Local Election

Incumbent lead holds steady in Madera County District 3 supervisor’s race after Election Day

Madera County District 3 Supervisor Robert Poythress, left, is being challenged for his seat by Madera City Councilmember Cecelia Gallegos, right, in the March 5, 2024, election. It will be the county’s only local race.
Madera County District 3 Supervisor Robert Poythress, left, is being challenged for his seat by Madera City Councilmember Cecelia Gallegos, right, in the March 5, 2024, election. It will be the county’s only local race. COURTESY OF MADERA COUNTY AND CITY OF MADERA

Friday’s update to results out of Madera County’s Board of Supervisors District 3 contest showed incumbent Robert Poythress ahead of Madera City Councilmember Cecelia Gallegos by more than 500 votes.

A win in this election would hand Poythress a third four-year term on the Board of Supervisors. On Tuesday night, he told The Fresno Bee he felt “pretty good about this margin.” Poythress said the way District 3 elections have played out in the past indicate his lead will likely remain steady.

”I would not expect the percentages to change very much from here on out,” he said.

On Friday, it seemed his expectations played out. The difference in votes between the candidates had not changed much since Tuesday night, when Poythress held 58.16% of the vote and Gallegos held 41.84% of the vote.

A loss for Gallegos would end her election winning streak. She has been elected to serve as Madera’s District 1 city councilmember three times.

Gallegos has not responded to the Bee’s request for comment Friday afternoon.

According to numbers from the Madera County Clerk-Recorder posted at 3:45 p.m., Poythress held 2,111 votes, or 58.67%. Gallegos held 1,487 votes, or 41.33%. There were a total of 3,598 votes counted at that time in District 3, where records show 14,679 people registered to vote.

An announcement by the Clerk-Recorder said the next update to the results will take place Wednesday by 5 p.m.

The county’s District 3 encompasses most of the city of Madera: Almost all of the city east of Highway 99 and a sliver of the city to the west of the highway. The race in this district played out in the wake of the closure of Madera Community Hospital, the only hospital for adults in the county.

Madera County’s District 3 encompasses most of the city of Madera, covering the majority of the city west of Highway 99 and a sliver of the city east of the highway.
Madera County’s District 3 encompasses most of the city of Madera, covering the majority of the city west of Highway 99 and a sliver of the city east of the highway.

Gallegos did not pull punches during her campaign about the county’s handling of the hospital’s closure. She criticized votes by Poythress last summer to allocate public dollars to help reopen the facility, calling it “bad management.” Gallegos also accused Poythress of not looking out for the interests of District 3 residents and the city of Madera.

As District 3’s supervisor, Gallegos said she would push the county to take a district hospital initiative to Madera County voters in an attempt to create a back-up plan for a future hospital failure. The proposal for a district hospital is one Poythress said the county has not ruled out.

He has shot back at Gallegos with examples of what the county has accomplished in the city, such as work on homelessness, and with confident assertions that Madera hospital will open this summer. If the county had not allocated funds for the hospital, it would not be on the road to a reopening, he previously told The Bee.

The winner of the race will also have to navigate the priorities of a growing population in Madera County as developers’ interest in the region increases and more homes are built. He or she will also have to deal with groundwater sustainability in the county as state-mandated regulations loom.

Poythress said Tuesday night that he is ready to advance water policy in order to achieve that sustainability.

He’s played a large role in traffic projects on Highway 99 during his tenure on the board, and is looking to continue to work on the widening of the highway through Madera County. A win for him in this election, he said, would be a “win for continued stability in the county organization.”

“I believe that we can expect our sense of unity, our sense of teamship, that is throughout the county to continue,” he said. “I can continue to advocate for our county in the transportation world, not here locally, but also in Sacramento because of the positions that I hold.”

Poythress also serves as the board president of the California Associations of Councils of Governments. The incumbent was raised in a farming family in Madera and worked in banking for 39 years.

He has served on the Board of Supervisors in District 3 since 2017, but first ran for public office in 2004, when he was elected to the Madera City Council. He also previously served as mayor of Madera.

Gallegos’ campaign for a seat on the Board of Supervisors is happening midway through her second full term on the City Council. She previously said she is willing to step away from her job as a teacher in the Madera Unified School District, where she has worked for more than 30 years, in order to dedicate all of her time to serving county residents.

This story was originally published March 5, 2024 at 9:09 PM.

Erik Galicia
The Fresno Bee
Erik is a graduate of the Missouri School of Journalism, where he helped launch an effort to better meet the news needs of Spanish-speaking immigrants. Before that, he served as editor-in-chief of his community college student newspaper, Riverside City College Viewpoints, where he covered the impacts of the Salton Sea’s decline on its adjacent farm worker communities in the Southern California desert. Erik’s work is supported through the California Local News Fellowship program.
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