
Coverage will begin at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday evening
VANCOUVER – Clark/Vancouver Television (CVTV) will provide the only live television coverage of local general election results in Clark County starting at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday (Nov. 8).
Viewers can tune to Comcast channel 23/323HD for up-to-the-minute Clark County election results, analysis and commentary. Live streaming CVTV election coverage will also be available to viewers online at www.cvtv.org.
CVTV’s election coverage will be hosted by city of Vancouver Strategic Communications Manager Tim Becker and tax preparation business owner Paul Montague. Becker and Montague will also conduct candidate interviews remotely.
CVTV is the local government, non-commercial cable access channel operated and funded by the city of Vancouver and Clark County.
Information provided by city of Vancouver.
Also read:
- Rocksolid Community Teen Center launches 40/40 Campaign to support teens this fallRocksolid Community Teen Center seeks 1,000 donors at $40 each to fund after-school programs this fall.
- VIDEO: Rep. John Ley – I-5 Bridge replacement project is a ‘light rail project in search of a bridge’Rep. John Ley criticizes IBR design that allocates 54% of bridge surface to transit while costs balloon to $14.4 billion.
- Letter: IBR/Light rail and chronic homelessnessVancouver resident Bob Zak criticizes city council’s light rail endorsement and calls for tougher homeless policies.
- 2026 Northern Pikeminnow Sport-Reward Fishery begins May 1Cash rewards start at $6 per fish, with top angler earning over $159,000 in 2025 catching 15,715 northern pikeminnow.
- Annual Plant Fair returns to Two Rivers Heritage MuseumVolunteers harvest plants from Thor Larsen’s historic Carriage House property for the May 16-June 14 fundraiser.
- VIDEO: Former WA AG Rob McKenna criticizes AGO role in crafting millionaire’s taxFormer AG Rob McKenna calls out current AGO for collaborating with lawmakers to circumvent constitutional process and prevent voter input.
- Gray wolf population in WA surges to highest recorded levelState biologists counted 270 wolves across 49 packs, marking a 17.4% jump from 230 wolves in 2024.








