Jackson County officials say the N.C. State Auditor's office influenced the choice of Cullowhee's early voting site for the 2026 general election, despite local support for the county Health and Human Services building.
Four of five election board members had concluded Parks and Recreation lacked space for November turnout, while BOE staff and Western Carolina University backed HHS as the only government-owned site meeting logistical and voter-volume needs.
About 7,000 voters are expected to use the Cullowhee site, and critics say Parks and Rec already faces heavier traffic after a new pool opened without added parking, forcing voting into three small rooms and a gym reconfiguration for Election Day.
HHS was described as a larger, secure, windowless site with reserved parking and a large lobby, and the letter argued Raleigh should not override county election workers and taxpayers who fully fund local elections.