
The last day to submit new voter registrations and voter updates to existing registrations online or by mail is 5 p.m. Mon., Feb. 6
VANCOUVER ‒ Beginning Friday (Jan. 27), Clark County Elections will mail ballots to all eligible registered voters residing within the city of Vancouver, Vancouver School District, Washougal School District and Woodland School District.
If a voter does not receive a ballot by Thu., Feb. 2, they should contact the Elections Office at (564) 397- 2345 to request a replacement ballot. Although replacement ballots may be requested in person at the Elections Office, staff encourages voters to request a replacement by email or by phone. After Jan. 29, replacement ballots may also be requested or accessed electronically at VoteWA.gov to print out and return by mail or drop box. Email requests should be sent to elections@clark.wa.gov.
The mailing address is Clark County Elections Office, PO Box 8815, Vancouver, WA 98666-8815. The last day to submit new voter registrations and voter updates to existing registrations online or by mail is 5 p.m. Mon., Feb. 6.
Voters may still register and update existing voter registrations after Feb. 6, but must do so in person by 8 p.m. Tue., Feb. 14.
The Elections Office is located at 1408 Franklin St. in downtown Vancouver and is open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Election Day.
The process of preparing the ballot tabulation system which produces election results will begin at 7:15 pm on Election Day, Tuesday, Feb. 14. Results will be posted on clarkvotes.org around 8:15 pm.
An online voters’ guide and a sample ballot listing the ballot measures appearing on the Feb. 14, 2023 Special Election are available at the Elections Office website at clarkvotes.org.
Also read:
- Clark County Council discusses statement regarding ICEClark County Council members debated whether issuing a statement on ICE would ease community concerns or further complicate law enforcement operations in the county.
- Beaver Bay Campground reservations open this week before grand re-opening Memorial Day weekendBeaver Bay Campground on the Lewis River will reopen May 22 following major renovations, with campsite reservations opening Jan. 30 through PacifiCorp.
- Grand Finale of Brush Strokes in Motion this Fri. & Sat. at RedDoor features Mathieson & ClarksonRedDoor Gallery will wrap up its Brush Strokes in Motion series with live art demonstrations by Cheryl Mathieson and Matthew Clarkson during two afternoon events in Camas.
- County manager seeks volunteer for open seat on Arts CommissionClark County is seeking applications from residents of unincorporated areas to fill a two-year, at-large position on the Clark County Arts Commission.
- Leslie Lewallen stays and fights for Washington as director of Future 42 Clark CountyFormer Camas City Councilor Leslie Lewallen is leading the Clark County chapter of Future 42, a new organization focused on policy advocacy, accountability, and engaging persuadable voters at the local and state level.
- Opinion: ‘Seeking might over right destroys representative government’Retired judge Dave Larson argues that prioritizing political power over constitutional principles has undermined representative government and calls for renewed civic responsibility.
- Letter: ‘Immigration’ resolution scheduled for this Wednesday at Clark County Council MeetingRob Anderson urges residents to closely watch an upcoming Clark County Council meeting where an immigration-related resolution and proposed rule changes are expected to be discussed.









Make sure you are registered and vote. We need everyone to vote no on school levies until they quit spending our money on inappropriate books and curriculum.
No friggin’ way! Vote NO on both the homelessness levy and the school levy!!!
The city just gave away 2.76 million dollars in tax breaks to one developer, on one project.
When I see this city making everyone pay their full tax bill, only then you can come to me with your hat in hand. Until that happens, this city’s habit of cuttin’ developers a tax break and then shifting the tax burden onto its rank-n-file citizens is going to have repercussions across the board, for every levy or bond.
The city has thrown piles of money at the homeless for the past 7 years and I’m sure not seeing much, if any, improvement. You will never, ever, be able to spend your way out of homelessness. “If you build it, they will come” is being proven in that the more services the city provides, the more there are that need those services.
Jamie Spinelli, city housing czar, and all her minions have built homelessness into a self-sustaining industry! They don’t want to solve the problem; they need the problem to continue to grow, thus ensuring their continued employment, paychecks, and juicy benefits… all courtesy of the rank-n-file citizens.
It’s time this city wakes up and quits chasing unicorns and fairy dust. Rank-n-file citizens are taxed to death already! City leaders need to start listening to the rank-n-file citizens instead of their select few whose pecking order depends on how much money is brought to the city’s table.
As for the Vancouver School District (VSD)… sorry, but I’m not seeing any belt-tightening measures being taken. You know, the same belt-tightening that rank-n-file citizens are doing on every week when they decide to grocery-shop or pay the electric bill. Maybe VSD has cut back and I’m not aware… but that is the very problem. VSD, if they’ve made those “hard decisions,” hasn’t made it known to the rank-n-file citizens. So I’m voting NO.