A tiny mountain town had to skip an election earlier this month because part-time officials forgot to advertise or prepare for it and it wasn't their first election flub.
Wallsburg, population 275 in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah, failed to schedule an election two years ago, and city officials had to be appointed then.
They were supposed to go up for election November 5, but once again, Wallsburg forgot to get things going, according to Wasatch County officials. The Salt Lake Tribune first reported on the missed election.
More From This Section
The leaders of Wallsburg were told by state elections officials to keep serving until an election can be held in two years.
"We will remember them in 2015," Titcomb said. "They will definitely have an election in 2015."
Wallsburg's mayor and four city council members had no hidden agenda in letting the election slide; they just forgot, he said.
Wallsburg is so small it doesn't have a website or paid staff, and nobody answered the phone at the town's empty office yesterday which is used only for official meetings.
Titcomb said the town's mayor is Jay Hortin, who didn't return phone messages left by The Associated Press.
The mayor was described by his father as an electrician who may have been unavailable because he probably was out working somewhere.
Of his son extending his mayoral duties, Frank Horton said, "Somebody's got to do it."
Frank Hortin said he had no clue how town officials forgot to hold an election, adding, "We probably wouldn't have anybody around to get elected anyway.