Saturday, May 16, 2026

In short, Topeka's municipal turnout reflects a classic American local-election problem: structurally low participation that rewards presence and name recognition over bold change.

Topeka's municipal election turnout is consistently low, typical of off-year local races in mid-sized U.S. cities, but it improves noticeably when a contested mayoral race is on the ballot.

Recent Turnout Data (City of Topeka / Shawnee County)

  • 2025 General Election (Nov. 4): Approximately 22.3% turnout. Roughly 17,000+ ballots cast out of ~76,379 registered voters in the relevant areas. This was described as "above average" for a municipal cycle and higher than recent non-mayoral years. The mayoral race (Spencer Duncan vs. Henry McClure) drove interest, with Duncan winning ~75% (12,723 votes).
  • 2025 Primary (Aug. 5): Much lower, around 9.74%.
  • 2021 General (mayoral race): 20.25%.
  • 2017 General (mayoral): 19.4%.
  • 2013 General (mayoral, pre-November shift): 14.1%.

District-level examples from 2025:

  • District 3 (Sylvia Ortiz vs. Daisy Karimi): Only ~846 votes total (482–364).
  • District 1: ~1,345 votes.
  • District 7 (very close race): ~2,850 votes.

Historical Context and Trends

Kansas moved municipal elections to November (odd years) starting around 2015–2017 to boost turnout by aligning with higher-visibility cycles. It helped somewhat — turnout in mayoral years now hovers in the high teens to low 20s — but remains far below even-year state/federal races (Kansas presidential turnout was ~63% in 2024).

Key drivers of low turnout:

  • Nonpartisan, low-visibility races: City council seats often see minimal campaigning and media coverage.
  • Small district sizes: Individual council races can have under 1,000 votes total.
  • Incumbency and familiarity: Long-serving members like Ortiz benefit from loyal bases in low-turnout environments.
  • Competing priorities: Voters prioritize national/federal elections; local ones feel distant or pre-determined.

When turnout rises:

  • Contested mayoral races (as in 2025, 2021, 2017) add energy and media attention.
  • Hot local issues (e.g., bonds, school board races on the same ballot).
  • Early voting and weather (2025 saw strong early voting + pleasant Election Day).

Broader Comparison

  • National municipal average: Often 15–25% in off-year local races; Topeka sits in the middle-to-lower end for cities its size (~125k–130k population).
  • Implications: Low turnout favors incumbents, organized neighborhoods, and motivated bases. It reduces accountability pressure and can perpetuate long tenures despite stagnant conditions in certain districts. Efforts like the 2025 "TopCity25" voter challenge aimed to address this but yielded only modest gains.

In short, Topeka's municipal turnout reflects a classic American local-election problem: structurally low participation that rewards presence and name recognition over bold change. Mayoral years provide a modest lift, but overall engagement remains limited. For exact precinct-level or certified final numbers, check the Shawnee County Election Office site.

Why do they keep sending her back - --- What have you done for me lately?

 Deep Dive: Sylvia Ortiz’s Own Words Running Down Conditions in District 3 (East Topeka)

Sylvia Ortiz has been remarkably consistent — and blunt — over her 21 years on the council about the ongoing problems in the district she represents. She repeatedly describes East Topeka/District 3 as historically neglected, with crumbling infrastructure, blight, incomplete basic services, and slow progress even under her own watch. These aren’t opponent attacks or outsider critiques; they’re her own public statements in interviews, voters’ guides, and campaign coverage from 2017 through 2025.

Here are her direct quotes and statements (pulled from CJOnline reporting):

On Infrastructure & Streets (Her Most Repeated Theme)

  • 2017 (voters’ guide, on pavement conditions and funding equity): She called certain East Topeka streets “very bad and dumpy” (specifically S.E. 6th and Golden) and noted S.E. Doane was “still a dirt street.” She asked publicly: “When will East Topeka streets get fixed?” while contrasting them with repeated repairs on west-side roads like Wanamaker.
  • 2017: “East Topeka has been neglected for decades… We are slowly moving forward but have a long way to go.” (On the need for fair-share funding for streets, gutters, sidewalks, and other infrastructure.)
  • 2021 (re-election interview): “There is so much work that needs to be done… Because we were neglected for decades, it’s going to take decades to get caught up.” She specifically hoped to finish S.E. 5th Street from California to Market and said she wanted “all streets in her district fixed.”

