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Fiala wins on coin toss: Kent mayor's race ends in tie, flip of half-dollar

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By Mike Sever

Record-Courier staff writer

Anyone who doubts if an individual vote matters should ask Kent mayoral candidates Jerry Fiala and Rick Hawksley what they think.

Fiala won the Kent mayor’s post on the toss of a coin Friday morning at the Portage County Board of Elections after the official count ended in a tie vote.

Fiala had a two-vote lead over Hawksley on election night, but they tied at 2,052 each after provisional and absentee ballots were tallied in the official certified count Friday. Twenty-five percent of Kent’s 17,538 registered voters cast ballots for mayor.

That decision will stand unless an automatic recount set for Nov. 30 changes the vote tally.

It was the first of two ties that had to be decided by the toss of a coin Friday. Ohio election law specifies how tie votes are to be resolved.  

“This will probably turn out to be a very historic meeting,” said elections board Chairman Norman Sandvoss. It was the first time he could determine that two coin tosses were needed to resolve ties, he said. The last tie was in 1979 for a Streetsboro City Council race.

“In my 13 years on the board of elections we’ve never had to do this,” Sandvoss said. 

The last time a coin toss was used to determine a mayor’s race was the 1961 race between Mayor Redmond Greer and Robert Byrne. Greer was ahead in the final tally, but the two tied after Byrne demanded a recount. Greer retained the mayor’s post when his coin, too, came up “heads.”

By state election law, the coin toss was necessary to declare a winner in the tie. An automatic recount still will be held.

Explaining the procedure, Sandvoss had Fiala and Hawksley’s names written on lots and placed in his Ohio State hat to draw for who would call the toss. Fiala won the draw and called “heads” as Sandvoss tossed the coin. 

“It’s heads,” Sandvoss declared after dropping to his hands and knees to read the coin after it landed on the floor.

Lois Enlow, deputy director of the elections board, provided the 1961 half-dollar used and Sandvoss sealed it in an envelope for the eventual winner.

After the meeting, Fiala and Hawksley shook hands. They will have to wait until Nov. 30 to see how the recount turns out.

“One way or the other, we’ll be in the history books,” Fiala said. 

Both he and Hawksley agreed the election shows the value of the individual vote.

“One vote obviously changes things,” Hawksley said.

Sue Fiala, wife of the apparent mayor-elect, said she found the situation “very stressful.” 

She accompanied her husband on his door-to-door campaign around the city and said they must have knocked on doors at 97 percent of the houses in Kent.

On election night, Fiala had 2,013 to 2,011 votes  for Hawksley, but there were still 89 provisional ballots to be considered. 

Hawksley picked up two more votes than Fiala out of those to tie the race. 

Eight ballots had to be tossed out for technical errors or violations, such as the voter not signing the envelope or voting in the wrong precinct.

 




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   Next 10 Comments of 11 Total Comments
11.
    Posted by Mr. Destiny November 21, 2009
I wonder if Lois got that two headed coin for John?

10.
    Posted by Uknown November 21, 2009
"This is like deja vu all over again." - Yogi Berra

9.
    Posted by Uknown November 21, 2009
Ed1,

It seems to me that the anti-Good Old Boy platform failed miserably in our most recent election.

If you're planning to run for Kent City Council next year, you might want to choose a different straw man. And learn how to spell check.

8.
    Posted by funinthesun November 21, 2009
It is absolutely terrifying that Ed1 was not too long ago a one term Kent City Councilman. Get over it and start picking on Stow!

7.
    Posted by Floyd G. Orilla November 21, 2009
Congratulations Jerry.

I agree with ed1 completely, maybe this town can have a little less traffic "calming" now and be move forward with out stopping at ever redlight!

6.
    Posted by EKlectic November 21, 2009
This is not a Portage County thing. Coin tosses decide tied mayoral races all throughout the country. It is very common and accepted. In Kent, the mayor doesn't really have much power anyway, it's the way the city government is set up. Ironically, they do decide in the event of the city council ending in a tie.
"Under the city of Kent's form of government, the Mayor presides at all meetings of the Council but has no voice or vote in its proceedings, except in the event of a tie. The Mayor does not have any other power to approve or disapprove ordinances or resolutions.

The Mayor is an ex-officio member of all committees created by Council. The Mayor is recognized as head of the City government for all ceremonial purposes and by the Governor for purposes of military law."

From: http://www.kentohio.org/gov2/mayor.asp

5.
    Posted by Ed1 November 21, 2009
Good for Kent and Congratulations to Jerry. The only scary thing about this is that Sanity beat Insanity by a coin flip. To think that Kent could have been subjected to more of the "man who has visions" by a tie vote is very sad. Kent has had the majority of Council controlled by people suffering hallucinations for far to long. If Kent residents want their city to improve then they need to remove the hallucinating visionaries from council and replace them with good old fashion common sense people who run Kent with the residents interest first in mind and the agenda of the special interest groups and the Good Old Boys ignored.

4.
    Posted by Fair Tax 1 November 21, 2009
Congrats Jerry!!!

3.
    Posted by Uknown November 21, 2009
Johnny Yuma,

I don't smell anything. Are you sure it's not just you?

2.
    Posted by Johnny Yuma November 21, 2009
WOW oh s--t oh WOW

Can anyone smell the leadership in Kent, at work here?

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