After only an hour and a half of counting votes, the Dickinson Community results are in: The Student Association executive board elections will continue on as planned.

The re-vote didn’t lead to any changes in the winners of the overall election or in the candidates scheduled for the runoff election, according to Karen Galan, vice chair of the Elections Committee.

“I’m really relieved that nothing changed and, more importantly, very excited to work with student groups and the executive board that’s coming in,” said Jared Kirschenbaum, the executive vice president-elect.

Only 191 students in Dickinson voted in yesterday’s election — 65 students fewer than in the original, campus-wide election held in late March.

Galan said the decrease could have come from students not knowing about the election, or simply from apathy.

The runoff election, which will feature presidential candidates Adam Amit and Jonathan LaSala as well as financial vice president candidates Matthew Allwood and Abid Hossain, will take place Wednesday, April 22 from 1:30 to 7:30 p.m. in community dining halls and the New University Union food court.

Four grievances that could have altered election results were ruled Wednesday in favor of the respective defendants cited in the complaints, according to Judicial Board Chair Jonathan Cogan. Any further grievances filed would be ruled on after spring break.

In response to the initial election, Shaun Hiller, a candidate for vice president for academic affairs, filed two grievances. The first was against the elections committee, committee chair Mary Leonardo and vice chair Karen Galan. According to Hiller, the ballot box was improperly handled during elections by non-elections committee member Randal Meyer.

Cogan said the board did not find in favor of the grievance because no statute was violated.

“We saw that there was no injustice that occurred,” Cogan said. “There was no foul play involved.”

Leonardo said Meyer never physically touched the ballot box, as the box containing the ballots was enclosed in a larger box while he handled it.

The second grievance was filed specifically against Leonardo, who Hiller alleged endorsed one of the e-board candidates by joining his Facebook group.

However, Cogan said the board found in favor of Leonardo because, as far as they could tell, she had attempted to join all of the candidates’ Facebook groups, and thus was not endorsing anyone.

Leonardo said she had joined to monitor messages sent out to group members because of past violations. Some of the other candidates didn’t want her in their groups, Leonardo said, or kicked her out.

“I had a feeling that was how it was going to go,” Hiller said of the result.

Leonardo added that she wasn’t happy there were so many grievances, but that the controversial nature of the election meant she was going to “have to expect this thing at this point.”

Elahd Bar-Shai, an Off-Campus College Assembly representative and member of the Elections Committee, filed a grievance against the SA Financial Council and Vice President for Finance Alice Liou. Bar-Shai said Financial Council violated the New York State Open Meetings Law when the group voted him out of a meeting.

Cogan said the judicial board found in favor of Liou and the Financial Council because they only removed one individual and did not go into executive session. However, Bar-Shai said he plans to appeal the decision after break.

The last grievance filed with the judicial board came from Assembly Rep. Rod Alzmann in regards to budget hearing motions.

An additional grievance, which was under the jurisdiction of the Elections Committee, was filed by Kirschenbaum against Joseph Bansgopaul, a candidate for the same position. Bansgopaul was banned from postering and quartersheeting, but can still get his name out through other means, Galan said.