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School Board and Ballot Proposition Unofficial Election Results With Absentees

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Four at-large trustee seats were available for the Sheridan County School District Two Board this year. There were a total of 15 candidates running for the four available positions in Tuesday’s General Election. The four that were elected to serve as trustees for District Two were Michael Lansing, Ann Perkins, Arin Wadell and Shelta Rambur. Each of the trustee positions are for a term of four years.

Clint Krumm and William Adsit were elected to serve four year terms as at-large trustees on the Sheridan County School District One Board. Karis Prusak and Wade Betz were elected to the Board of Trustees for School District Three. Both the county-wide lodging tax and the county-wide sales and use tax were approved by Sheridan County voters.

The Sheridan County Clerk’s Office will conduct a Post-Election Ballot Audit of the 2022 Sheridan County General Election on November 11, beginning at 8:30 am on the second floor of the new addition of the Sheridan County Courthouse in the Election Office. This audit may be attended by a named representative(s) from any political party to observe the audit. The County Clerk, along with Election staff and sworn Election officials representing both major parties, will conduct the audit. More elections results can be viewed here.

3 Comments

3 Comments

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    Jeremy Jones

    November 9, 2022 at 4:33 am

    I thought Sheridan cared about education and appreciated our teachers more than this! We’ll see how these new district 2 school board members perform and if they can play nice in the sand box. The last thing we need is these newbies to bring their personal agendas and movments into our already world class program at school district #2.

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    Melinda Brennan

    November 9, 2022 at 1:57 pm

    Please stop being negative. Diversity of thought is needed and constructive. These people are united in their desire to assist the school district in promoting excellence for our students!
    Differing views will bring balance and respect.

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    Dennis Fox

    November 9, 2022 at 4:34 pm

    Re-imposing Wyoming’s highest sales tax of 6% makes no sense. Especially with record high inflation and property taxes thru the roof. Guess the one-sided, high-tax propaganda worked. BTW, still waiting for my “lower taxes are better” mailer. A fair election presents both sides of the issue to voters, so we can be fully informed. Perpetuating the myth that, “High taxes are good for us” and using our tax money to do it, ought to be illegal, maybe even criminal.

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