Information Mainly for Precinct 19-19 Voters
Last Updated:
6/30/22 14:27
CONTENTS (click a topic to jump it)
WARNING
Precinct 19-19 voters who require curbside parking or accessible parking should:
In fact, probably
all voters should avoid the
"carpool" times (click link).
The line of cars going into the main entrance of the parking lot can be
very long and
not passable. It then winds around
in the parking lot, partially blocking your ability to park or
unpark if you do manage to get into the lot.
Updated: 6/26/22
NOTE: This web page has general
information about elections and the Precinct 19-19 polling place. It
stays pretty much the same for each election.
Detailed information about the preceding,
5/17/22, election can be found
here.
Updated: 6/26/22
Upcoming election: The
next election for Precinct 19-19 will be a second primary election on
7/26/2022.
Your party affiliation matters in a partisan primary election vs in a
municipal or general election.
Information about the election will be posted on the Wake County Board
of Elections (WCBOE)
Upcoming
Election Information web page, which will be updated as Election
Day approaches.
Updated: 5/28/22
Consider volunteering to be a
precinct official for this and future elections.
Know your precinct:
Everyone needs to know in which precinct you are now registered (see
below) and go to vote in the polling place for that precinct if you vote
on Election Day. That is where your pollbook data is located; it is not
in the pollbooks at any other polling place on Election Day. Keep your
registration data up-to-date, e.g., if you move.
Getting registration and ballot
information: You can easily
check your voter registration information,
including your currently recorded name, residence address, party
affiliation, precinct, polling place, and municipality (if any). You
will also see the voting jurisdictions you are in, e.g., NC House, Wake
County Commissioner, and School (Board of Education). Normally a month
or more before Election Day you can
view the exact ballot(s) that will be available to
you for that election. Always keep your voter registration data
up-to-date, e.g., if you move. Of course, if you have not already done
so, please
register to vote! You can register as
described in the
how to update section below.
Mail-in absentee ballots
and early voting sites: If you will not be able to vote at
your polling place on Election Day or just choose to vote early, you can
either submit an
absentee
ballot or vote at an
early
voting site before Election Day.
Unfortunately, because of the light turnout expected for the July
2022 election, there will be few early voting sites, none of which are
close to our area.
Updated: 5/28/22
Maps and
pictures: The items in this section focus on Precinct 19-19.
For those voters using Rogers Road to get to Granite Falls Boulevard,
note the SIX overhead traffic lights at that intersection. The turn is
now hard to miss.
Updated: 5/28/22
How to check your voter registration
information: When certain changes occur, such as when a
redistricting changes the jurisdictional areas you are in or if you have
updated your registration information with the Wake County Board of
Elections (WCBOE), e.g., after a move, the WCBOE mails an updated voter
card to each affected voter. That card lists your (possibly changed)
polling place and your (possibly changed) voting jurisdiction
information, including your municipality, e.g., Wake Forest, Rolesville,
or Unincorporated, as well as your name, residence address, and party
affiliation.
You can see your
current
registration information online by clicking on "Voter Lookup" near
the top of the
WCBOE home page. The "Am
I Registered?" link lower on the home page leads to the same "Voter
Lookup" link under a different name ("My Voter Info") as well as
providing some background information. In the following I'll just use
"Voter Lookup" to cover all similar links that eventually get to "Voter
Lookup".
How to view a sample ballot appropriate
for you: The "Voter Lookup" facility mentioned above also
lets you view images of the ballot(s) applicable to you in the upcoming
election. These images are usually made available a month or more
before the election. Each image exactly duplicates what you would see
on the associated hardcopy ballot. Viewing your ballot before the
election lets you vote more quickly on Election Day.
To view which ballot(s) may apply for you, enter your identification
data in "Voter Lookup". When your registration data is displayed,
scroll down to the "Your Sample Ballot" section and click on the link
for the ballot style you wish to view, e.g, N0009. If you see
No eligible ballots instead of a ballot style, that means you are
not eligible to vote in this election. For example, that will occur if
this is a municipal election, but you don't live within the corporate
limits of the municipality having the election. It can also occur if
this is a partisan primary election, but your party has no contests in
this election.
An Unaffiliated voter may see several possible ballot styles for a
partisan primary election. All can be viewed here; however when
actually voting later, the Unaffiliated voter must choose just one of
these styles. In contrast, for partisan voters in a partisan primary
election or for all voters in a general or municipal election, only one
sample ballot style will be displayed for each voter.
When the Constitution and Green Parties did not receive sufficient
votes in the 11/3/20 election, they were declared to no longer be
registered political parties in North Carolina. Subsequently the Green
Party petitioned to be reinstated, but on 6/30/22 the NC State Board of
Elections did not accept the petition. Since they are not registered
parties, neither the Green nor Constitution Party is included in the
following description.