She has served on the Public Infrastructure Committee for years and routinely pushes Capital Improvement Program amendments, yet she keeps using language that frames the district as still behind.

On Sidewalks, Blight & Overall Condition

  • She has acknowledged “cracks in the sidewalks” and “narrow streets” as core challenges residents face (from her pre-council NIA days, but repeated as context for why she ran and what still needs work).
  • Blight and abandoned structures remain a recurring “priority.” In multiple cycles she has pushed for more action on boarded-up houses and small-business attraction, implying the problem persists.

On Youth, Safety & Quality of Life

  • 2017 (after a juvenile fight at a National Night Out event in Betty Phillips Park): Called it a “terrible scene” and said the city needs greater investment in kids to keep them engaged.

On Ignoring Voters or Constituent Frustration

Public news coverage does not show widespread, on-the-record accusations that she personally “ignores” individual voters — she has a reputation for hands-on constituent service (accompanying residents to meetings, handling zoning issues, etc.). However:

  • Her own repeated admissions that the district is “neglected,” “has a long way to go,” and will “take decades to catch up” (even after 12–16 years in office at the time of those quotes) open the door to the critique that the problems she highlights haven’t been solved under her long tenure.
  • The credible 2025 challenge from Daisy Karimi (who took 43%) reflected some voter frustration with slow visible change, even if Ortiz still won. Social-media chatter and challenger comments often echo the “same representation for 20+ years, same complaints” theme.
  • She entered office in 2005 precisely because she felt the previous District 3 rep was ignoring the neighborhood. After two decades of her voice at the table, she is still publicly describing many of the same core issues.

Bottom line from her own record: Sylvia Ortiz has never shied away from naming the problems in East Topeka — dumpy streets, dirt roads, neglected infrastructure, blight, and the need for equity with the west side. She frames them as decades-old issues that require decades more to fix. Critics (and your sarcastic angle) can fairly point out that she has been the longest-serving voice for the district during many of those “decades.”



District 3 got the perfect attendance trophy… a splash pad… clean celebrity jockstraps… another empty lot where development almost happened… and a councilwoman who keeps loudly describing the exact same problems she was elected to solve.

 Sylvia Ortiz: 21 Years of Showing Up… One Spray Park… Harlem Globetrotters’ Jockstraps… Killing Maverick… and Still Complaining About the Same “Dumpy” Streets

In local government, they say showing up is half the battle.

Sylvia Ortiz has perfected that half.

For the other half — you know, actually fixing the problems she keeps pointing out in East Topeka — the neighborhood is still waiting after twenty-one years.

Since 2005, she’s been the longest-serving member of the Topeka City Council in modern history. Plaques for perfect attendance? Check. Re-elections? Mostly locked in. Committee meetings on the Public Infrastructure Committee? Countless.

Her official bio’s proudest legacy: “Sylvia is very proud of being a major stakeholder in creating the first spray park in Samuel Jackson Park.”

One splash pad from 2011. Kids get misted. Mission accomplished.

But the accomplishments don’t stop there.

In 2023, when the Harlem Globetrotters couldn’t get their dirty uniforms, towels, and jockstraps washed, Councilwoman Ortiz personally loaded it all up and hauled it to the laundromat. True small-town hospitality — fresh drawers for the celebrities.

In 2025, she added another notch: helping kill the Maverik development deal on the old Ramada/Holidome site. A private project ready to clean up blight, bring jobs, and generate tax revenue — approved by the Planning Commission twice — got voted down 9-1 after her emotional testimony about “kids walking to school” in a district she doesn’t even represent. The vacant lot stays vacant. The weeds win.

