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Election Information

Pine-Richland School District Voting Regions

On February 11, 2015, Judge Joseph James signed an order approving the reconfiguration of Pine-Richland School District's electoral regions under Section 303 of the School Code as follows: 

  • PRSD Region 1 to remain comprised of Pine voting districts 1, 4, 5, 7 & 8. 
  • PRSD Region 2 to be comprised of Pine voting districts 2, 3 & 6 together with Richland voting districts 6, 7 & 8. 
  • PRSD Region 3 to be comprised of Richland districts 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5.

Voting Region Map

 

Voting Regions

Region Township Voting Districts
#1 Pine Twp. 1, 4, 5, 7 & 8
#2 Pine Twp. 2, 3 & 6
#2 Richland Twp. 6, 7 & 8
#3 Richland Twp. 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5


 

 

Voting Locations

Richland Twp. Voting Districts Poll Locations Address
Richland Municipal Building 4019 Dickey Road, Gibsonia
2 St. Thomas Church in the Fields 4106 St. Thomas Road, Gibsonia
3 & 4 Pine-Richland Youth Center 5554 Community Ctr. Drive, Gibsonia
5 Northern Tier Regional Library   4015 Dickey Road, Gibsonia
6 & 7 Trinity Evangelical Church 3832 Gibsonia Road, Gibsonia
8 Richland Volunteer Fire Dpt 5857 Meridian Road, Gibsonia

 

Pine Township Voting Districts Polling Locations Address
1, 2 & 3 PRHS Stadium 704 Warrendale Road, Gibsonia
4 & 5 Northway Christian Community Church 12121 Perry Hwy., Wexford
6 & 8 North Park Skating Rink 303 Pierce Mill Road, North Park
7 Salem United Methodist Church 350 Manor Road, Wexford

 

*If you are looking to serve on the school board, you can call the Allegheny Election Division Registration Department at 412-350-4510 to find out which region you would serve.   In addition, you can visit the Election Bureau online

Primary Election

If there are no names placed on the primary ballot by timely submission of an appropriate nomination petition, the ballot remains blank and a write-in is the only way to secure the party nomination.

To secure a party nomination by write-in at the primary (and to be placed on the general election ballot) , a candidate must receive a minimum of 10 write-in votes. 

This would mean a candidate would need at least 10 Democrat write-ins on the Democrat ballot to get the Democratic nomination, and at least 10 Republican write-ins on the Republican ballot to get the Republican nomination. 

Write-in Mechanics

Formerly, with paper or mechanical voting machines, there was a line where a write-in name would actually be "written" in. Under current practice with electronic voting machines, the process is that a "write-in" touch-screen button is visible in each of the offices listed for election. When that button is selected, a blank appears along with a touchscreen QWERTY keyboard and the write-in is accomplished by typing the name in.

If people intend to pursue a write-in effort, it is IMPERATIVE that the name be spelled out exactly, and exactly the same in each case. Including first and last name, middle initial, etc. A single letter of difference causes the write-in to be treated as a separate vote for a separate person. There is no accumulation of even obvious spelling errors, and no after-tally correction available. T. Jones, Tom Jones, Thomas J. Jones, and T.J. Jones would each be treated as a separate candidate and would not tally towards the 10 votes required to secure the nomination at the primary. You can hand out cards or flyers with your name as it should appear on the ballot.

General Election 

If no one gets a nomination by write-in in the primary (no one receives at least 10 write-in votes,) leaving the nomination empty, the party committee processes do NOT operate to designate a nominee whose name would appear on the general election ballot.  Those party processes operate only when a vacancy in office arises after the primary, or if there is a party nominee but that nominee dies or something. 

Thus, the only avenue available for the general election is likewise the write-in approach. 

At the general election, even if there are names on the ballot, the write-in can still emerge victorious if he/she has the highest number of votes. BUT, NOTE CAREFULLY a write-in cannot be cast and will not be counted for a person whose name DOES appear on the ballot for the particular office. 

An interesting distinction is that while at least 10 write-ins are required in the primary to secure nomination and placement on the general ballot as a party nominee, only one (1) write-in would be necessary to win at the general, if that one write-in is the only vote cast for the office. An unlikely occurrence, but mathematically and legally possible. So, it is possible for a nominated candidate could win a general with one (1) vote if it were the only vote cast, and the same holds for the write-in.

  • Find Out What Will Appear on Your Ballot
    Know before you go to vote. Search what issues, questions and/or candidates will appear on your ballot.
  • PR School Board of Directors
    Meet each member of the PR School Board. See bios and terms.
  • Search Your Region or Polling Place
    Search by address to find your polling center/region.
  • Information for Running for School Board
    Find general information and elective requirements.
  • Allegheny County Election Calendar
    View Allegheny County's election timeline/calendar. The items on the site's calendar can change without notice.
  • Voting Regions
    The Pine-Richland School District Board of School Directors adopted a modified regional plan for the election of school directors. This plan was presented to the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas and approved. The realignment is designed to more accurately reflect the changing populations in the Pine and Richland Townships and to equalize the three regions. Each of the three regions elects three school directors to the Board.