SAN ANGELO, Texas — There were 82 ballots, both mail-in and provisional, that needed to be cured before counting in the May 4, 2024, City of San Angelo police chief election. Today, election judges made their final count, and only 18 of those ballots were valid, the Tom Green County Elections Office announced Monday afternoon.
The race was close enough where provisional and late mail-in ballots mattered. Candidate Lt. Mike Hernandez was sitting at 3,279 votes, or 49.5%, and Sgt. Travis Griffith was at 46.5%. If enough of the provisional and mail-in ballots were cast for Hernandez—enough to give the frontrunner 50% of the vote plus one more vote—there would be no need for a runoff election scheduled for June 15, 2024. It was a long shot, as Hernandez would need to win about 75 of the 82 outstanding votes, assuming some votes would go towards Griffith or the minor third candidate, Lt. Chris Cimino.
After the smoke cleared at the elections office around 11 a.m. this morning, only eight of the 44 mail-in ballots could be verified. Elections Supervisor Vona Hudson referenced new laws passed by the Texas Legislature requiring an identification number from, for example, a Texas driver's license, a Social Security number, a Texas Election ID Certificate, or a Texas personal ID card to be properly marked on the ballot. If no identification was given, or a bogus ID number was marked on the ballot envelope, then the ballot could not be counted. This is in addition to the traditional signature verification procedures.
Only 10 of the 38 provisional ballots were cured. Provisional ballots are issued when the voter shows up at the voting center, but the computer claims the voter already requested a ballot by mail. Or, the voter's address was outside the city limits, but the voter informs the election worker that they had moved to an address inside the city limits. Or, the ballot is unintelligible, such as a mail-in ballot voted for more than one candidate.
Out of 82 ballots remaining to be counted, only 18 were cured, Hudson said. She noted this seemed like a fairly normal number of ballots in question after an election with 6,639 ballots cast.
The unofficial final count is published on the Tom Green County website. Here is how the count changed:
Candidate | May 4 Tally | May 13 Final Tally | Gain/(Loss) | Final Vote % |
---|---|---|---|---|
Travis Griffith | 3,080 | 3,088 | 8 | 46.51% |
Mike Hernandez | 3,279 | 3,286 | 7 | 49.50% |
Christopher Cimino | 263 | 265 | 2 | 3.99% |
The San Angelo City Council will canvass the final results and make them official on Wednesday, May 15. Provided the council approves the election results, it will consider a resolution ordering a runoff election for June 15, 2024, "for the purpose of electing a police chief," stated the agenda.
The agenda posted today noted that council will allow public comments at the beginning of the canvassing. Jackie Chesnutt, this is your cue.
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Comments
Who would have ever believed that the fate of the 2024 San Angelo Police Chief's election would come down to weather a road trip to obtain an exclusive endorsement from former Chief Tim Vasquez can turn the tide and the momentum in the upcoming Run-off election?
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PermalinkWhy is there an issue here? Just add mail-in votes until the right guy wins. If people misspelled his name or accidentally voted for the wrong guy, correct the ballot. They should all say "Spike Fernandez." Duh.
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PermalinkHow long does it take to count to 100. Apparently in Tom green county quite a while.
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PermalinkThey have to order more white-out, deal with a software company about correcting miscast votes on the machines, and find new names with identifiers and addresses to add the correct amount of mail in ballots. Cut 'em a break — if anything, they're not getting paid enough!
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