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From YouTube: LWV Bloomington: 2021 City Council Candidate Videos
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A
Welcome
to
this
airing
of
candidate
videos
produced
by
league
of
women,
voters
bloomington
with
a
special
thank
you
to
the
city
of
bloomington
for
the
video
production
league
of
women.
Voters
is
a
non-partisan
political
organization
that
never
endorses
candidates
or
political
parties.
In
these
videos,
you
will
hear
from
candidates
for
city
council.
All
candidates
who
filed
to
run
for
council
were
invited
to
record
videos.
They
will
speak
to
you
about
their
priorities
for
bloomington
and
their
reasons
for
running
for
office.
B
Hi
everyone
I'm
nathan,
coulter.
I
am
thrilled
to
be
running
for
a
second
term
on
the
bloomington
city
council.
I'm
proud
of
the
work
that
we've
done
and
excited
for
the
work
we
have
ahead
of
us.
These
last
few
years
have
really
forced
all
of
us
to
refocus
our
priorities
and
just
think
about
things
differently,
and
I
continue
to
be
tremendously
energized
to
keep
moving
forward
and
taking
care
of
our
neighbors.
B
As
far
as
my
own
background,
I've
lived
in
bloomington
my
entire
life,
my
mom
taught
math
for
39
years
at
normandale,
community
college
and
my
dad
who
a
fellow
resident
once
referred
to.
As
quote
the
last
honest
attorney,
had
his
office
in
bloomington
too
by
day
I
work
for
and
with
our
bloomington
legislators
on
important
issues
facing
our
community,
and
I
live
over
by
old
town
hall,
with
my
wife
charity
and
our
daughters,
eleanor
who's,
almost
three
and
adeline,
was
born
this
past
july.
B
But
we
all
know
that
there
is
more
work
to
do,
and
I
am
ready
and
eager
to
talk
about
where
we
go
from
here.
Bloomington
deserves
nothing
less
than
a
full
and
serious
discussion
of
the
issues,
and
I
have
long
believed
that
elections
should
be
won
on
a
vision
for
the
future,
not
simply
reliving
or
re-litigating
the
past.
B
I
believe
that
budget
decisions
are
policy
decisions.
I
was
thrilled
with
the
work
that
our
community
budget
advisory
committee
did
to
ensure
that
our
values
were
at
the
center
of
our
budget
discussions.
As
we
navigated
the
effects
of
the
pandemic,
the
result
preserved
funding
for
the
core
basic
services.
Our
neighbors
need,
with
a
levy
increase
that
was
lower
than
every
city
around
us
and
half
of
what
minneapolis,
richfield
and
edina
had.
We
need
to
continue
finding
new
ways
to
ensure
that
the
broad
array
of
needs
wants
and
ambitions
in
bloomington
is
reflected
in
our
budgets.
B
B
I
hear
from
almost
everyone
I
talk
to
about
how
they'd
like
to
see
more
small
and
locally
owned
businesses,
especially
places
to
eat
and
drink.
We
created
our
small
business
emergency
assistance.
Loan
program
made
the
process
of
opening
a
restaurant
easier
and,
of
course,
paved
the
way
for
breweries
and
tap
rooms.
We
need
to
continue
supporting
businesses
and
workers
and
work
to
provide
a
fuller
measure
of
opportunity,
success
and
stability
for
everyone
who
contributes
to
our
economy.
B
George
floyd's
murder
last
year
resulted
in
both
a
national
and
an
intensely
local
reckoning
on
race
and
our
city
council
responded.
We
declared
that
racism
is
what
we
know
it
to
be:
a
public
health
crisis.
We
adopted
a
racial
equity
business
plan
to
govern
internal
city
operations
and
empowered
a
racial
equity,
strategic
planning
committee
to
bring
forward
concrete
actions.
We
can
take
to
address
racial
inequities
that
we
know
exist
in
our
community.
B
Now
I
could
go
on
about
our
park
system
master
plan
future
focused
redevelopment
or
proactively
having
conversations
with
folks
in
all
32
precincts
in
bloomington.
Suffice
it
to
say
I
love
doing
this
work
and
I
have
never
been
more
confident
in
our
potential
as
a
community
or
more
excited
for
what
the
future
holds.
B
I
have
always
believed
that
a
vote
is
more
than
simply
expressing
a
preference.
