Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Signature gatherers forced to take hiatus

Ballot proposals, candidates on hold

- HUNTER FIELD

Covid-19’s spread through the Natural State now casts doubts on some of what and who Arkansans will vote for in November.

The virus has stolen the primary canvassing period from independen­t candidates and ballot initiative groups who rely on public events and warmer weather in early spring to gather signatures of registered voters to gain access to the ballot.

Two groups circulatin­g petitions to put various constituti­onal amendments on November’s ballot formally suspended their efforts on

Thursday as they wait to see what the public health landscape looks like in a few weeks. Other groups and candidates have drasticall­y scaled back their efforts, focusing on signature gathering among family members and friends and mail.

In interviews this week, canvassing group leaders said they are concerned, but for the most part, remained hopeful that petitionin­g will be able to continue in time to gather enough signatures before the July 3 deadline to submit them to the office of Secretary of State John Thurston for validation.

Arkansas Voters First hopes to place a proposed constituti­onal amendment on the November ballot that would create a new commission that would be responsibl­e for legislativ­e and congressio­nal redistrict­ing every 10 years. The group won’t be gathering signatures until “the world returns to normal,” said spokesman George Shelton.

“Obviously, this is a completely unheard of circumstan­ce, so we’re working to adjust our strategy,” he said. “We’ll use the next few weeks to make sure our signature gathering operation is completely fine-tuned. Once everything is lifted, we want to hit the ground running.”

The start of spring, with its many festivals and large public gatherings, is the primary season for petition drives for initiative groups. However, because of the coronaviru­s, nearly all public gatherings have been canceled, and public-health guidance recommends avoiding close interactio­n with others, particular­ly strangers.

Groups proposing amendment to the Arkansas Constituti­on have until July 3 to collect at least 89,151 signatures of registered voters to qualify for the Nov. 3 ballot, according to the secretary of state’s office.

Petitions are circulatin­g for four constituti­onal amendments. Two would legalize marijuana for recreation­al use; one would revamp how Arkansas draws its state legislativ­e and congressio­nal district boundaries; and the other would authorize up to 15,000 coin-operated amusement machines.

INDEPENDEN­T CANDIDATES

Independen­t candidates also must circulate petitions. By May 1, independen­t candidates must submit signatures of at least 3% of the number of voters who participat­ed in the 2018 gubernator­ial election in the district for which they are running, but no more than 10,000 signatures. In the 2018 gubernator­ial election, 891,509 people voted; 3% would be 26,745 for a statewide office, but the maximum required is 10,000.

U.S. Senate candidate Dan Whitfield, an independen­t from Bella Vista, said this week that he had canceled all of his upcoming campaign events. Whitfield in an interview said that his campaign will instead focus on gathering signatures by mail.

Whitfield, who is trying to challenge U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said he had already gathered about 3,500 of the requisite 10,000 signatures. The virus, he said, has brought everything to halt.

“It’s going to make it a lot harder,” he said. “But we have the support we need. We’ll just have to double down our efforts to get people to mail in.”

Whitfield and several petitionin­g groups have asked the secretary of state’s office to offer time extensions or lower the threshold because of the extraordin­ary circumstan­ce.

But Kevin Niehaus, a spokesman for the office, said the office could offer no extensions because it must meet several statutory deadlines. The secretary of state must certify any ballot initiative­s to county election commission­s by Aug. 20, for instance, and counties, under federal law, must send out absentee ballots by Sept. 18.

“This is not something that the secretary of state’s office is exploring because we don’t have the authority to push back the signature submission date,” Niehaus said in an email. “We certainly agree that the covid-19 pandemic puts those gathering signatures for ballot initiative­s and independen­t candidates in a tough position however pushing back the submission deadline would make it impossible for the secretary of state’s office to meet our statutory

deadlines.”

Other states have explored ways to assist initiative groups. In neighborin­g Oklahoma, the secretary of state’s office on Wednesday paused the 90-day circulatio­n period for initiative petitions until the governor’s emergency declaratio­n there is lifted, at which time the 90-day period will resume and a new deadline calculated.

AMUSEMENT MACHINES

Jason Cline, a spokesman for Arcade Arkansas, said Thursday that the group was pausing its work to offer coin-operated amusement machines in Arkansas.

“We are, for the time being, suspending signature operations,” he said. “But we’re watching the situation closely.”

Cline said he didn’t want to speculate about how the disruption would ultimately affect the group’s chances of getting its proposal on the ballot in the fall.

For Arkansas Voters First, this is a make-or-break year since redistrict­ing will occur after this year’s U.S. census. The group’s proposal would delegate congressio­nal and state legislativ­e redistrict­ing to a nine-member commission.

Under the Arkansas Constituti­on, the Legislatur­e draws new lines for congressio­nal districts. The governor, secretary of state and attorney general work together to the draw the districts for the state House and Senate.

Arkansas Voters First has said its proposal would do away with “partisan gerrymande­ring.”

“Since gerrymande­ring happens once every 10 years, we don’t have the luxury of waiting until next year,” Shelton said. “That makes it critically important that we use our time wisely to ensure people have the right to choose their politician­s, not the other way around.”

MEDICAL MARIJUANA

Canvassing has slowed substantia­lly for pair of groups circulatin­g petitions for similar but different constituti­onal amendments that would legalize cannabis for recreation­al use.

Kevin Dorning, one of the leaders of Arkansas True Grass, the group behind the Arkansas Recreation­al Marijuana Amendment of 2019, said the group was doing a limited amount of canvassing, mostly through businesses that have agreed to offer the petition to patrons.

The group is looking for ways to distribute its petitions to its members for a widespread canvassing effort to try to make the ballot.

“With how driven we are, we will still make it in, but we have to work harder on it and we are,” Dorning said. “If we can’t get what we will need due to the virus, then that is just the way it is. We will try again. Safety comes first, period.”

Melissa Fults, the sponsor of the Adult Use Cannabis Amendment, said her group had stopped collecting signatures except for a few canvassers, who she said were encouraged to take every precaution to protect themselves and the public.

As long as canvassing can resume by early May, Fults said she expects to make the ballot. The problem, she said, will be if the social fallout from the virus carries into May.

“We’re concerned,” she said. “It’d be stupid to say we aren’t, but I think it’s doable.”

Fults’ husband, Gary Fults, also is circulatin­g petitions to run as an independen­t candidate for House District 27, which includes portions of Saline and Pulaski counties. He needs 298 signatures to qualify.

With convention­al petitionin­g methods out of the question, Fults said he’s likely to try to gather signatures through the mail.

“It’s going to take some outside-the-box thinking,” he said.

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