Coin toss for a council seat: Tied race determined by chance
SALT LAKE CITY — Officials settled a deadlocked race for a spot on a city council in suburban Salt Lake City by drawing names from a pilgrim hat and flipping a coin — a decision-by-chance that Utah and a number of other states allow to break ties in elections or appointments.
Utah law lets tied votes be settled “by lot” but does not specify what method of chance to use, Elections Director Mark Thomas said Wednesday. A coin toss and drawing names are common methods and they have been used two or three times over the past decade in Utah, generally in small elections, he said.
In the Kentucky city of Grayson, a tied election for a city council seat was settled Thursday with a coin flip.
In other states, local officials sometimes have rolled dice to determine the winner. That happened in Oregon in June, when two legislative candidates tied as they sought the nomination of the Independent Party. A 1992 stalemate in a primary for an Arizona legislative seat was settled by a game of poker.