Two incumbents and two newcomers are running for two three-year terms on the board.
MEXICO – Seven people are running for three seats on the Board of Selectmen, but no one has stepped forward for two open school board seats.
Two incumbents and two newcomers are vying for two three-year terms for selectman.
Monique Aniel, a retired physician, is seeking her first full term. She was elected last year to finish Robert Lyons’ term. Aniel is a former SAD 43 director who lives on Backkingdom Road.
Reggie Arsenault of Meadow Street, a delivery truck driver, is running for a second term. He is also a member of the Mexico Planning Board.
Challenging them are newcomers Donald Hodsdon, an oil truck driver who resides on Mexico Avenue, and Marjorie Richards, a Highland Terrace resident who serves on the Citizens Advisory Board, and is retired from a day-care center.
Three residents are seeking to finish the two years left in the term by Louise Waterhouse, who died earlier in the year.
Edward Fontaine III of Penley Street is a plumber and small business owner. Richard Philbrick of Chase Avenue is a Boy Scout leader and Rumford public works employee. Wesley Raynor, of Whitman Street, is a real estate agent and member of the Citizens Advisory Board.
Longtime SAD 43 director Betty Barrett is seeking another three-year term, and Peter Zanoni, a retired teacher and resident of Gleason Street, is running for a second term.
No one has taken out nomination papers for the SAD 43 seats of Jarrod Dumas and Amy Bernard, who resigned. Two years remain in both terms.
Town Clerk Penny Duguay said representatives could be elected through write-in, or through appointments by selectmen.
Mexico is entitled to four seats on the 13-member board.
Elections take place on June 8.
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