Browse
Search
Agenda - 09-02-2021; 12-8 - Information Item - Memorandum - Transmittal of the Final Report from the BOCC Elections Advisory Group (BEAG) on the Process for Electing County Commissioners in Orange County
OrangeCountyNC
>
Board of County Commissioners
>
BOCC Agendas
>
2020's
>
2021
>
Agenda - 09-02-2021 Virtual Business Meeting
>
Agenda - 09-02-2021; 12-8 - Information Item - Memorandum - Transmittal of the Final Report from the BOCC Elections Advisory Group (BEAG) on the Process for Electing County Commissioners in Orange County
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
8/26/2021 2:41:58 PM
Creation date
8/26/2021 2:46:38 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
BOCC
Date
9/2/2021
Meeting Type
Business
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
12-8
Document Relationships
Minutes 09-02-2021 Virtual Business Meeting
(Message)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2020's\2021
Jump to thumbnail
< previous set
next set >
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
214
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
87 <br /> Bob Joyce <br /> UNC School of Government <br /> April 22, 2021 <br /> Under GS 153A-58, counties may, without action by the General Assembly, chose for <br /> themselves (through a referendum process) one of four modes of election for county <br /> commissioner.1 <br /> 1. <br /> GS 153A-58(3)a. At large elections—everybody votes for all candidates in primary and in <br /> general election; no districts <br /> The voters of the entire county vote for all candidates for nomination (in the primary) and for <br /> election (in the general election). <br /> 2. <br /> GS 153A-58(3)b. True electoral districts–only district voters vote for candidates in district <br /> primary and in district general election <br /> The voters of each district vote to nominate (in the primary) and elect all candidates (typically <br /> only one) from that district (in the general election). <br /> 3. <br /> GS 153A-58(3)c. Blended districts—only district voters vote for candidates in district primM <br /> but all voters of the county vote for all candidates in general election <br /> The voters of each district vote to nominate all candidates (typically only one) from the district <br /> (in the primary)but all voters of the county vote to elect all candidates (in the general election) <br /> 4. <br /> GS 153A-58(3)d. Residency districtscandidates must reside in districts but all voters of the <br /> county vote for candidates in primary and in general election. <br /> The voters of the entire county vote for all candidates in all districts in the primary election and <br /> in the general election,but the candidates must reside in the district they are running from. <br /> May a county combine districts with at-large seats? <br /> Under method#2, the answer is Yes. GS 153A-58(3)b specifically says so. <br /> Under method#3, the answer is Yes. GS 153A-58(3)c specifically says so. <br /> Under method#4, the answer appears to be No. GS 153A-58(3)d does not provide for <br /> combining at-large seats with residency district seats. <br /> Orange County uses method#3, combined with at-large seats. <br /> ' In addition to the mode of election,under GS 153A-58,counties may choose(within constraints)the number of <br /> members of the board,the length of terms of the board,and the manncr of election of the chair of the board. <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.