COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. -- Twenty-four candidates are competing for six seats on Colorado Springs' City Council.
The last day to register to vote in the election is Monday, March 4.
The mail-ballot municipal election is April 2, and ballots will be mailed to voters between March 8 and 18.
This election is the first to choose City Council members from six districts instead of four.
Some districts have five candidates meaning someone could win there with as little as 21 percent of the vote.
Here's a brief rundown of the ballot, with links to the candidate's pages for more information, as well as links to new district maps for the upcoming year.
Vying for a chance to represent the city's northwest sector, District 1:
Julie Naye, conservative activist and former small business owner
Tim Leigh, current at-large councilman
Linda Mojer, Women's Chamber of Commerce Executive Director
Don Knight, an Air Force and defense industry retiree
and Joe Barrera, an education consultant.
Competing for District 2:
Incumbent Angela Dougan
Lt. Joel Miller of the Air National Guard
and Bill Murray Army veteran and former firefighter.
Several notable names running for District 3 representing the city's southwest and downtown...
Tom Gallagher, former City Council member and mayoral candidate
Jim Bensberg , a former El Paso County Commissioner
Keith King , a former state legislator
Brandy Williams, current at-large councilwoman
and Bob Kinsey an anti-fracking advocate.
Your options for District 4 which covers the city's southeast...
Gary Flakes, a consultant who served 12 years in prison in the deaths of two springs teens
Deborah Hendrix, Harrison School District 2 School Board Chair
Dennis R. Moore, former Air Force analyst
and Helen Collins, former member of Douglas Bruce's so-called "Reform Team".
Running for the new District 5 falling between I-25 and Powers and from Platte up to about Austin Bluffs...
Bernie Herpin , current district 4 councilman
Roger McCarville, a property tax opponent
Jill Gaebler, nonprofit administrator
and Al Loma, Board of Education Director in District 11
Finally in the new eastern District 6:
David H. Moore, U.S. Postal Service supervisor turned pastor
Adres G. Pico, defense industry manager
and Ed Bircham, a local business owner, also a member of douglas bruce's reform team.