Candidates file declaration papers for November 5 election featuring first-ever combining of school board and city government races on ballot

The Tuesday, November 5 election will be the first time the state of Iowa will hold both city government and school board elections simultaneously, following a law passed by the Iowa Legislature in 2017. Candidates had until September 19 of this year to file declaration papers to be placed on this year’s combined ballot.

Declared candidates involved in contested races in this year’s local school board or city government elections will each receive a candidate questionnaire from The Standard within the next couple weeks to be returned and published in the October 30 issue of The Standard, prior to this year’s election. All local candidates who filed declaration papers by that September 19 deadline to serve area communities are listed below:

SCHOOL BOARDS
Both the Allamakee Community School District and Eastern Allamakee Community School District will each have at least one contested race for their respective school boards. Both will have three seats up for election this year.

In the Allamakee Community School District, the lone contested race will be in District 3, where recently appointed incumbent Beth Shafer will be challenged by Tony Smith. Shafer was recently appointed to the District 3 seat following the resignation of long-time board member Patty Nordheim. Erik Helgerson will be seeking re-election to his District 2 seat unopposed, and Brent Beyer is the lone declared candidate for the open District 4 seat which Tim Waters is not seeking re-election to after several years of board service.

In the Eastern Allamakee Community School District, two of three seats up for election will be contested, with incumbents seeking re-election to all three seats. Kelli Mudderman is running unopposed for her At-Large seat. The District 1 seat will have incumbent Bobbie Goetzinger being challenged by Stacie Strong, and the District 2 seat will have incumbent Bruce Palmborg being challenged by both Tony Becker and Krista Rasque in a three-candidate race.

MAYORS
Five area communities will each have mayoral and city council races listed on this year’s ballot. Two of those five mayor races will be contested this year, with only three incumbent mayors seeking re-election in those five communities.

In Waukon, incumbent mayor Pat Stone is being challenged by current Waukon City Council Ward 3 representative Arvid Hatlan, whose council seat is not set to expire for another two years. Both are currently in the first term of their respective City of Waukon governmental roles.

The other contested mayoral race is in Lansing, where incumbent mayor Mike Brennan will not be seeking another term. Current Lansing City Council member Kyle Walleser and former council member William Burke have both declared their candidacy for that open mayoral seat.

Remaining incumbent mayors Joshua Dreps of New Albin and Dave Monserud of Waterville will both be seeking re-election unopposed in this year’s election. Although not a current incumbent, Harpers Ferry will be seeing some familiarity in its lone candidate for mayor as Jerry Valley has declared his candidacy, replacing current mayor Bill Nation, who is not seeking re-election after being appointed to that seat earlier this year following the resignation of previously-elected Richard Smrcina.

CITY COUNCILS
Two of those same five communities will each have one contested race within their city councils. The remaining three communities each have a number of candidates equal to or less than the number of council seats up for election this year.

The contested race within the Waukon City Council lies in one of its two At-Large seats, where incumbent John Ellingson is facing a challenge from Scott Panos. The other council seat up for election is in Ward 2, where incumbent John Lydon is seeking re-election to that seat unopposed.

The Board of Trustees for Veterans Memorial Hospital in Waukon also has three candidates declared on the ballot for election to three positions on the board. Those three candidates include incumbents Matt Goltz, Kevin Hanson and Dennis Lyons.

New Albin is where the other contested city council race will take place, as four candidates are vying for three seats up for election on the council. Incumbent Alexie Grotegut is the only one of those four candidates who is seeking re-election, with the other three declared candidates being Anna Fee, Elizabeth Ristey and Alberto Whitlatch. Incumbent City Treasurer Diane Erbe is also up for re-election unopposed on this year’s ballot in New Albin.

Lansing has two At-Large council seats up for election, with just one declared candidate filing papers. Incumbent Bruce ReVoir is seeking re-election to the council, with the other seat being vacated by Kyle Walleser’s declared candidacy for Lansing Mayor and needing to be filled either by write-in vote or appointment.

Harpers Ferry has three declared candidates for three At-Large council positions, including incumbent Sandi Riha, along with Tom Diggins and Daren Kaeppel. Likewise, Waterville also has an equal number of candidates for its five city council seats up for election, including Robbie Burrett, David Christianson, Jaclyn Hilleshiem, Jeff Mitchell and Jodi Van Iten.