NEW: Cianci Campaign Co-Chair Alleges Voter Suppression at MLK

GoLocal News Team

NEW: Cianci Campaign Co-Chair Alleges Voter Suppression at MLK

A blocked intersection at the corner of Camp and Doyle.
Leah Williams Metts, the campaign co-chair for the Cianci campaign, has levied allegations of possible voter suppression in Providence today.  

"I was at MLK all day," said Metts, of being at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School polling location on the East Side, in the Mt. Hope district of the city.  "Doyle Ave and Camp Street were blocked.  So I had to go down to North Main, come back up by University Heights, and up Carrington.  There were no detour signs for getting around the road work."

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"I thought this looked like voter suppression -- voters have to park far away or down the hill on Doyle.  There were signs - temporary ones --  saying no parking from 7 AM to 5 AM all week?  So I took the pictures.  I thought, "Are you serious?  This is Mt. Hope, there are a lot of Cianci supporters here.  I was at MLK all day, and it was extremely slow." 

Kathy Placencia with the Board of Canvassers spoke with GoLocal Tuesday afternoon.  "It was road work with the city, they were finishing paving the roads," said Placencia.  I heard that it's all over now."

A no-parking sign on Camp Street in front of entrance of MLK.
"It's voter suppression, that's what it looks like," said Cianci campaign manager Cyd McKenna.  "The poorest neighborhod on the East Sode all of a sudden has their roads repaired on Election Day?  And when their councilman is running against a "reform candidate"?  You can hardly even walk there with the road work."

McKenna said that had to speak with Cianci to see if the campaign would pursue a formal complaint.  


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