Ike damage might disrupt Galveston voting

Published: Oct. 6, 2008 at 7:29 PM

GALVESTON, Texas, Oct. 6 (UPI) -- Damage left by Hurricane Ike in Galveston, Texas, could affect the county's 187,000 registered voters when they go to the polls next month, officials said.

Because the storm destroyed or damaged the homes of many voters, they are now living far from the voting precincts where they are registered to vote, the Houston Chronicle reported Monday.

"The biggest issue is that many of our Galveston County voters are displaced," county elections coordinator Douglas Godinich said.

There was a proposal to allow Hurricane Ike evacuees who are living in other areas of Galveston County to be able to vote at any county precinct Nov. 4, but that idea was rejected, Godinich said.

The newspaper reported that Galveston County Clerk Mary Ann Daigle turned down an offer by the

secretary of state's office because there wasn't enough time to complete the work needed to make the switch.

"We examined that option, and it is not a good fit," Godinich said.

He said displaced voters can avoid polling problems by casting a ballot during early voting, Oct. 20-31, or casting an absentee ballot by mail by Oct. 28.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
NBA: Houston 116, Dallas 108 (OT) (25 min)
NHL: Chicago 5, Boston 4 (SO) (28 min)
COL FB: Villanova 23, Montana 21 (29 min)
NBA: Oklahoma City 109, Detroit 98 (54 min)
NBA: New York 95, LA Clippers 91 (54 min)
NBA: Memphis 107, Indiana 94 (55 min)
NBA: New Orleans 98, Denver 92 (55 min)
fark
Yeah, you probably have mad cow disease
U.S. to Capture Cow Farts to Save the Planet. This should complete the Cow trifecta
Austin man reports cow as missing
800 sheep and 40 cattle killed by Walla tip fire. BBQ trifecta is sick due to overeating
Unknown number of hogs become instabacon in farm fire. Accidental BBQ trifecta complete
Cat chewing is draining Yemen's water supply