Updated: 6/30/22
North Carolina now has three political parties: Democratic,
Libertarian, and Republican. If you are registered as an affiliate of
one of these parties, in a partisan primary election you can vote only
for contests of that party (assuming there are any such contests). You
are also restricted to that party if a "second primary" election is
required because the primary election left some contests undecided.
In contrast, an Unaffiliated voter can choose a party for the
partisan primary election and can vote only for the contests of that
party. If a second primary election is required, the Unaffiliated voter
must stay with the party choice made for the primary. If no choice was
made for the primary, the Unaffiliated voter can choose any party in the
second primary. After the second primary election (or after the primary
election if no second primary was required), the Unaffiliated voter's
party choice is reset so the voter can now again choose any party in the
next partisan election.
For a general election, vs a partisan primary election, your party
affiliation is ignored. If a precinct does not have any split
jurisdictions, as is the case for precincts 19-19 and 19-18, all voters
in those precincts will receive exactly the same ballot in a general
election. Party affiliation also does not matter in a municipal
election.
How to update your voter registration
information: If you haven't yet registered, you must do so
by a specific date for the election in which you wish to vote; this
deadline will be posted on the
WCBOE website. Don't put
it off to the last minute. If you have moved or changed your name after
you previously registered, please notify the WCBOE to get your
registration updated. Doing that early will make things go much faster
and more smoothly for you on Election Day. All this registering and
updating can be done with this
form
and instructions found on the WCBOE website under "Voter Info".
Clicking on "Register To vote" or "Update my name" or "Update my
address" or "Change my party affiliation" will all bring up the same
form which you then complete, print, and mail. You can now also
register or update your registration information thru the
DMV
Online Voter Registration portal. Once your first-time or updated
registration has been processed, the WCBOE will mail you a new voter
card.
Please wait at the Tabulator to see
your ballot's status: Our current model Tabulator has
worked very well since being introduced in 2019. However there is one
thing we want to emphasize to voters: After firmly sliding your ballot
into the Tabulator slot, PLEASE WAIT the few seconds it takes until the
display shows whether the ballot was accepted or rejected. If you don't
wait and just hurry out the door, we have to try to chase you down if
the Tabulator has detected an error after you ran, e.g., if you marked
too many entries in one or more contests.
Updated: 6/26/22
If you select too many in a contest, until we bring you back to say
how you want to proceed, no one else can cast their ballot. The voter
line is held up until you are available to say whether you want the
Tabulator to ignore the extra-marked contest(s) or instead have us give you
a new ballot to fill out all over again. All this goes much faster if
we don't have to chase you. If we can't catch you, we have no choice
but to tell the Tabulator to ignore all the extra-marked contest(s) on
your ballot so it can be read in, thus allowing the other (patiently
waiting) voters to now cast their ballots.
Even worse, your ballot may be rejected by the Tabulator if you
mismarked it using X's, or checkmarks, or smiley faces, or red ink, or
something else, instead of just filling out the ovals with the supplied
black ink pens, per the instructions. Such an invalid ballot can cause
a real mess if you can't be chased down. Please just wait to see your
ballot's status.
Special considerations for the 19-19
polling place: Below are several things 19-19 voters will
need to consider about Sanford Creek Elementary School. The six WCBOE
pictures
illustrate some of these points.
- Use the correct entrance to get to the voter
parking area. See the
19-19 polling
place map.
If you enter Granite Falls Blvd. from Rogers
Rd., the first school entrance you encounter (the one on the west
side of the school property) is ONLY for school buses. We'll
have signs warning people that this is NOT an entrance for
voters. The correct entrance (the one on the east side) is about
1/4 mile further along.
Similarly, if you enter Granite Falls Blvd.
from W. Young St., do not turn at the first road you encounter on
the left. That leads to some private businesses, not the school.
The school entrance driveway is the second road on the left.
At the entrance driveway there is a large stone
sign saying "701 Sanford Creek Elementary School". There is also
a round sign showing a cartoon bluejay, the SCES mascot. The
driveway goes up a steep hill and leads to a large parking area
in front of the school, which is not visible from Granite Falls
Blvd.
Updated: 6/27/22
- Unfortunately the correct
entrance is the one used by "carpool" parents to drop off
and pick up their kids. If you try to drive in at certain times,
you may find yourself involved with a long, slow line of such
cars; this may make it difficult to get into or out of a parking
place. Try to avoid the "carpool" times. The latest information
from the school for this Election Day is listed below.
The "carpool" times to avoid are 8:30-9:15 AM and 3:15-4:15
PM.
(The afternoon period is probably the worse of
the two.)
Check back here close to Election Day in case
the school changes these times.
No matter when you arrive, always follow the signs and watch
out for cones which may require you to wind around the parking
area; don't try to take a shortcut. Be very careful if you use
the narrow passing lane to go beside the "carpool" line.
