Lynchburg City Council rejects new precinct idea for LU
Lynchburg City Council rejected the idea of creating a new precinct for Liberty University voters during a meeting Tuesday.
The prevailing majority argued the suggestion was an overreaction not yet justified by history.
Members also noted it would be difficult, if not impossible, to get the General Assembly to accept any precinct changes, and observed a federal census pending in 2010 means a re-evaluation of all precincts is already on the horizon.
Ward III Councilman Jeff Helgeson, whose district includes LU, suggested the change as a means of alleviating congestion at the Heritage Elementary School precinct, which saw its registration more than double this year as thousands of LU students signed up to vote.
Heritage Elementary School takes voters from the LU campus.
“This has been a sleepy little polling place, and now it’s got a whole lot of new people,” Helgeson said. “With that, I think it’s incumbent upon us to take action.”
The councilman added the city had a responsibility to its voters, and distributed data showing the Heritage Elementary precinct had grown almost as fast over the past four years as the other three voting wards combined.
The request for a new precinct failed 3-4 with councilmen Helgeson, Turner Perrow of Ward IV, and Scott Garrett, at large, in the minority.
Those voting against the measure noted LU’s students have only been on the voter rolls for this year’s presidential election.
Upcoming elections occur at the state and local levels, which tend to generate less excitement and can’t be counted on to produce the same kind of turnout, officials noted.
“I just think this is a completely extreme overreaction,” said Vice Mayor Bert Dodson. “… To just rush in and do this is sloppy government.”
The vice mayor voted against a new precinct along with Mayor Joan Foster, Ward I Councilman Mike Gillette and Ward II Councilman Ceasor Johnson.
Gillette noted Heritage Elementary was not the biggest precinct in the city — that title goes to the Moose Lodge in Ward I.
Heritage Elementary, which did see the city’s single biggest turnout Nov. 4, now ranks as the second-largest precinct, according to a city memo.
Council members opposed to an extra precinct indicated they felt the issue could be better managed by adding extra voting machines and poll workers to Heritage Elementary in the future.
It would have been difficult for the city to get a new precinct approved. The state is putting a freeze on such changes beginning Feb. 1. The freeze won’t be lifted until 2011, when the next federal census is complete.
Helgeson had advocated immediately starting the precinct creation process, then asking the state to “grandfather” the subsequent voting site in. Other members suggested that plan had little, if any, hope of succeeding.
Barry N. Moore, vice president of university relations for LU, was in the audience during council’s deliberations.
He said afterward the school took no position on the precinct issue and trusted officials to make adequate provisions for future elections.
He added, though, he felt those anticipating a slump in LU’s voter turnout were mistaken.
“I think (the presidential election) heightened awareness, obviously,” Moore said. “But we fully expect this level, or something close to this level of interest, will continue.”
“Our students and faculty and staff will stay engaged in the future, because it’s the right thing to do,” he said. “It’s good citizenship.”
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Reader Reactions
I’m a grad student at UVA. The day before elections, Perriello took out a half page ad in the Cavalier Daily campus paper. It informed UVA campus students they were to vote at one of the 3 on campus polling places. UVA town students were to vote at their respective polling station in C-ville.
I don’t see what the big deal is for L-burgers. Other than hoping that keeping the polling station off campus would deter LU students from voting. Which I suspect is the case. It is done elsewhere in the state, why not here? But heaven forbid if L-burg benchmarks itself against other progressive cities in VA….
Another symptom of the fearful manner City Council has been conducting business for several years. The same fear of helping prepare for the inevitable is evidenced by their tortured decision making process.
They repeatedly postpone decisions, fail to be evenhanded with all Wards, their inability to plan any new city events except those easily arranged, and the denial to even acknowledge difficult challenges.
We need more foresight and less circling the wagons. Another precinct should not be considered a threat but a solution to an obvious need.
Is there any wonder Liberty frequently steps in to fill the various vacuums left by council?
I must ask the obvious question, and maybe it’s not so obvious, but if the Falwells, Barry Moore, Coucilmen Helgeson, Turner, Perrow, and the leadership of Liberty University and Thomas Road Baptist Church were honest and forthright in there sincere support for the democratic process, why didn’t they push for active citizenship of their out-of-state student’s in their own home states by absentee voting rather than having them re-register to vote in one precinct in Lychburg, Virgina?
If we are to look to this faith institution, this faith based institution of higher education, these faith leaders and local elected officials for moral guidance and ethical governance, then why do they so brazenly wave their versions of morality and ethics in our faces and not expect people to roll their eyes in righteous disgust or be surprised this action will not further polerize this community? While it is debatable if any voter fraud has been perpetrated by these actions, what is not in question is that these very actions are morally questionably and wholly (and holy) unethical. Not only should the citizens of local communities, our Commonwealth, our nation, hold their elected officals accountable, but the congregations of our faith institutions should equally hold our faith leaders accountable for morally and ethically wrong actions.
I am a Christian, I read the same Bible as those at Liberty University and Thomas Road Baptist Church, the very same Bible that the Falwells, Barry Moore, that Councilmen Helgeson, Turner, and Perrow read (maybe I assume too much), and it gives me spiritual guidance and it tells me that pushing Liberty University undergraduates to re-register to vote in Ward III Precinct 4 is wrong. While I will be both cheered and criticized for this post and calling these people out, it needed to be said. They needed to be held accountable and to the same moral, ethical, and spiritual standards that they advocate. Liberty University and Thomas Road Baptist Church could be an incredible force for positive change, but again they put a narrow-minded ideology for their select community above the greater good. I pray that Christ will touch each of their hearts and show them that they need to ask for forgiveness for this action. If not, I pray that he will reach down and impose is righteous punishment upon those that advocate for questionably moral and unethical public policy that only advances their interests. Oh, I’m sorry. That’s the same prayer that they pray.

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