Your
vote
is
an
investment
in
the
kind
of
community
you
want
to
see.
I
know
that
folks,
here
in
bloomington,
take
that
investment
very
seriously
as
you
should,
because
our
city
is
worth
it.
I
have
worked
hard
every
day.
I've
been
on
the
city
council
to
prove
worthy
of
the
investment
that
bloomington
voters
made
in
me,
and
I
am
ready
and
eager
to
continue
doing
just
that.
B
C
C
I
am
committed
to
public
service.
I
have
volunteered
at
the
kids
schools.
I
volunteer
baseball
coach,
among
other
things,
and
also
I
volunteered
on
several
school
board
committees
before
finally
serving
four
years
on
the
school
board,
including
one
as
school
board
chair
that
was
four
years
ago
so
now
fast
forward
four
years
and
I'm
running
for
city
council
in
part,
because
I
believe
that
our
city
council
could
benefit
from
more
diversity
of
opinion
on
the
council,
and
I
feel
like
my
commitment
to
balancing
stakeholder
input.
C
I
want
to
talk
a
minute
about
some
of
the
philosophies
that
I
have
around
governance
with
liberty
and
justice
for
all.
I
don't
really
think
that's
just
a
tagline.
I
think
it's
really
important
that
all
people
in
our
city
are
treated
fairly
equally
and
with
respect,
regardless
of
socioeconomic
status,
gender,
race,
etc.
C
Some
of
my
priorities,
if
I
were
to
be
elected,
would
be
public
safety
and
infrastructure.
One
of
the
most
important
aspects
of
city
government
is
doing
those
things.
That
would
be
difficult,
if
not
impossible,
for
us
to
maintain
ourselves.
For
instance,
I
don't
want
to
have
to
fix
the
potholes
in
front
of
my
house.
I
don't
want
to
have
to
pave
the
street
myself.
I
don't
want
to
have
to
lay
a
sidewalk.
I
don't
have
to
hire
my
own
fire
department
in
case
my
house
burns
down.
C
Moving
on,
we
talk
about
the
common
good,
it's
things
like,
for
instance,
if
we
can
all
agree
that
driving
90
miles
per
hour
on
residential
street
would
be
bad
and
against
the
common
good.
Then
the
city
can
work
to
determine
what
set
of
laws
we
can
all
agree
to
live
by.
So
that
way
we
can
live
in
peace
to
harmony
in
our
community
like,
for
instance,
some
roads
might
be
40
some,
it
might
be
30
might
say
in
a
school
zone
you
can
only
go
10
or
15
miles
an
hour.
C
So
that's
the
role
of
city
government.
As
I
see
it,
the
other
thing
is
taking
care
of
community
values,
the
things
in
our
community
that
we
value
so,
for
instance,
the
with
the
water
park
or
or
or
big,
not
everything
is
going
to
be
cost
neutral.
Not
everything
is
going
to
make
its
money,
but
if
we
value
it,
then
we
should
work
to
keep
it.
I've
had
people
ask
me
things
like:
why
should
I
pay
for
libraries?
I
buy
my
own
books,
so
my
taxes
shouldn't
go
to
libraries.
C
Well,
many
in
our
community
believe
that
libraries
provide
value
for
the
research
potential
that
they
that
they
give
us
for
those
who
maybe
can't
get
books,
or
we
can
find
things
that
we
wouldn't
otherwise
have
had
access
to
same
with
the
water
park.
It
might
not
be
cost
positive,
but
the
community
values
it
it's
sort
of
like
big.
If
the
ice
garden
were
to
go
away,
a
lot
of
people
in
our
community,
I
think,
would
be
devastated.
C
C
It's
it's
important
that
the
city
sticks
to
city
business
and
tries
to
stay
out
of
partisanship
as
much
as
possible,
and
so
from
from
that
perspective,
I'm
not
seeking
any
endorsement
from
any
political
party
or
any
outside
group,
because
I
don't
want
to
look
like.
I
am
beholden
to
any
outside
interests
other
than
those
things
that
I've
stated
so
far.
C
So
if
that
sounds
good
to
you
or
if
you'd,
like
more
information,
you
can
check
me
out
on
the
web
at
olivacitycouncil.com
or
facebook,
facebook.com
oliva
city
council.
You
can
email
me
at
rickett,
oliviacitycouncil.com
or
even
call
or
text
me
952,
but
please
do
it
before
9pm.
