Trish White-Boyd has served on Roanoke City Council since being appointed to fill a vacant seat in early 2019. She is now running for election to the Council for the first time. She is currently the president of Star City Management Services and has served on the Roanoke Board of Higher Education and the League of Older Americans.
During her time on City Council, White-Boyd supported a plan to paint a mural reading “END RACISM NOW” along Campbell Avenue downtown. She has voted to remove Confederate monuments and remove the names of Confederates from city parks. White-Boyd has also supported green initiatives, such as funding e-bike programs and voting to expand the city’s trails.
She is running for re-election on a progressive platform that includes improving neighborhoods while preventing gentrification and expanding affordable housing options within the city.
She will improve education by increasing access to preschool education, continuing her work to develop a suicide prevention program for Roanoke city schools, and working to join the My Brother’s Keeper initiative to help close opportunity gaps experienced by young men of color.
White-Boyd is also committed to sustainability and combating climate change on the local level. To improve the city’s sustainability, she wishes to improve public transportation, search for viable options for solar and renewable energy sources for municipal buildings and local businesses, and implement neighborhood-specific sustainable development strategies.
White-Boyd is less proactive on issues of police reform. She supports more training for officers that will allow them to better deal with people experiencing mental health crises or addiction but has not advocated shifting any first-responder duties away from police. Most of her statements about the George Floyd protests have been supportive of protesters’ rights to express themselves, but stop short of acknowledging the need for reform.
Trish White-Boyd is a progressive choice for this race.
Trish White-Boyd has served on Roanoke City Council since being appointed to fill a vacant seat in early 2019. She is now running for election to the Council for the first time. She is currently the president of Star City Management Services and has served on the Roanoke Board of Higher Education and the League of Older Americans.
During her time on City Council, White-Boyd supported a plan to paint a mural reading “END RACISM NOW” along Campbell Avenue downtown. She has voted to remove Confederate monuments and remove the names of Confederates from city parks. White-Boyd has also supported green initiatives, such as funding e-bike programs and voting to expand the city’s trails.
She is running for re-election on a progressive platform that includes improving neighborhoods while preventing gentrification and expanding affordable housing options within the city.
She will improve education by increasing access to preschool education, continuing her work to develop a suicide prevention program for Roanoke city schools, and working to join the My Brother’s Keeper initiative to help close opportunity gaps experienced by young men of color.
White-Boyd is also committed to sustainability and combating climate change on the local level. To improve the city’s sustainability, she wishes to improve public transportation, search for viable options for solar and renewable energy sources for municipal buildings and local businesses, and implement neighborhood-specific sustainable development strategies.
White-Boyd is less proactive on issues of police reform. She supports more training for officers that will allow them to better deal with people experiencing mental health crises or addiction but has not advocated shifting any first-responder duties away from police. Most of her statements about the George Floyd protests have been supportive of protesters’ rights to express themselves, but stop short of acknowledging the need for reform.
Trish White-Boyd is a progressive choice for this race.
About the Race
The election for President of the United States is on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Former Vice President and Senator from Delaware Joe Biden (D) is running against the current president, Donald J. Trump (R), a businessman and former reality television star.
About the State
Every eligible voter may cast a ballot in the presidential election. The majority of the U.S. population has voted Democratic for the last twenty-eight years, except 2004. However, the allocation of electoral college votes led to Republicans taking the White House in two of those seven elections. Turnout is typically higher during presidential election years, though 2018 saw the highest record turnout for a non-presidential election since 1914, with 50.3% of the electorate turning out to vote. Turnout for the 2016 election was at 55.7%. In 2008, when the nation elected President Barack Obama (D), turnout was 58.2% but dropped to 54.9% in 2012.