Get Ready
September 15, 2024 at 3:57 p.m.
Editor, Times-Union:
If you would like to vote early, there are a few things to keep in mind: check your voter registration status to make sure your name has not been wrongfully purged. At the website indianavoters.in.gov, registration status can be checked. Also, you can register there if you have not already done so. The current total of Indiana registered voters is 4,754,814, and the 2023 total population count was 6.86 million.
— Local early voting begins in October, and any eligible, registered voter in Kosciusko County may do so in-office at the Kosciusko County Justice Building (121 N. Lake St., Warsaw) on October 8 through November 1 from 8 am to 4:30 pm. Also at this location on October 26 from 8 am to 3 pm, November 2 from 8 am to 3 pm, and November 4 from 8 am to 12 noon.
—A second location at the North Webster Community Center (301 N. Main St., North Webster) will be available on October 26 from 8 am to 3 pm and November 2 from 8 am to 3 pm.
—Early voters do not need a reason to vote early in-office but must bring an Indiana or
Federal issued photo ID.
Women:
Politicians are taking control of your reproductive health care.
Men: Your family planning is gradually becoming controlled by politicians.
Students: Your freedom to learn is being restricted by politicians whose goal is to control what you are allowed to know and how to think.
Seniors: Your financial and medical security is being threatened by politicians who think you are being coddled.
Everyone: You no longer know if that person on the street who is legally “packing heat” is going to shoot you—or protect you, thanks to “bought-and-paid-for” politicians.
Teachers: Your public schools are being threatened with defunding, subject matter control, and ideological misinformation.
All citizens: Be informed. Learn all you can about all candidates, their positions and their voting records.
Then vote!
Barbara Fabyan
Leesburg, via email
Editor, Times-Union:
If you would like to vote early, there are a few things to keep in mind: check your voter registration status to make sure your name has not been wrongfully purged. At the website indianavoters.in.gov, registration status can be checked. Also, you can register there if you have not already done so. The current total of Indiana registered voters is 4,754,814, and the 2023 total population count was 6.86 million.
— Local early voting begins in October, and any eligible, registered voter in Kosciusko County may do so in-office at the Kosciusko County Justice Building (121 N. Lake St., Warsaw) on October 8 through November 1 from 8 am to 4:30 pm. Also at this location on October 26 from 8 am to 3 pm, November 2 from 8 am to 3 pm, and November 4 from 8 am to 12 noon.
—A second location at the North Webster Community Center (301 N. Main St., North Webster) will be available on October 26 from 8 am to 3 pm and November 2 from 8 am to 3 pm.
—Early voters do not need a reason to vote early in-office but must bring an Indiana or
Federal issued photo ID.
Women:
Politicians are taking control of your reproductive health care.
Men: Your family planning is gradually becoming controlled by politicians.
Students: Your freedom to learn is being restricted by politicians whose goal is to control what you are allowed to know and how to think.
Seniors: Your financial and medical security is being threatened by politicians who think you are being coddled.
Everyone: You no longer know if that person on the street who is legally “packing heat” is going to shoot you—or protect you, thanks to “bought-and-paid-for” politicians.
Teachers: Your public schools are being threatened with defunding, subject matter control, and ideological misinformation.
All citizens: Be informed. Learn all you can about all candidates, their positions and their voting records.
Then vote!
Barbara Fabyan
Leesburg, via email