Connect with us

NEWS

Early voting for Nov. 7 ballots opens Monday

Published

on

Texas voters will go to the polls on Nov. 7 to consider a variety of issues including 14 constitutional amendments, while Montague County voters will make decisions about bond issues in its two largest school districts and multiple city and school district elections across the county.
Early voting will run Oct. 23-Nov. 3 at four locations across the county including the courthouse annex community room in Montague, Nocona City Hall Council Room, Saint Jo Civic Center and Bowie Senior Citizens Center.
The centers will be open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, but there will be extended hours from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Nov. 2 and Nov. 3 at the Montague location only.
Voters may cast their ballots at any of these locations due to countywide voting. Sample ballots are available on the county website at co.montague.tx.us.
Applications for ballot by mail should be mailed to Montague County Elections Administrator Ginger Wall, P.O. Box 158, 11339 State Highway 59N, Montague, TX 76251. These applications must be received no later Oct. 27. Those with questions may call Wall’s office at 894-2540.
To be eligible to vote by mail a voter must be 65 years or older by election day, be sick or disabled, be out of the county on election day or during the early voting period, be expected to give birth within three weeks before or after election day or be in jail but otherwise eligible. Those ballots must be received at the election office and postmarked by 7 p.m.. on Nov. 7.
In the weeks leading up to the election, The Bowie News will provide information on all the ballot issues. See the Bowie mayoral race candidate questionnaires on page 1A.

PLEASE NOTE THE EARLY VOTING CHART HAS BEEN UPDATED.

Continue Reading

NEWS

Senate District 30 runoff early voting to open

Published

on

Texans continue to go to the elections polls as voters decide who will face off in the November general election to fill the 30th Senatorial District seat.
Both the Democratic and Republican Parties will have party primary runoffs on May 28 as they try to select a candidate to fill the seat of Senator Drew Springer (R-Muenster) who chose not to see a second-four-year term after winning a special election in 2020. He ran unopposed in 2022.
There were multiple candidates in both party primaries back in March and no one was able to garner the necessary majority. The top two vote-getters will face off to determine a winner for the November ballot.
Early voting for the runoff runs May 20-24 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Montague County Courthouse Annex Community Room. This is the only location for early voting.
On election day voting polls will be located in the courthouse annex, Bowie Senior Citizens Center, Nocona City Hall and Saint Jo Civic Center. They will be open 7 a.m.. to 7 p.m.
Those who voted in the March primary can only cast ballots in that party primary, voters cannot switch parties. Those who did not vote in the primary can vote in either party primary.

Read more on this story in the mid-week Bowie News.

Continue Reading

NEWS

County to bid SO radio console

Published

on

By BARBARA GREEN
[email protected]
Montague County Commissioners will make plans to take bids for a radio console at the sheriff’s office after a portion of the unit went down.
That was just one of the many topics in Monday’s court session. An executive session to discuss pending litigation was tabled after County Judge Kevin Benton reported a conference call with the other party’s attorney and County Attorney Clay Riddle showed they were not ready for discussion and he asked it be tabled, which was approved.
On the radio console, the court has been talking about the unit since Sheriff’ Marshall Thomas reported the console has reached the end of its life expectancy of eight years and was having lots of problems. The county had applied for a grant to help pay for it, but it won’t be announced until June.
The radio system has two parts said Thomas and one unit has completely stopped working, however, they are still able to use the radio for now and handle 911 service. Judge Benton said in looking at the estimated costs it was expected to be just under the $50,000 bid limit hovering around $42,000; however, they also have found the unit needs five radios through which it can transmit from the two computers which will push up the price.

Read the full story in the mid-week Bowie News.

Continue Reading

NEWS

Building projects lead Bowie City Council agenda

Published

on

Infrastructure projects once more dominate the agenda of the Bowie City Council when it meets at 6 p.m. on May 13.
A pair of proclamations open the meeting, one for Emergency Medical Services Week and National Travel and Tourism Week.
City Manager Bert Cunningham will present information on the substation transformer project, the phase two sewer line replacement contract, status of the infrastructure fund and plans for the budget.
A pair of public works requests will ask for $24,000 out of the infrastructure fund to buy nine fire hydrants and $29,825 from the meter tap account to buy replacement meters. Public Works Director Stony Lowrance is expected to make that presentation.

Read the full story in the weekend Bowie News.

Continue Reading
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad

Trending