Beier, Boyle, Woods take council seats
The dust has settled, the campaigning has stopped and the results are in. East Lansing has two new city council members.
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The dust has settled, the campaigning has stopped and the results are in. East Lansing has two new city council members.
The East Lansing election is over, and newly chosen council members have no time to waste celebrating their victories.
After months of campaigning and debating, most of the work for the six East Lansing City Council candidates is done. Now, only the most difficult part of the election process is left — the waiting game.
Election day for the East Lansing City Council has arrived and MSU faculty, students and community members will be heading to the polls. However for some minority students, various challenges occur when trying to cast a vote.
Legacies can be a tricky thing to discuss. It’s hard in a community of different viewpoints for a consensus of what a public servant means.
If students and residents read one thing in The State News today, we hope it’s this: vote.
This city could be under new leadership come tomorrow night.
City officials quietly repealed an ordinance preventing panhandling this month in the wake of a recent federal court decision.
MSU engineering students are helping to develop a joystick that could make it easier for disabled people to cast votes.
There’s still almost a week before the East Lansing City Council elections, but based on funding alone, we already have a pretty clear idea of who is ahead.
East Lansing City Council hopeful Ruth Beier raised more than $8,000 for her city council candidacy in the Nov. 5 election, with most of the funding coming from members of the Michigan Education Association, according to campaign finance reports submitted to the Ingham County Clerk’s office late last week.
East Lansing could look to regulate pay-for-ride companies that do not classify themselves as taxi cabs.
Editor’s note: This is the sixth and final installment of a semi-weekly series profiling East Lansing City Council candidates prior to the Nov. 5 election.
If they choose to do so, both straight and same-sex couples can now place their names on a city directory and be officially recognized by East Lansing, even if state laws prevent them from formally doing so.
Editor’s note: This is the fifth installment of a semi-weekly series profiling East Lansing City Council candidates prior to the Nov. 5 election.
Editor’s note: This is the fourth installment of a semi-weekly series profiling East Lansing City Council candidates prior to the Nov. 5 election.
Editor’s note: This is the third installment of a semi-weekly series profiling East Lansing City Council candidates prior to the Nov. 5 election.
Monday is the last day to register to vote in East Lansing. So hop to it.
Unregistered voters who hope to influence the Nov. 5 election are running out of time.
Editor’s note: This is the second installment of a semi-weekly series profiling East Lansing City Council candidates prior to the Nov. 5 election.