 West Virginians are heading to the polls Tuesday while Kentuckians make the trip May 17th. During the 2016 primary election, one contest catching a lot of attention is the presidential race. Presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump both made campaign stops in Kentucky and West Virginia. However, Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton stopped in Williamson, West Virginia last Monday to tour the Williamson Health and Wellness Center and sit in on a roundtable discussion. Out-of-work coal miner Bo Copley of Del Barton attended the roundtable meeting with Clinton while also getting to sit with local miners during Donald Trump's visit to Charleston, West Virginia. Copley says registered voters need to do their homework and show up to the polls election day. Every vote matters and every vote counts. Every person should find out about each, especially the presidential races. You should do background checks on every nominee, not just Republican, not just Democrat. There's people that may be better qualified than the one that just your party is for. According to the United States elections project, in the 2012 general election only 55% of registered voters in Kentucky and 46% in West Virginia actually voted. Copley feels if more people would have voted, our area would be in better shape. There are people that are hurting in this area right now and we don't want to wait on that person and their policies. We want someone that can bring some change now. I mean that's current administrations locally as well. I know they can't do a lot in that amount of time, but had we voted those kind of people in previous elections then maybe we wouldn't be waiting. What do you have? What can you bring to us? We may already have something in place. Registered voters can cast their ballot until 7.30 Tuesday evening. Reporting in Williamson for EKB News, I'm Shelby Steele.