Next Tuesday on September 14 Jamaica Plain voters will head to the polls during the Boston Municipal Primary election and cast their ballots for Mayor and At-Large City Councilor.
Jamaica Plain voters will choose from a field of seven mayoral candidates and a large field of candidates running for City Councilor At-Large.
Who is on the Ballot
next Tuesday
In the Boston Mayoral race four have emerged as favorites among voters ahead of the Primary and include Acting Mayor Kim Janey, Michelle Wu, Annissa Essaibi George and Andrea Campbell with John Barros, Robert Cappucci, and Richard Spagnuolo rounding out the field of mayoral candidates.
The top two vote getters will compete in the Boston Municipal General Election in November.
In the At-Large race Jamaica Plain voters can pick up to four candidates from the field of 17 At-Large candidates running in the Primary.
The candidates for At-Large are incumbents Michael Flaherty and Julia Mejia, Ruthzee Louijeune, Jonathan Spillane, David Halbert, Erin Murphy, Said Abdikarim, Kelly Bates, James Colimon, Domingos DaRosa, Althea Garrison, Alexander Gray, Carla Monteiro, Bridget Nee-Walsh, Roy Owens, Donnie Palmer, and Nick Vance.
Where to Vote in
Jamaica Plain
The following are the polling locations broken down in order of Wards and Precincts. All polling locations will be open between 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. on Tuesday, September 14, 2021. Ballots will be available in English, Spanish, Chinese and Vietnamese. Language assistance will be available on Election Day by translators at polling locations or by contacting the Election Department’s translation phone bank. Those interested in volunteering can apply to be a poll worker here.
Ward 11
Precinct 4, Word of Life Tabernacle Church – 120 Amory St. Vote in Bishop Samuel A. Darden Hall. Voter entrance on the left side of the building from Bragdon Street.
Precinct 5, Walnut Park Apartments – 1990 Columbus Ave. Vote in the community room.
Precinct 6, Brookside Family Life Center – 3297 Washington Street. Vote in the community room.
Precinct 7 & 8, Boston English High School – 144 McBride St. Vote on the auditorium stage. Voter entrance on Williams Street side door.
Precinct 9 & 10 Margarita Muniz Academy (formerly Louis Agassiz Elementary School) – 20 Child St. Vote in the gymnasium. Voter entrance through gymnasium door to the right of main entrance.
Ward 19
Precinct 1 & 3, Curley k-8 (formerly known as Mary E. Curley school) – 493 Centre St. Vote in the cafeteria. Voter entrance through driveway on Pershing Road.
Precinct 2, Joseph P. Manning Elementary School – 130 Louder’s Ln. Vote in the cafeteria. HP entrance right side rear door.
Precinct 4, Nate Smith Elderly Housing – 155 Lamartine St. Vote in meeting room.
Precinct 5, Collins Apartments – 29 Pond St. Vote in the community room.
Precinct 6, Bowditch School Building – 82 Green Street. Vote in the community room.
Precinct 7 & 12, Woodbourne Apartments – 6 Southbourne Rd. Vote in the dining room.
Precinct 8 & 9 Margarita Muniz Academy (formerly Louis Agassiz Elementary School) – 20 Child St. Vote in the gymnasium. Voter entrance through gymnasium door to the right of main entrance.
Precinct 10 & 13, Washington Irving School – 105 Cummins Highway. Voter entrance to the rear of the school from Hawthorne Street. Vote in Room #102
Precinct 11, Joseph Calci Training Center – 25 Colgate Rd. Vote in the wallpaper room.
Vote by Mail Ballots
The City of Boston has also installed 20 ballot drop boxes across the city for voters to drop off completed vote by mail ballots.
The Ballot Drop Box location in Jamaica Plain is at the Jamaica Plain Branch Library, 30 South Street or on the first and third floor entrances of Boston City Hall.
All drop boxes are monitored under 24 hour video surveillance. Drop boxes will also be available at each early voting location during the scheduled voting hours.
Applications for vote by mail ballots have been mailed out to every registered voter in Boston. Voters are asked to fill out the application, including their signature, as applications received without a signature will not be accepted. To be eligible to vote by mail in the Preliminary Municipal Election, applications must be returned to the Boston Election Department by Wednesday (today), September 8, by 5 p.m.
Vote by mail applications can be returned by U.S. mail with the prepaid postcard or in-person at the Boston Election Department, City Hall, Room 241.
If a registered Boston voter did not receive or lost their application, they can request a new ballot application by completing the form available on the City’s vote-by-mail website. The form can be sent to the City of Boston’s Election Department, via mail, email, fax, or in-person. The Boston Election Department is located at Boston City Hall, City Hall Square, Room 241, Boston, MA 02201. Fax: 617-635-4483, Tel: 617-635-VOTE (8683). Email: absenteevoter@boston.gov
Vote By Mail
The Election Department will send out vote by mail ballots as soon as the application requests are processed. Once a voter receives their ballot package, they should follow the enclosed instructions. It is important to sign the yellow ballot affidavit envelope. Unsigned ballot affidavit envelopes will cause a ballot to be rejected. To return ballots by U.S. mail, make sure to apply sufficient postage. While ballot package weight can vary, two First Class stamps is generally sufficient.
To be counted, ballots must be received by the Boston Election Department or in a ballot drop box by the close of polls on Election Day, Tuesday, September 14, 2021 at 8 p.m.
Tracking Your Ballot
Boston voters can track their ballot request through the state’s website. The city will continue to mail ballots as applications arrive, until the application deadline of 5 p.m. Wednesday, September 8, 2021.