New Jersey
Related: About this forumRecall of young Bergen school board member tossed
A 20-year-old Park Ridge school board member who attends college in Nashville will avoid facing a recall election this year because organizers of the effort to remove him from office never had their petitions notarized.
That means Robert Fisher, who was elected two years ago at age 18, might not face voters again until next year, if he decides to seek re-election.
I am delighted that the Clerks Office followed the law and rejected this ridiculous attempt to subvert the will of Park Ridges voters, Fisher said. Now I can get back to doing the will of the people with this distraction out of the way.
Organizers of the recall effort collected 2,141 signatures more than the 1,864 needed to put the measure on the ballot. But they neglected to have the petitions notarized, which is required under state election law.
https://newjerseyglobe.com/local/recall-of-young-bergen-school-board-member-tossed/

stopdiggin
(14,294 posts)I'm generally a real proponent of the voters getting what they asked for ...
In this case - perhaps the correct thing might have been to voluntarily step aside?
Also - getting the sense here that 'culture wars' - might be a large factor in why something like that has not happened.?
no_hypocrisy
(52,820 posts)Being enrolled in a college several states away is a challenge. While I'm sure there are ZOOM meetings and all documents can be scanned and e-mailed to this Board member, I have doubts about being physically in the municipality and in the schools to understand the status quo.
stopdiggin
(14,294 posts)this young man is featured as having some very 'socially conservative' views.
and, in time when were weren't so intent on 'sticking it to' - our opponents - a seat on a local school board would have been a thing fairly easily relinquished .. ?
and hardly this 'stand my ground' 'fight to the finish' - political donnybrook?