Pennsylvania
You only have a few days left to register to vote in PA’s elections; here’s how
UD students sign up on National Voter Registration Day
Tuesday was National Voter Registration Day and a student organization dedicating to getting people to vote set up to sign students. 9/24/19
Damian Giletto and Jennifer Corbett, The News Journal
Voting-age residents in Pennsylvania have only a few days left to register to vote in the state’s municipal elections.
Here’s what you need to know and do to register to vote in Pennsylvania.
When is the deadline to register to vote in Pennsylvania?
The deadline to register to vote in Pennsylvania is Monday, Oct. 20.
How do I register to vote in Pennsylvania?
According to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania’s website, you must be a U.S. citizen for at least a month before the election, a resident of the election district in which the you plan to register for at least 30 days before the election, and must be at least 18 years old on or before Nov. 4 in order to register to vote.
You can pick up voter registrations forms from these service providers and other agencies across Pennsylvania:
- County voter registration offices
- County assistance offices
- Women, Infants & Children (WIC) program offices
- Armed Forces recruitment centers
- County clerk of orphans’ courts or marriage license offices
- Area agencies on aging
- County mental health and intellectual disabilities offices
- Student disability services offices of the State System of Higher Education
- Offices of special education in high schools
- Americans with Disabilities Act-mandated complementary paratransit providers
You can also register to vote online in Pennsylvania. Note that online voter registration carries the same Oct. 20 deadline.
Pennsylvania state, common pleas judges up for election on Nov. 4
Pennsylvania’s upcoming municipal elections feature races for Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justices, Superior Court judges, Commonwealth Court judges and Common Pleas judges for numerous Pennsylvania counties.
Damon C. Williams is a Philadelphia-based journalist reporting on trending topics across the Mid-Atlantic Region.
Pennsylvania
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Pennsylvania
What the war with Iran could mean for gas prices in western Pennsylvania
The war with Iran could start impacting your wallet as soon as today.
Jim Garrity from AAA East Central says oil prices are up.
“They’re hovering around $72. They were pretty consistently around $65, $66 for a while,” he said.
Nationally, AAA said the average for a gallon of regular sits at about $3, up approximately six cents from last week.
In Pennsylvania, it’s around $3.12 a gallon, and in the Pittsburgh region, it’s around $3.24 a gallon. That’s actually down about four cents from last week.
Garrity added that gas prices this time of year would already be increasing, usually because of higher demand for the warmer months and the production of the summer blend of gas used for those months.
The impacts of what’s happening in Iran may not be immediate, which could be part of why our region and the state overall have not seen a spike yet, he said.
“It could be a couple of days later. It could be up to a week later,” Garrity said.
A lot of people are watching what happens with the Strait of Hormuz. Iran borders it to the north, and 20% of the world’s oil goes through it.
Iran is one of the world’s biggest oil producers, and China gets a lot of that oil.
“If there is an impact there, you could see oil start to come in from other parts of the world, which has a downstream effect on [the United States],” Garrity said.
One way you can save on gas if prices increase in our area is by slowing down.
“When you drive faster every five miles, over 50 miles an hour, your fuel efficiency is going down,” Garrity said. “You’re making the car work harder, making the gasoline consumption less effective.”
Garrity added that in 2022, when our area and many others saw some of the highest gas prices ever recorded, people changed their driving habits.
“We saw people make seemingly permanent changes to their driving behaviors, driving less in general, consolidating trips,” he said.
Pennsylvania
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