Thursday, November 8, 2012
Take a look at the tallies for each precinct in Stow — did your section of town vote Republican or Democrat?
Barack Obama won the national vote and he won in Ohio. But, if Stow alone decided the next president of the United States, Mitt Romney would be the winner. According to unofficial results from the Summit County Board of Elections, 147 more Stow voters picked Romney over President Barack Obama — who was re-elected Nov. 6, 2012. In Stow, 8,863 voted for Obama and 9,010 voted for Romney. One person in the entire city voted for Stewart Alexander of the Socialist party. The polling results contradict a campaign donation report for Stow. Far more Stow residents gave money to the Obama campaign than Romney's. 3-B 4-E 0 1 1 12 448 522 3
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
President Barack Obama won Ohio, and the presidency, according to NBC News and the Associated Press.
President Barack Obama has won Ohio and reclaimed the presidency of the United States. Obama narrowly won the popular vote over Republican challenger Mitt Romney, and claimed enough Electoral College votes to win a second term in the White House. And in the heated and expensive race for one of Ohio's U.S. Senate seats, Sen. Sherrod Brown has defeated GOP challenger Josh Mandel to reclaim his U.S. Senate seat, according to projections from NBC News and the Associated Press. "Today in Ohio, in the middle of America, the middle class won," Brown said in a prepared statement. RESULTS UPDATED AT 1 A.M. NOV. 7, 96% Precincts Reporting Obama-Biden Sherrod Brown Betty Sutton STATE BALLOT ISSUES Ohio may be the most important state in today's …
Friday, November 11, 2011
Find out how many voters went to the polls in Stow Nov. 8.
More than half of Stow's registered voters took the time to go to the polls to vote Nov. 8. Out of 23,312 registered voters in the city, 13,479 (57.82 percent) made it to the voting booth or voted absentee this general election. Here's a roundup of final, but unofficial election results from the Summit County Board of Elections: (click on the headers to go to a story with comments from candidates in each race.) Precinct 4-B, out of 30 precincts in Stow, had the highest voter turnout for the mayoral race: 474 ballots cast (70 percent). In August, during a special election, the same exact 6.57-mill 10 year levy failed by 1,688 votes. There were 4,039 votes (60 percent) against Issue 2 and 2,621 votes (40 percent) for the levy in August. …
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Find out how many votes each of the eight school board candidates received.
At the first Stow-Munroe Falls Board of Education of the new year, residents will see Fred Bonacci, Rod Armstrong and Karen Powers (incumbent) sitting on the board. Incumbent Boardmembers Denny Mariola and Pat Matthews were not re-elected and will finish their terms Dec. 31. Here are the final but unofficial results according to the Summit County Board of Elections: Statement from Powers: "I would like to sincerely thank all of my supporters and those who voted for me, as well as those who voted to pass our levy. I am truly humbled by the faith and trust that they have shown in me in two elections. I am genuinely excited to start my second term particularly since our levy has passed. It will be wonderful to finally work under conditions …
41.18679
-81.47367
Stow-Munroe Falls School Board of Education
4350 Allen Rd, Stow, OH
/articles/school-board-election-and-win
1086333
/locations/5779062
Sara Drew received the most votes Nov. 8, according to the final but unofficial results from the Summit County Board of Elections.
The results are in and Stow's new mayor is Sara Drew. Here's how many votes each candidate received, according to the final but unofficial results from the Summit County Board of Elections. (30 of 30 precincts counted.) Statement from Drew: "I am excited, overwhelmed, thrilled and grateful ... I am a lot of things. I am just thrilled!" Drew said. "I would like to say thank you to the voters of Stow for their confidence in me. I'm honored to be able to serve our community as mayor and I look forward to working with new city council and employees of the city. I will make sure Stow remains an outstanding place to call home." Statement from Buck: "I would like to say thank you to all the people who supported me throughout the campaign. I …
41.16725
-81.44038
Stow City Hall
3760 Darrow Rd, Stow, OH
/articles/stow-s-new-mayor-is
1086484
/locations/5779104
This post will continuously be updated until the final results are in later tonight.
THE FINAL RESULTS ARE IN CHECK THE FOLLOWING STORIES FOR THE FINAL BUT UNOFFICIAL RESULTS: The polls officially closed at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 8. Continue to check and refresh this post for voter counts as they are reported by the Summit County Board of Elections. When the final, but unofficial, results are in from all precincts in Stow, look for the final stories on the site about the winners. Candidates are in order of who has the most votes in each section. Last updated: 10:48 p.m. Nov. 8. Mayor: (28 of 30 precincts counted) City Council At-Large: (28 of 30 precincts counted) Ward 1: (7 of 7 precincts counted) FINAL Ward 2: (7 of 8 precincts counted) Ward 3: (7 of 7 precincts counted) FINAL, A 1 percent difference equals an automatic …
Stow Finance Director John Baranek ran unopposed Nov. 8. His comments are below and election results will be posted when they are available tonight.
John Baranek is "very excited" to start his fifth term as finance director in Stow after running unopposed Nov. 8. Baranek received 8,258 votes, accoring to the final but unofficial results from the Summit County Board of Elections. The city's finance director said he is looking forward to continuing the work he's done for years in his department. Three areas he said he wants to focus on are: While continuing to focus on those three goals, Baranek said there are a few changes he'd like to see. "The main thing that I would like to see change is how residents and other customers can access our services that the city offers especially in the area of making payments online on their utilities, income taxes, permits, park/recreation programs, …
dave
8:19 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
That is why I moved to Stow. This city has more sense than the rest of Ohio and the country. This should tell you too that Stow would like more reporting conservative issues.   more ›