Lincoln County election officials, clerk and recorder resign posts

Mar. 28—The Libby City Police Department is not the only government agency in disarray in Lincoln County.

With a handful of school board trustee elections right around the corner, the county's Elections Department has no one working in it and the clerk and recorder has also resigned.

According to County Human Resources Director Dallas Bowe, she has received letters of resignation from Clerk and Recorder Robin Benson and both employees in the Elections Office, including Administrator Paula Buff and her assistant, Amanda Eckart.

Bowe said the letters were confidential and she would not be releasing any information from them.

In a letter to media outlets on Friday, March 24, sharing a list of candidates for school board trustee candidates, Election Administrator Paula Buff also announced her resignation.

Buff took over the position a little more than two years ago following the resignation of Chris Nelson less than a week after the 2020 general election. According to a previous story in The Western News, Nelson didn't respond to requests for comment. Then-County Administrator Patrick McFadden said Nelson left the job for personal reasons.

Nelson only served in the position from August 2020 to November 2020. He was appointed following the resignation of previous election administrator Leigh Riggleman.

At the time, county officials gave no reason for Riggleman's resignation. She departed after county commissioners switched from her proposed all mail-in election, meant to avoid the spread of the coronavirus on Election Day, to a traditional poll election. After her resignation, commissioners changed course again, favoring a mail-in voting process.

Benson wore many hats for the county over the years, also serving as auditor and assessor surveyor. Benson first won the clerk and recorder post in 2014.

She won re-election for the Clerk and Recorder post in November with 100% of the votes, a total of 7,791. Her vote total was more than all but two of the 13 local races on the 2022 general election in November. Only Sheriff Darren Short and Coroner Steve Schnackenberg received more votes.

Two of those local races included county commissioner seats, which were claimed by Brent Teske and Jim Hammons.

The commissioners are unsure of how the May 2 elections will be conducted.

District 1 Commissioner Brent Teske said he hadn't seen the resignation letters and that it was too soon to know how the elections will be handled.

"Ultimately, we'll have to fill those positions, but that will run through Human Resources," Teske said. "I haven't seen the letters so I am not sure why they resigned."