While all of St. Paul's City Council incumbents easily won re-election Tuesday, a tight race to fill the open Second Ward seat is headed to the county elections bureau Monday for final resolution.
The results mean that the seven-member council will have no more than two new members to fill open seats when it takes office in 2016, which some will read as a mark of satisfaction with the city's performance and others as a disappointing failure by citizens to clean house after recent controversies over policies and accountability.
Incumbents Dai Thao, Dan Bostrom and Russ Stark — of the First, Sixth and Fourth wards, respectively — rolled up landslide margins against their challengers, while Fifth Ward incumbent Amy Brendmoen won a solid victory over her main opponent, David Glass, a businessman who won an $800,000 settlement from the city in a contract dispute for which he partly blamed her.
Chris Tolbert, the Third Ward incumbent, and Seventh Ward candidate Jane Prince had no opponents on the ballot and captured upward of 90 percent of the vote in their respective districts.
The only close race was in the Second Ward, where nonprofit official Rebecca Noecker wound up 3 percentage points in front of Ramsey County Board aide Darren Tobolt. Because neither could claim more than 50 percent of first-place votes cast, a runoff will be held Monday under the rules of St. Paul's ranked-choice voting system.
Tobolt said Tuesday night that he wasn't surprised the race was so tight.
"The last time this seat was open it was decided by 80 votes, so we completely expected to go to Monday," he said. "We'll see what happens next."
Under ranked-choice voting, the candidates receiving the fewest votes are dropped and their second-place votes are reallocated to the remaining candidates.