If you do arrive at the wrong time, a way to
avoid the "carpool" line is to use one of the two gravel parking
lots adjacent to the school, just off Scarboro St. See the
Alternate Parking
Lot signs on the sign placement diagram. There is a
small, grassy hill between the larger lot and the school. Since
there is no sidewalk or other prepared pathway over that hill,
walk carefully, especially if the grass is wet. These gravel
lots are normally used for the Town of Rolesville's Main Street
Park. The Town has given the WCBOE permission to use them for
voter parking.
- The voting enclosure (the room where you vote) is the school's
Media Center. The entrance for it is on the left side of the
building's front, hiding around a corner. Don't try to use the
building's main entrance, which is toward the right. We'll have
signs to steer you to the Media Center entrance.
- For exit from the Media Center, use only the side
door you used for entry. Do not try to exit by the rear door
into the main school building. We'll probably have that inside
door partially blocked in some way -- to be used only as an
emergency exit.
- For those needing curbside assistance, i.e.,
people physically unable to come inside to vote, the curbside
parking area will be at the building's front, near the Media
Center entrance. The accessible parking area is there as
well. These parking places may not be too visible when you first
enter the school's parking lot (there's a lot of winding around
to get there), but we'll have signs.
For people needing curbside or accessible parking facilities,
it is
strongly advised that they
NOT come to vote anywhere close to the
school's
"carpool" times noted above. Navigating
around the "carpool" line to reach the special parking areas can
be confusing and difficult. At other times (i.e., no "carpool"
line), it is much easier -- just follow the pavement arrows and
our vote direction signs to get to the curbside or accessible
parking areas.
Cars needing curbside parking should go completely around the
loop by the building's entrance. See the
traffic
flow and
curbside/accessible
diagrams. This ensures curbside-parking cars will be properly
oriented at the curbside doorbell stand. This orientation also
provides easy exit from curbside parking back into the "carpool"
traffic flow.
. Updated: 6/30/22
This
handout repeats much of
the above curbside considerations. It also includes a diagram to
emphasize the "go around the loop" path that should be taken to
enter the curbside area. We intend to give this handout to each
curbside voter in case they have not seen the information
elsewhere. Updated: 6/12/22
Please pass on the above information to your neighbors. Bookmark
this web page for future reference.
Jeff Knauth
Chief Judge for Precinct 19-19
APPENDIX
Try iMAPS if you want more detailed
maps: The above modified WCBOE
precinct map is at a
high level and gives a good overview. However if anyone wants to dig
REALLY deep (down to the lowest level) into things like voting precinct
boundaries, municipal corporate boundaries, NC state senate and
representative districts, flood plains, greenways, judicial districts,
county commissioner districts, and dozens of other such regions, Wake
County has a great, free, public tool called
iMAPS.
Using the iMAPS Layers facility, you can display a map showing such
regions as those listed above. You can zoom in or out, down to
individual houses/lots or up to the whole county. You can display
multiple layers simultaneously, e.g., how voting precincts and municipal
corporate boundaries intersect (important for a municipal election).
You can do searches and view property information, e.g., ownership,
taxes, and deeds. You can blend street and aerial views. And much more
-- this description just scratches the surface of what the tool can do.
See
iMAPS Usage: Voting Precincts vs
Municipal Corporate Boundaries for a step-by-step practical
example.
Old news: Precinct 19-10
division done in 2017: Voting Precinct 19-10, which had
used the Jones Dairy Elementary School as its polling place, grew large
enough that it needed to be divided in two by the Wake County Board of
Elections. (As of 2022 it would have had well over 11,000 registered
voters.) This division was done in 2017. Precinct 19-10 no longer
exists. The part of old 19-10 north of Chalk Road is now the new 19-18
precinct; it still has Jones Dairy Elementary as its polling place.
However all the rest of old 19-10 is now the new 19-19 precinct and has
as its polling place Sanford Creek Elementary School at 701 Granite
Falls Blvd. in Rolesville. See the
Precinct 19-19
overview map; there are other
maps and pictures in a section above.
History of Significant Changes
5/28/22: Reset change tags to initialize this file for the 7/26/22 second primary election.
6/12/22: Added link to the
"Some Curbside Voting Considerations" handout.
6/26/22: Further emphasized that voters should avoid driving to SCES during the "carpool" times.
6/26/22: Added voting enclosure layout for an expected light turnout on Election Day.
6/26/22: Improved some text in the "Please wait at the Tabulator..." section.
6/26/22: Reworked HTML/CSS for top sections (Contents, Carpool/Curbside Warning, and Note).
6/27/22: Improved text about the Sanford Creek Elementary School entrance driveway.
6/30/22: Noted latest status of the Green party in NC -- still not a registered party.
6/30/22: Clarified a curbside vs. accessible parking requirement.