Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mystery clouds county’s voting changes

Republican­s link additional options to Democrats’ lawsuit

- By Rory Appleton Las Vegas Review-journal

Clark County will offer more voting options in the June 9 primary election as part of sweeping changes revealed Tuesday, but how and when those decisions were made remained a mystery.

Most members of the

Clark County Commission and several county staff members did not respond Wednesday to requests for comment on the changes. Two commission­ers applauded the new measures but said they either could not share or did not know how the changes were made.

Meanwhile, Republican­s feel the changes were the result of either pressure from or a deal with the Democrats and are threatenin­g a new lawsuit of their own to block them.

This week’s news came after Clark County Counsel Mary-anne Miller submitted a court document Monday in which she said that the registrar of voters, Joseph

Gloria, “at the direction of local county officials” was setting up two additional in-person voting sites in the county.

The filing said the additional sites “were thought not to be needed because of the ease and safety of voting by mail and because of the extremely low turnout for primary elections in Clark

County in the recent past.”

The county will now offer three in-person voting sites, mail ballots to every registered voter instead of just active voters and allow a bipartisan group of deputized “field registrars” to collect sealed ballots from voters as part of its announced changes.

According to the court filing, the changes will cost the county at least $323,000.

The new policies come as the state and county election officials face a lawsuit from the Nevada State Democratic Party, the Democratic National Committee and other related groups. Many of the Democrats’ demands were met by Clark County, but the groups are seeking statewide changes for both the primary and general election.

The state Democrats declared a victory Tuesday, saying the changes in Clark County will expand voter access. The election officials have maintained they are not trying to curb access but rather lower risk of COVID-19 exposure for voters and staff.

Commission­ers in favor of changes

Commission­er Tick Segerblom said he could not speak for the commission as a whole or about how the decision to amend the county’s election plan was reached, but he expressed his support for the changes.

“Having only one voting center was unacceptab­le,” he said. “This is a huge county, and we need to do anything we can do to make it easier for people to vote.”

Segerblom said he also agreed with mailing ballots to all registered voters, not just active ones.

“It’s not right that a government official would decide to not send ballots to some people because it was decided those people aren’t likely to vote,” he said.

Voting is a fundamenta­l right, he added, and the increased costs are worth protecting that right.

Commission­er Lawrence Weekly said he expressed his concerns with the county’s previous election plan to County Manager Yolanda King after learning of the specifics through news reports. He was not sure how the changes were eventually made.

He said Gloria had expressed staffing and other concerns to the commission during previous meetings, but Weekly did not know the county’s plan included only one in-person voting center, which he would have opposed.

Weekly is also in favor of the new requiremen­ts, noting that elderly or disabled voters might not be able to even walk to their mailboxes to submit their ballots. He said the new options allow those concerned about the coronaviru­s to vote safely from home, while increasing access for others.

Multiple attempts to reach Commission­ers Michael Naft, Larry Brown, Marilyn Kirkpatric­k, Jim Gibson and Justin Jones were not successful, as were attempts to reach Miller, the county counsel, and county spokesmen Erik Pappa and Dan Kulin.

Republican­s respond

Republican National Committee Chief of Staff Richard Walters said that the commission reached a “back alley deal” with the Democratic groups pushing the lawsuit. The RNC has intervened in the lawsuit to oppose the Democrats.

“If Gloria doesn’t want to do it and says it’s a waste of taxpayer money, then why are you doing it?” Walters said. “This only benefits the Democrats. … it’s a swipe at election integrity.”

Contact Rory Appleton at rappleton@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0276. Follow @Rorydoesph­onics on Twitter.

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