Allen Filing Opens for Mayor, City Council, AISD Board; Deadline Feb. 13
Filing opened Jan. 14 for Allen mayor, City Council Place 2 and two AISD board seats; candidates must file by 5 p.m. Feb. 13 to appear on the May 2 ballot.

The candidate filing period for Allen municipal and school board elections opened Jan. 14 and runs through 5 p.m. Feb. 13, giving prospective candidates a month to submit paperwork to appear on the May 2 ballot. Voters will choose a new mayor, a City Council member for Place 2 and two members of the Allen ISD board.
The mayoral contest is guaranteed to be an open race because Mayor Baine Brooks is completing his final term and is barred from seeking reelection under the city's term-limit ordinance. City Council Place 2 is currently held by Tommy Baril. Allen City Council members are elected citywide and serve three-year terms, meaning the winner will represent the entire city rather than a specific district.
On the school side, two Allen ISD board positions are on the ballot. Place 6 is held by Board President Polly Montgomery and Place 7 by Board Vice President Bill Parker. Control of school board seats influences local priorities on budgeting, campus planning and instructional policy at a time when many North Texas districts are navigating enrollment shifts and capital needs.
Candidates who wish to run must file by the 5 p.m. Feb. 13 deadline. Election resources and candidate filing forms are available on the City of Allen and Allen ISD websites. Those materials outline eligibility, required documentation and submission procedures. Candidates who meet the deadline will appear on the May 2 ballot.

Open municipal and school board seats have immediate local consequences. A new mayor will shape Allen's approach to growth, infrastructure investment and city services as Collin County continues to expand. City Council races decided citywide can shift the balance of policy on zoning, transportation and tax rates that affect homeowners and businesses across Allen. School board outcomes will affect classroom priorities, budget decisions and long-term planning for facilities and bonds.
For residents, the filing period is a practical reminder that local government is shaped at the neighborhood level. Prospective candidates and engaged voters should verify eligibility, review filing requirements and mark the calendar for the Feb. 13 deadline. After filing closes, the focus will shift to campaigns and voter information ahead of the May 2 election, when Allen residents will select their next leaders for city hall and the school district.
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