Thank
you
and
have
a
great
day.
D
It
was
about
a
guy
who
just
got
fabulously
drunk
with
one
of
his
friends
one
night,
and
he
fell
asleep
for
20
years.
When
he
woke
up,
he
could
not
recognize
his
town.
His
friends
had
moved
away.
Some
family
members
had
died,
some
had
gotten
married.
The
revolutionary
war
was
over.
He
was
just
trying
to
make
sense
of
what
had
happened
to
his
city.
D
Well,
that
same
thing
happened
to
me
two
years
ago,
when
somebody
got
shot
and
murdered
just
two
blocks
from
my
home
on
86th
and
penn,
then
kevin
the
owner
of
penn
lake
roast
beef,
where
I
buy
sandwiches
every
saturday.
He
got
gunned
down
in
broad
daylight
in
his
store
last
summer
and
almost
died
on
his
sidewalk
in
front
of
the
store
folks
that
shattered
my
sense
of
innocence
about
bloomington
from
a
public
safety
standpoint.
D
I
started
looking
at
the
statistics
and
started
looking
at
the
police
calls
the
the
robbery
reports,
catalytic
converters
getting
stolen
in
broad
daylight.
Our
city
is
not
the
place
that
it
used
to
be.
Then
I
started
looking
at
the
numbers,
I
started
looking
at
the
tax
revenues
in
the
city,
taxes
kept
going
up
every
time.
I
opened
my
property
tax
statement.
It
was
going
up
not
by
10
or
20
dollars,
but
by
hundreds
of
dollars
every
single
year.
In
fact,
since
I
moved
here
in
2003,
my
property
taxes
have
doubled.
D
So
I
started
looking
at
that
and
I
discovered
that
this
city
in
2015
just
a
few
years
ago,
our
budget
was
only
125
million
dollars.
Today,
it's
almost
200
million
dollars.
Folks,
we
have
a
city,
council
and
a
manager
and
a
mayor
who
is
addicted
to
spending
other
people's
money,
your
money,
so
I'm
here
to
fight
for
you,
I'm
here
to
put
the
brakes
on
the
spending
in
this
town.
We
have
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
of
bonding
in
the
years
ahead.
D
We
have
tax
levies
that
are
going
to
be
increasing
our
taxes
by
60
to
70
percent
in
the
next
10
years.
Our
city
cannot
handle
that
kind
of
spending,
and
I'm
here
to
hold
the
line
for
you.
The
third
thing
I
noticed
in
our
town
was
the
way
that
this
city
council
governs.
They
don't
govern
for
you,
they
could
care
less
about
you
all
they
care
about
is
the
outside
special
interests
and
the
big
money
and
the
other
groups
that
are
coming
in
to
try
to
push
their
way
around.
D
They
did
that
last
year,
with
ranked
choice.
Voting
they
brought
in
a
group
called
fair
vote
minnesota.
Well,
there's
nothing
fair
about
it,
and
now
we
have
ranked
choice
voting.
There
was
an
uproar
that
ensued,
but
the
city
council
wanted
it
and
they
got
it.
The
next
thing
that
they
did
was
they:
they
restricted
the
parental
rights
of
tens
of
thousands
of
parents
in
bloomington
who
wanted
to
make
medical
decisions
for
their
kids.
They
stripped
their
rights
away.
D
The
third
thing
they
did
was
they
stripped
the
rights
of
people
grown
adults
to
buy
flavor
tobacco
and
the
shop
owners
that
sell
flavor
tobacco.
Sometimes
those
those
products
make
up
forty
to
fifty
percent
of
their
revenue.
There
are
businesses
in
bloomington,
many
of
them
immigrants
and
minorities
they're
going
to
go
bankrupt
because
of
this
new
rule.
This
city
council
is
governing
with
a
heavy
hand
and
they're
governing
for
the
special
interests
and
not
for
you
so
folks,
I'm
a
small
business
owner.
D
I
have
to
fight
for
every
dollar,
I'm
also
a
commercial
pilot,
I've
trained
for
thousands
of
hours
and
flown
dozens
of
years
and
have
been
trained
by
the
faa
and
by
airlines
to
be
able
to
look
out
and
see
things
in
the
on
the
distance
on
the
horizon.
Sometimes
we
look
two
three
hundred
miles
into
the
into
the
horizon
to
be
able
to
see
things
and
try
to
take
care
of
them
before
they
happen.
