Metro-East News

St. Clair County consolidates voting precincts. It could save thousands of dollars

In this file photo, election judges at the Douglas Elementary School polling location in Belleville wait for their next voter during the April 4, 2023, election.
In this file photo, election judges at the Douglas Elementary School polling location in Belleville wait for their next voter during the April 4, 2023, election. dholtmann@bnd.com

Ahead of the 2024 primary, St. Clair County has consolidated its 190 voting precincts down to 149 to comply with a change in state law. It will also cut county spending on elections.

The St. Clair County Board voted at its meeting Monday night to eliminate 41 small precincts and merge them with others because the Illinois Election Code now states that a precinct should include around 1,200 registered voters. The state law used to call for between 500 and 800 voters per precinct.

The eliminated precincts are located in Belleville, Canteen, Caseyville, Centreville, Marissa, St. Clair, Stookey and Sugarloaf townships.

Fewer precincts means fewer polling places to rent and staff with election judges, so the move could save the county an estimated $30,000-$40,000 a year — or more, according to St. Clair County Clerk Tom Holbrook.

In odd-numbered years with only one election, the county has budgeted an average of almost $200,000 since 2018 to pay for judges, one of the largest expenses for elections. The cost is doubled in even-numbered years with two elections.

This chart shows St. Clair County's spending on election judges from 2017 to 2023.
Created with Datawrapper

After the precinct consolidation, about 75% of voters in the county will be able to vote on Election Day in the same place they did before, Holbrook said. But about a quarter of voters will have a new polling place for the primary election eight months away, on March 19.

Holbrook and elections supervisor Laura Kaemmerer said the clerk’s office is working to make and mail out new voter registration cards, which will tell voters if their polling place changed.

“We will try to keep it, just as we have before, to the most convenient location for those people,” Holbrook said of polling place changes.

This table shows the changes St. Clair County made to its voting precincts.
Created with Datawrapper

St. Clair County Board Chairman Mark Kern noted many people are using early and mail-in voting rather than voting at the polls.

“The polling places now don’t get near the demand, and so that’s why you can merge (precincts) and still not overwhelm,” Kern said.

A little over half of voters cast their ballots early in the last presidential race and a little over a third in the last gubernatorial race, according to Holbrook.

The Illinois Election Code includes an exception that allows some small precincts with less than 1,200 voters to remain unchanged: every township has to have at least one polling place, Holbrook said.

County board members Courtney Moore, D-District 7; Steve Gomric, D-District 8; Ken Sharkey, D-District 11; Steve Reeb, R-District 13; Scott Tieman, D-District 17; and Richie Meile-D-District 25 didn’t vote on the precinct consolidation because they were absent from Monday night’s county board meeting. All of their districts include portions of townships where some precincts changed.

St. Clair County voting precinct changes by Lexi Cortes on Scribd

East St. Louis precinct changes

The city of East St. Louis, which has its own elections board, also made changes to its precincts in response to the new state law.

Kandrise Mosby, executive director of the East St. Louis Board of Elections, said the board voted July 13 to consolidate the city’s 25 precincts down to 13.

Mosby said the move will result in some savings for the city of East St. Louis, but she hadn’t calculated exactly what it might be.

The East St. Louis Board of Elections also plans to mail voters new voter registration cards to alert them to precinct and polling place changes, according to Mosby.

The Illinois Election Code now states that a voting precinct should include about 1,200 registered voters. The state law used to call for between 500 and 800 voters per precinct.
The Illinois Election Code now states that a voting precinct should include about 1,200 registered voters. The state law used to call for between 500 and 800 voters per precinct. Illinois General Assembly

This story was originally published August 2, 2023 at 6:30 AM.

Lexi Cortes
Belleville News-Democrat
The metro-east is home for investigative reporter Lexi Cortes. She was raised in Granite City and Edwardsville and graduated from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville in 2014. Lexi joined the Belleville News-Democrat in 2014 and has won multiple state awards for her investigative and community service reporting. Support my work with a digital subscription
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