And throughout it all, she’s been remarkably consistent about what’s wrong in her own District 3.

Her own words, over the years:

  • East Topeka streets are “very bad and dumpy.”
  • S.E. Doane is “still a dirt street.”
  • S.E. 5th from California to Market “needs to be done soon.”
  • East Topeka has been neglected for decades… we are slowly moving forward but have a long way to go.”
  • When will our residential streets get fixed like the west side’s?

She says these things in interviews, council meetings, and campaigns — in 2017, 2021, and right up through her 2025 re-election. Sidewalks? Still patchy. Blight and abandoned houses? Still a priority. Economic development and small businesses? Always on the wishlist. Youth and safety? Still needs more investment.

Twenty-one years. One spray park. Globetrotters’ dirty laundry service. Torpedoing a jobs project in another district. And the same “dumpy,” unfinished, neglected streets she’s been complaining about since the day she took office.

She entered politics in 2005 because the previous District 3 representative ignored neighborhood concerns. Fair enough.

But after two decades of her representation, those same concerns are still front and center — in her own public statements. The potholes she called out in 2017 are still rattling cars in 2026. The dirt roads and incomplete sidewalks remain “priorities.” The district is still “neglected,” according to the woman who’s been in charge of voicing its needs longer than anyone else in modern Topeka history.

Half the battle is showing up. The other half is showing results.

District 3 got the perfect attendance trophy… a splash pad… clean celebrity jockstraps… another empty lot where development almost happened… and a councilwoman who keeps loudly describing the exact same problems she was elected to solve.

The potholes? Still undefeated. The vacant lots? Thriving. The complaints? Evergreen.

That’s leadership, Topeka style.



Sylvia Ortiz chose emotional grandstanding on a project in another council member’s district. Share this. Talk about it. Vote like your tax dollars actually matter — because they do.

Sylvia Ortiz’s Maverick Meltdown: Emotional Testimony from Across Town Kills a Deal in District 9

By Henry McClure

Topeka, let’s talk straight.

Every single year you and I hand over $5 million of our sales tax money to Go Topeka and JEDO so they can “attract business” and “create jobs.” Fancy consultants, glossy brochures, taxpayer-funded trips — the whole circus. The pitch is always the same: “We’re open for business!”

Then a real business actually shows up.

Maverik — a growing, no-handout-needed company — wanted to redevelop the long-vacant, weed-choked former Ramada/Holidome eyesore at 605 SW Fairlawn, right off I-70. Private money. 20–50 jobs. New property taxes on a lot that’s produced exactly zero for years. Fresh food, fuel, and a clean gateway for travelers and truckers.

The Topeka Planning Commission did its job. Reviewed the plans. Heard the neighbors. Approved it twice — once with the full truck stop, then a scaled-back car-only version. Data-driven. Reasonable.

On August 12, 2025, the City Council voted 9-1 to kill it anyway.

Only Councilman David Banks voted yes.

And leading the charge with highly emotional, tearful testimony about “kids walking to school” was Councilwoman Sylvia Ortiz — from District 3.

Here’s the part that should make every voter in Topeka do a double-take.

The Maverik site and Landon Middle School sit squarely in District 9 — Michelle Hoferer’s district. Sylvia Ortiz represents District 3, which is across town in central Topeka. She doesn’t live in the affected area. Her constituents don’t walk Fairlawn every day. Yet she became one of the loudest voices shutting down a major private investment in another council member’s district.

Meanwhile, Councilman David Banks (District 4) stood alone and voted yes — even though the site isn’t in his district. He showed real leadership and put the broader good of the city ahead of the loudest voices in the room.

Sylvia Ortiz, on the other hand, went along with the mob and voted no on a project that would have delivered jobs, tax revenue, and blight removal benefiting the entire city — including spillover benefits for neighboring districts like her own.

Now let’s talk about that “kids walking to school” argument, because it’s the emotional hook that won the day.

