The Day

Recount confirms vote to fix schools

- By NATE LYNCH Day Staff Writer

North Stonington — A recount of referendum ballots on a $38.5 million project to renovate the town’s schools confirmed the original 3-vote margin results from May 16, approving the project 908-905.

The plan is to add a new wing to the Wheeler Middle/High School gymatorium and renovate the elementary school to meet state and federal standards.

Early last week, town officials were unsure whether a recount was needed.

However, after consulting a state statute on recanvassi­ng, election officials set the recanvassi­ng in a morning meeting last Wednesday.

Registrars of Voters Gladys Chase and Joan Kepler hand-fed the ballots into the machine for around two hours in New Town Hall, as residents, school and town officals and students on a field trip from their high school civics class looked on.

Unlike the referendum results, which saw the project’s supporters celebratin­g their victory, the recount ended on a subdued note,

with some residents expressing frustratio­n as they left.

During the recount, moderator Patricia Turner and Town Clerk Norma Holliday answered questions about the eligibilit­y of certain ballots and potentiall­y giving more time for out-of-town residents to apply for absentee ballots.

Holliday explained that the period of time between the town meeting and referendum — one week — makes it impossible to get absentee ballots to residents out-of-state when the referendum takes place.

The applicatio­n for that ballot is made available within four days of the question being finalized, and must be hand-delivered to the clerk.

“There’s not enough turnaround time,” Holliday said.

Resident Ann Brown asked if that week “can be a longer period of time, can it be two weeks or three weeks?”

Holliday and First Selectman Shawn Murphy said by state statute the referendum must take place within two weeks of the town meeting.

One property owner who tried to cast an absentee ballot was unable to do so because the individual did not include their certificat­ion from the town assessor.

People who own more than $1,000 of assessed property in a town can vote in the election if they are certified as an eligible property owner when the town holds votes on financial questions, Turner said.

Murphy said going forward he would be reviewing the ordinance that created the Ad Hoc School Building Committee as it takes on new responsibi­lity managing the school building project, to see if its members need to be reappointe­d.

That reappointm­ent potentiall­y could happen at tonight’s meeting of the Board of Selectmen.

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