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Numerous elections add up for Bexar taxpayers

Numerous elections carry heavy price for Bexar County taxpayers

When State Sen. Ruth Jones McClendon announced she'd be stepping down from her seat of nearly 20 years, nothing seemed out of place.

Since her health had been declining for several years, McClendon, a veteran lawmaker and beloved member of the Democratic delegation in the House, decided to focus on taking care of herself.

The cost of freedom

 

During the March 1 primaries, two top vote-getting candidates emerged from a field of six: Barbara Gervin-Hawkins, sister of NBA Hall of Famer George Gervin and co-founder of the George Gervin Youth Center, Inc. in San Antonio; and Mario Salas, an activist from San Antonio's east side.

The election, and subsequent runoff between Gervin-Hawkins and Salas on May 24 because neither captured a majority of the vote, is to fill McClendon's regular two-year term starting in January.

See May 7 election results

But voters from House District 120 also voted in another election May 7, to decide who will sit in McClendon's former seat until the end of the year in what's called an unexpired term (since McClendon left her seat early). The four candidates in the running were narrowed down to two: Laura Thompson and Lou Miller. They will head to a runoff election this summer.

It's redundant and needs to be changed, according to Bexar County commissioner Paul Elizondo.

“It’s gotten out of hand and it’s been out of hand for a while - with all of these special runoff elections that are required by some antiquated state statutes and the commissioners court can’t change that because we operate under state law," Elizondo said.

He said he and the rest of the commissioners would like to ask the delegation of state lawmakers from Bexar County to head to Austin and change election law, which currently requires 50 percent plus one vote, or a majority, to declare a candidate the winner of an election.

He would like to see plurality, a candidate who captures most of the votes, declare winners in some of the elections that don't have lasting impact, like McClendon's unexpired term. It would have helped avoid this "musical chair" situation of a special election that's now going to a runoff. Even an appointment in some cases would work, he added.

“With all these special election runoffs that are being called, the local taxpayers are having to pay for those elections," Elizondo said. "The state just requires us to hold them, then they’re requiring us, the county, to pay for them.”

And that’s not cheap.

Each election costs taxpayers about $110,000. While a normal year sees three to five elections, Bexar County Elections administrator Jacque Callanen said last year there were a total of 14 elections. That totaled more than $1 million in election costs - passed down to taxpayers because it's an unfunded mandate by the state.

It costs money and adds to the confusion for voters.

“So within two weeks of each other, (voters are) getting notices and having the ability to vote for two separate sets of people for two pieces of the same office," Callanen said. "So I don’t remember us having it quite like that before.”

Every election costs money, said State Sen. Jose Menendez, a former member of the House of Representatives who now holds the seat vacated by former State Sen. Leticia Van de Putte.

Menendez also won his seat by way of special and runoff elections against his Democratic colleague, former Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer.

“I wish we could reduce the number of special elections because it creates confusion, it creates voter fatigue," he said. "Many times, the voters have so many people trying to get them out to vote that they’re confused. They’re like, ‘I just voted.’ If we could have more of these elections on regular election times, if we could reduce the number of special elections, it would also be fiscally prudent and positive for the taxpayer.”

In the case of the House District 120 seat, Menendez questioned whether a special election actually served any purpose and said officials owe it to voters and taxpayers to be responsible with their money and elections.

The issue crosses the aisle, too.

Republican Bexar County commissioner Kevin Wolff, had the same concerns.

"I think it's ridiculous that we have so many elections. Add on top of this the sheer number of elected positions and propositions we're asked to vote on only adds to the confusion and, in my belief, apathy toward the voting process as a whole," he said.

As a member of the Texas House in the late 1970s, Elizondo helped pass election-reform laws himself. One of his favorite was holding all elections that are non-partisan (like city council) on the same day. He hopes this idea works, too.

“We’re going to present to the Legislature, with the help of Sen. Menendez hopefully, an option to either let the plurality rule be the rule of the day here - that if there’s a special election and there’s a runoff, if no one gets a majority, over 51 percent of the votes, then the plurality should be in place to give that person the office for the temporary period,” Elizondo said.

If nothing else, the high number of elections may be the price that's paid for freedom.

"There's nothing better," Callanen said.


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