D
I'm
gonna
put
those
same
skills
to
work
for
you
if
you're
interested
in
more
of
the
same
then
you're
going
to
get
more
the
same.
But
if
you
want
change
on
the
city
council,
I
am
your
candidate,
david
clarke
for
city
council,
david
clarke,
district
3..
We
need
to
replace
the
nonsense,
that's
going
on
with
common
sense,
and
I
am
your
candidate
now
because
of
ranked
choice
voting.
There
are
several
other
candidates
that
think
like
me,
and
I'd
like
to
ask
you
to
rank
them
as
well
the
rule
with
ranked
choice
voting.
D
Is
you
don't
rank
those
who
you
oppose,
and
so
I
ask
you
to
rank
david
clarke,
kevin
heinen
and
laura
hunt,
david
clarke,
kevin
heinen
and
laura
hunt.
If
you
rank
our
us,
we
have
the
best
chance
to
take
this
seat
and
to
bring
true
representation
for
the
for
the
common
person
on
the
city
council.
If
you're
a
senior,
if
you're
an
immigrant,
if
you're
a
young
family
trying
to
get
started,
you
want
somebody
to
fight
for
you.
I
am
that
person,
and
so
I
want
to
ask
for
your
vote.
D
Vote
for
david
clarke,
district
three
david
clark
for
city
council.
Dot
com
is
my
website,
david
clark
for
city
council,
dot
com.
We
want
to
take
bloomington
from
good
to
great
folks.
We
have
a
great
future
ahead,
but
not
if
we
tax
and
spend
our
way
into
oblivion.
We
need
to
fight
for
our
financial
security,
our
public
security
and
for
a
government
that
is
responsive
to
you.
God
bless
bloomington
and
we'll
see
you
on
election
day.
E
E
I
was
raised
on
the
east
coast,
graduated
from
penn
state
university
and
have
since
lived
in
some
of
the
best
cities
in
america
until
2008,
when
I
settled
here
in
the
twin
cities
to
work
at
best
buy
I'm
the
product
of
a
talented
and
creative
family
with
a
track
record
of
service.
My
dad
spent
his
career
in
the
us
army
and
my
mom
served
our
church
as
a
cantor
and
elector.
E
I
put
myself
through
college
as
a
short
order
cook
graduating
in
1991
with
a
degree
in
science.
I
later
earned
my
mba
through
employer-funded
scholarship
and
have
since
earned
enjoyed
a
20-plus
year
career
as
an
executive
leading
teams
of
innovators,
as
we
bring
new
technology
services
to
market
for
a
variety
of
industries.
E
My
wife,
sarah
and
I
moved
to
bloomington
for
the
same
reason.
So
many
other
people
do
access
to
incredible
amenities
like
our
parks,
the
comparatively
affordable
living
conditions
and
the
convenience
afforded
by
its
location.
But
it
was
obvious
to
us
that
people
here
care
about
each
other
work
hard
and
truly
take
pride
in
their
community.
E
I'm
that
leader,
I'm
committed
to
supporting
policies
that
can
accelerate
growth
for
our
small
businesses,
a
vital
economic
sector.
We
can
think
creatively
about
incentives,
credits
permits
and
other
adjustments
to
move,
remove
barriers
that
might
prevent
revitalization
post-pandemic,
and
we
should
also
take
a
long-term
lens
to
the
kinds
of
businesses,
large
and
small,
that
we
want
to
attract
to
bloomington.
E
While
working
with
our
convention
and
visitors,
bureau
and
the
chamber
on
projects
like
the
lindell
avenue
retrofit,
additionally,
we
must
think
long
term
about
how
to
effectively
support
our
seniors,
who
make
up
more
than
25
percent
of
the
population.
Here
in
bloomington,
I
look
forward
to
working
with
our
residents
to
take
a
critical
look
at
the
public
services
in
housing,
health
and
transportation
that
are
offered
today
determine
the
best
options
for
new
services
and
engage
with
them
consistently
as
their
needs
change.
E
But,
above
all,
I
am
blessed
to
live
in
a
place
that
values
its
natural
spaces.
I
have
a
keen
appreciation
for
the
positive
impact
that
access
to
nature
has
on
mental
and
physical
health.
