Register & Vote

Learn how to register, find your polling place, and make your voice count locally.

A polished oak city council dais in a modern council chamber, with neatly arranged nameplates labeled by district number, a slim silver microphone at each seat, and a large digital screen in the background displaying a simple District 3 map and the words “Neighborhood News & Policy Updates.” The chamber features clean architectural lines, light gray acoustic panels, and a California city seal mounted on the wall. Soft, even overhead lighting creates a professional, neutral atmosphere with gentle reflections on the wood surface. Photographic realism, shot at eye level with a slight wide-angle view, keeping the dais in sharp focus while the public seating blurs into the background, conveying transparency, order, and civic readiness without any people present.
A detailed project-planning workspace on a large, smooth white conference table inside a city office, featuring a folded District 3 zoning map, rolled-up blueprints, a slim silver laptop showing a city dashboard, and color-coded sticky notes aligned in tidy rows. A small potted plant in a concrete planter adds a touch of green beside a stainless-steel water bottle. Soft daylight filters through large unseen windows, creating gentle, directional light and subtle shadows across the documents. Photographic realism, shot from a slightly elevated angle, with the map and blueprints in crisp focus and the office background softly blurred. The atmosphere is professional, organized, and policy-focused, emphasizing careful planning and transparency in council projects.

Local Decisions, District 3 Futures

Every vote in a local election helps decide who speaks for District 3 on issues like housing, safety, and climate, shaping city budgets, new projects, and policies that touch your block, school, and workplace.

Resources

Follow these steps to register, update your address, or check your status, then use our links to official county and state tools for safe, secure, and accessible voting.

A clean bulletin board dedicated to District 3 community updates, mounted on a smooth concrete wall in a city hallway. The board is filled with neatly pinned flyers for neighborhood meetings, city infrastructure projects, park improvements, and local events, each in organized rows with consistent typography and city logos. Colored pushpins add subtle vibrancy against the neutral cork texture. Overhead fluorescent lights cast soft, even illumination, creating clear legibility and minimal shadows. Photographic realism, captured straight-on with a balanced, symmetrical composition and sharp focus throughout. The atmosphere feels organized, informative, and accessible, emphasizing structured communication from a city council office with no human subjects visible.