Sylvia and others pointed to children walking from up by the Governor’s Mansion, crossing Fairlawn near the I-70 bridge. Sounds scary. Sounds protective.

But here are the facts USD 501 (Topeka Public Schools) doesn’t want you thinking about:

  • Landon Middle School’s own attendance zone map includes the Governor’s Mansion / Cedar Crest area. Those kids are already assigned to Landon.
  • USD 501 policy is crystal clear: middle schoolers get free busing only if they live 1.75 miles or more from the school. Closer than that? They walk, bike, or get dropped off. Walking is the default.
  • The district expects students to walk up to a quarter-mile to bus stops. There is zero policy saying middle schoolers can’t walk near commercial development or across major roads.

In other words, hundreds of Landon students already navigate Fairlawn and that I-70 crossing every school day. The district designed the system that way. Adding a convenience store on a vacant lot next to an existing pedestrian route doesn’t create some brand-new danger — it just adds traffic to a corridor the school district already treats as safe enough for kids.

Meanwhile, the vacant lot sits there collecting weeds and zero taxes.

This is the same Topeka that brags about economic development while Kansas City’s suburbs roll out the red carpet for Buc-ee’s and Wally’s travel centers. Those cities say yes to private investment, mitigate real concerns, and reap the rewards. We pay $5 million a year to chase growth… then slam the door when it knocks.

David Banks showed courage and stood alone for progress.

Sylvia Ortiz chose emotional grandstanding on a project in another council member’s district.

The vacant lot is still empty.

The $5 million keeps flowing.

And the next time someone from Go Topeka or the City Council tells you they need more of your money to “attract business,” ask them one simple question:

“If you’re so good at attracting business… why did you spend all that time and energy killing the one that showed up ready to build?”

Share this. Talk about it. Vote like your tax dollars actually matter — because they do.

The punchline is on all of us until we demand better.



The vacant lot is still empty today. The $5 million economic development machine keeps spending. And voters get to decide if this is the kind of leadership they want.

9-1 Vote Breakdown: Topeka City Council Rejects Maverik Project (August 12, 2025)

The Topeka City Council voted 9-1 to reject the Planning Commission’s recommendation and kill the scaled-back Maverik convenience store/gas station proposal at 605 SW Fairlawn (former Ramada West/Holidome site).

  • The lone “yes” vote for the project (i.e., the only council member who voted against the motion to reject it): Councilman David Banks. He was the sole supporter of moving forward with even the car-only version.
  • The 9 “no” votes (against the project): Every other council member present.

Key named opposition:

  • Sylvia Ortiz (District 3) was the most vocal. She stated: “We’ve got a lot of kids walking down Fairlawn and walking across. I can’t support this because this is going to make more traffic for those kids, and that area is just so congested right there.” Her district includes the site and nearby Landon Middle School, making this a classic district-level concern.
  • Other council members (including Michelle Hoferer and others representing nearby or overlapping areas) aligned with neighborhood traffic and safety worries, even though the truck-stop elements (diesel pumps and scale) had already been removed.

What the vote actually meant: The Planning Commission had approved the project twice — first the full truck-friendly version, then the watered-down car-only convenience store after public pushback. The Council’s 9-1 vote overruled that expert recommendation entirely. No compromise. No conditions. The entire rezoning and site plan died.

Why this 9-1 split matters:

  • It perfectly illustrates the tension in Topeka’s process: the Planning Commission (data-driven, focused on zoning, traffic studies, and economic impact) said yes. The elected Council (responsive to vocal constituents in public hearings) said no.
  • Localized fears about one road and one school zone trumped citywide benefits (20–50 jobs, new tax revenue on a blighted lot that had produced $0 for years, blight removal on a prime I-70 gateway).
  • David Banks stood alone as the voice for broader economic development — exactly the kind of project Go Topeka is paid $5 million a year to attract.

This wasn’t a close or divided call. It was a lopsided rejection driven by neighborhood pressure, overriding professional staff and commission work. The pattern is clear: when special interests and district politics collide with private investment, the investment loses 9-1 in Topeka.