I
am
committed
to
ensuring
the
vitality
of
our
open
spaces
to
working
with
the
city
government,
to
make
sure
that
we
take
the
best
ideas
from
the
parks
master
plan
and
put
them
to
use
and
to
ensuring
that
we
have
climate
change
goals,
met
or
exceeded.
E
E
It
is
a
city
founded
in
fiscal
responsibility
and
sincere
care
for
its
residents.
We
are
rooted
here
and
it
would
be
the
honor
of
a
lifetime
to
serve
you
as
a
city,
council
member.
I
hope
you
will
join
me
and
the
many
other
residents
already
committed
to
this
campaign
by
moving
forward
with
a
renewed
vision
for
meaningful
change
and
a
commitment
to
what
truly
is
worth
protecting
for
more
information
visit.
Www.Voteforlona.Com.
E
F
Hi,
my
name
is
angela
coyle,
I'm
running
for
city
council
in
district
4..
The
reason
I'm
running
for
city
council
is,
I
moved
to
bloomington
a
few
years
ago
because
it
was
a
family
friendly,
open,
welcoming
community
and
I
feel,
like
every
person
who
moves
into
bloomington
or
lives
here,
should
feel
that
way.
F
Bloomington
should
be
very
welcoming.
We
all
should
feel
as
a
valued
person
in
our
community.
A
few
of
the
things
that
I
will
fight
for
is
to
be
a
voice
for
the
resident.
Anyone
who
comes
to
come
to
me
with
concerns
or
have
open
discussions,
I
will
respectfully
listen.
I
will
respectfully
fight
for
you.
I
will
be
your
voice.
F
Another
point
would
be
to
keep
valley
view
park
the
way
it
is
every
time
I
go
by
there.
It's
in
constant
use
by
several
residents
and
all
the
residents
that
I've
spoken
to
around
valley
view
express
their
concerns
with
it.
Changing
that's
an
85
million
dollar
project
that
that
money
could
be
used
elsewhere,
light
creek
site.
We
could
use
that
money
to
rehab
creekside
and
provide
a
place
for
our
bloomington
seniors
to
go.
Several
seniors
enjoy
creekside,
as
well
as
keeping
bloomington
valley
view
park
open.
F
Another
agenda
that
I
would
fight
for
is
our
green
spaces.
Ensuring
people
of
all
ages
have
a
green
space.
They
can
enjoy,
whether
it's
children
at
a
park
and
a
playground
or
single
adults
just
resting
and
relaxing
enjoying
the
scenery
or
walking
on
the
trails.
Also,
I
feel
public
safety
is
a
huge
agenda.
Each
resident
needs
to
feel
safe
and
secure
in
their
community.
F
G
G
First,
I
have
been
a
fierce
advocate
for
reinvesting
in
our
neighborhoods.
I
was
proud
to
help
expand
our
home
rehabilitation
loan
program,
providing
a
boost
to
folks
that
wanted
to
fix
up
older
properties.
I
was
excited
to
help
establish
the
first
dedicated
pool
of
funding
for
sidewalk
repair,
expand
our
trail
network,
improve
our
pedestrian
crossings
and
modernize
our
fire
stations
across
this
city.
G
I
will
say
with
a
lot
of
confidence
that,
more
than
ever
before,
each
and
every
corner
of
bloomington
is
being
heard
at
city
hall.
Now,
with
that
reinvestment
in
our
neighborhoods
and
alongside
empowered
and
engaged
residents,
we're
beginning
to
reimagine
what
is
possible
here
in
bloomington
and
I'll,
give
you
a
quick
example.
So
I
was
recently
invited
to
tour
blooming
meadows
apartments
off
86th
and
old
shock.
G
That's
about
two
blocks
from
my
house,
and
it
was
such
a
cool
opportunity
because
not
too
long
ago,
the
apartments
had
been
up
for
sale
and
there
was
a
good
chance.
They
would
be
gutted
flipped
into
luxury
units
and
those
hundreds
of
families
would
get
shown
the
door,
but
because
I
and
my
colleagues
on
council
had
established
a
housing
trust
fund
to
help
protect
properties
like
that
and
passed
an
opportunity,
housing
ordinance
to
make
it
easier
to
improve
them.
G
A
twin
cities,
non-profit,
was
able
to
purchase
blooming
meadows,
breathe
overdue
new
life
into
it
and
allow
those
hundreds
of
families
to
stay
rooted
in
our
community.
