reflective of where the county was prior to the pandemic.

“We believe reducing the number of polling locations in Warren County has cut off access to voting for many people in our community,” Harkins said. “Especially college students, those who are disabled and people of color.”

Despite the decrease in voting centers, Yates is hopeful in the functionality of the existing centers. The voting centers have a large capacity and are available from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. on election day, providing flexibility to voters.

“They are in our larger areas like gymnasiums so that we can set them up larger that can fit anywhere from 3-5,000 people,” Yates said.

The voting centers are in larger city areas convenient to where citizens work, and there are also smaller voting centers that serve certain areas of the county, Yates said.

Prior to the general election, there are five early voting locations that provide additional flexibility to voters.

Early voting will occur before the general election on Nov 2, 3 and 4 and is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the provided locations: Ephram White Park, Living Hope Baptist Church, Michael O Buchanon Park, Phil Moore Park and Sugar Maple Square.

Anyone unable to make it to a voting center on election day may participate in early voting on any of the three days available.

There are two voting centers closest to WKU that will be most convenient for students on election day.

“The closest polling locations to campus are at First Baptist Church and Warren Central High School,” Harkins said.

However, despite the close proximity, these locations still require transportation for most students, making the voting centers inconvenient for some.

Ella Galvin

“Warren County officials have promised that for the fall election they will work with WKU and city officials to provide transportation for students and WKU staff to downtown voting locations on election days,” Harkins said. “We are hopeful they will follow through on this commitment.”

Students who choose not to register in Warren County or are registered in their home county in Kentucky may return to vote in that county on election day or request an absentee mail in ballot from the county in which they are registered.

“There is a state portal that will open Sep. 23 (govote.ky.gov) and it will give you all the information and will have the address of where you want it mailed to,” Yates said.

It is vital that if an absentee ballot is requested that it is sent back to the county in which it was requested from in order to make it back in time.

“Something we have seen in the past, students think that they can request their ballot and then drop it off here and so they’ve dropped it in our drop box,” Yates said. “We try
to forward those on to the counties that they go to. So that’s something that they need to be aware of to send it back to the county that they got it from.”

If a student wishes to change their registration and become registered in Warren County, they have the option to do so in the County Clerk’s office or online through the state portal.

Registration must be completed by 4 p.m. local time by the deadline in order to participate in the general election.

If any registered citizen needs to check the status of their registration they may do so on the state portal or through an app curated by the League of Women Voters.

“We have an app called League in Action that people can sign up for to remind them to register, check their registration and keep them up to date on the issues that affect the community,” League Coordinator for the League of Women Voters of Southern Kentucky Elizabeth Hawks said.

Regardless of the accessibility to a voting center, the urgency to become a registered voter and go to the polls remains.

Kentuckians for the Common- wealth is an organization “leading the way to a thriving, joyful, intergenerational, multi-cultural society,” Southern Kentucky Community Organizer for KFTC Megan Bailey said. Bailey specifically works to mobilize more in- dividuals to the polls during election seasons.

“I’ll never forget turning 18 and realizing my time to speak up and be heard had finally arrived,” Bailey said. “The voice of the masses is heard through voting, but to participate in such a process, you first have to register.”

Politicians have additional insight to the feelings of those they serve if the majority of people participate in elections.

“Many people do not realize how voting moves the needle of change,” Bailey said. “Do we always get what we want? Of course not, but politicians do recognize those who have the power to send them home.”

Registering to vote and participating in the upcoming election is the easiest way to express feelings towards issues and provoke change, Yates and Bailey agreed.

“This is your time for anything that you feel strongly about to be heard,” Yates said. “You have to be registered to vote and you need to vote.”

Potentially an even more vital element to registering to vote is becoming an educated voter. Yates recommends researching the candidates and their platforms, as well as the job they are running for.

“It’s the importance of just voting, even more so when you are an informed voter. Especially in local elections,” Yates said. “Research the candidate and find out as much as you can of what they stand for. So you want to make sure that you know what the office is and what you’re voting for.”

Bailey explained there is an added sense of urgency for young people and college students to become registered voters.

“The truth of the matter is this nation could use new skin in the game,” Bailey said. “Young people are the ones who will own businesses, build schools and be doctors and nurses. The voice of young people is imperative to see the changes we demand to see, but it all starts with registering to vote.”

There are certain issues that directly affect the everyday life of a college student, and becoming a registered voter could strongly affect that outcome. Decisions to elect certain legislators could affect issues such as the cost of a college education and working wages.

“You think that our legislators don’t have anything to do with you,” Hawks said. “But those are the people who set how much your tuition is, how much your university gets from the state, how you get your student loans, how much you pay for your student loans.”

Harkins added to this idea.

“Voting gives you the ability to have a say on issues such as climate change and college affordability,” Harkins said.

WKU Assistant Professor of Sociology and Criminology Suzanne Juenke has worked hard to break the narrative of voting not contributing to change.

Juenke made the decision to give extra credit to her students that become registered voters.

“‘I’ve found that those who choose not to vote believe their vote does not matter”, Juenke said, “but I expressed to the students, their vote can make a difference, and their vote does matter.”

Voting gives citizens the opportunity to make a decision on the issues that affect everyday life.

“You should have a say in the decision making process that affects the quality of your own life,” Bailey said. “We have great options, we just have to make educated decisions on who should be in place.”

It will remain important for every eligible person to make a fair effort to go to the polls this election year.

“Whether you’re 18 or 80, your voice still matters and your vote still matters,” Hawks said.

News Reporter Maggie Phelps can be reached at margaret.phelps370@ topper.wku.edu.

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