Allow
those
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
kids
to
stay
safe
and
in
place
in
the
city.
They
call
home-
and
I
mentioned
that
because
when
I
was
a
little
kid
blooming
meadows
was
my
home
and
a
lot
of
those
families
that
are
there
now
was
a
lot
like
my
family,
then
my
dad.
G
Salesman
during
the
day,
he
restocked
those
little
drawers
at
ace
hardware,
type
places
and
at
night
to
help
make
ends
meet.
He
worked
as
the
building
security
guard.
He
used
to
take
me
on
patrols.
When
I
was
little.
My
mom
was
a
brand
new
northwest
airlines
flight
attendant
grinding
out
red-eye
flight
after
red-eye
flight
to
help
keep
that
roof
over
our
heads
to
give
me
the
shot
that
I've
had
my
whole
life
and
I'm
running
for
re-election
as
your
council
member,
because
I
have
seen
firsthand
like
so
many
of
you.
G
What
is
possible
here
in
bloomington
that
it's
possible
for
bloomington
to
be
a
city
where
every
family
can
put
down
roots
and
thrive
where
every
family
feels
welcomed
and
heard
and
shown
respect,
the
bloomington
can
be
a
place
where
every
family
has
a
shot
at
raising
their
neighborhood's
future
city
council.
Member
bloomington
is
so
much
more
than
just
another
suburb
parks
and
paths
and
road
work
and
water
pipes.
I
know
it's
deeper
than
that
and
in
knocking
on
thousands
of
doors
and
talking
to
so
many
of
our
my
neighbors.
G
So
I'm
asking
for
your
support
in
this
re-election
campaign
so
that
together
we
can
continue
investing
in
our
neighborhoods,
empowering
our
neighbors
to
guide
our
future
and
overall
realize
the
incredible
possibilities
bloomington
has
before
it.
Thank
you
so
much
to
the
league
of
women
voters
for
helping
to
put
this
opportunity
together
and
thank
each
and
every
one
of
you
that
are
watching,
because
local
stuff,
like
this
truly,
is
the
most
important.
A
I
Did
you
know
it's
an
election
year?
Bloomington
residents
will
now
use
ranked
choice,
voting
in
city
elections.
You
may
be
wondering
what
is
ranked
choice
voting.
We
all
use
ranked
choice,
voting
in
making
decisions
every
day
like
when
deciding
what
transportation
to
use
or
what
activity
to
do
it
works
the
same
way
with
voting.
Instead
of
choosing
just
one
candidate,
you
select
up
to
six
candidates
in
order
of
preference.
If
more
than
six
candidates
file,
you
can
still
only
choose
your
top
six.
I
If
less
than
six
file
the
number
of
choices
or
rankings
will
equal
the
number
of
candidates.
In
this
example,
maria
is
trying
to
decide
which
bloomington
facility
she
wants
to
go
to
with
her
friends
to
participate
in
an
activity
they,
like
maria,
loves
to
swim.
So
the
family
aquatic
center
is
her
first
choice,
but
if
the
weather
is
too
cold,
her
second
choice
would
be
the
center
for
the
arts
galleries,
followed
by
creekside
community
center
to
visit
friends
and
the
bloomington
ice
garden
to
check
out
open
skate.
I
If
maria
and
her
friends
marked
these
decisions
on
a
ballot,
they
would
mark
their
first.
Second,
third
and
fourth,
decisions
voting
left
to
right
and
top
to
bottom
and
making
only
one
choice
in
each
box
on
election
day.
You
will
use
this
same
process
to
rank
the
candidates
on
your
ballot.
These
votes
are
then
counted
in
rounds
in
round
number
one.
All
of
the
first-choice
votes
are
counted
if
a
candidate
gets
more
than
50
of
the
first-choice
votes.
That
candidate
is
the
winner.
I
If
no
candidate
gets
more
than
50,
the
candidate
with
the
least
number
of
first-choice
votes
is
eliminated
and
their
votes
are
transferred
to
those
voters.
Next
highest
choice
totals
are
then
recalculated,
and
this
process
of
elimination
continues
until
one
candidate
has
received
more
than
50
percent
of
the
votes.
Maria
and
her
friends
will
visit
the
center
for
the
arts
for
more
information
on
ranked
choice.
Voting
and
city
elections
go
to
blm
dot,
mn,
slash
vote.