Las Vegas Review-Journal

220K primary ballots kicked back to county

Registrar: Office learned from that

- By Rory Appleton

More than 223,000 mailed ballots were returned to Clark County as undelivera­ble mail during the June primary, according to a report by the conservati­ve-leaning Public Interest Legal Foundation and confirmed by the Review-journal.

Because of COVID-19 concerns, officials opted for the first all-mail election in state history. Unlike other counties, Clark County mailed ballots to all voters, not just active ones, in part because of legal pressure from state and national Democrats.

Of the 1,325,934 ballots mailed out in Clark County,

223,469 were returned as undelivera­ble. About 305,000 were returned by voters, verified and counted by the county.

About 58 percent of the undelivera­ble ballots belonged to inactive voters, meaning those who have not confirmed their address with the county but remain registered. Inactive voters are removed from the rolls entirely if they miss two consecutiv­e federal elections.

Recent changes to the state’s election laws stipulate that only active voters will receive ballots in the Nov. 3 general election, so it’s likely that the number of undelivera­ble ballots would decrease under the current plan.

However, 93,585 undelivera­ble ballots belonged to voters classified as active in Clark County’s voter rolls.

Public Interest also audited the Clark County and Nevada state voter rolls and found that 2,358 people on the state’s active rolls are deceased. More than 2,200 of these came from Clark County. The foundation did not find any evidence of widespread misuse of these ballots.

Records cleanup needed

But communicat­ions and research director Logan Churchwell said the number of deceased people and undelivera­ble addresses on the active voter rolls shows a need for both the county and the state to clean up their records.

Other states in which voting by mail is common, such as Oregon and Utah, have had years to develop systems for doing this without much in-person interactio­n, he added. But Nevada must adjust on the fly as a state in which voters heavily prefer to vote in person.

“States are having to make this corrective swing, and the question is whether they have the manpower to do it,” Churchwell said.

For the primary, election staffers verified the signature on each ballot, and according to Nevada Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske, there were no confirmed cases of fraud. Still, Republican­s have warned of the cost of mailing hundreds of thousands of ballots and the possibilit­y of stray ballots being fraudulent­ly returned.

The state and national Republican

Party and President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign have sued Nevada in an attempt to block the state from mailing ballots to all active voters.

Trump also questioned whether the U.S. Postal Service could handle the volume of ballots in Nevada. However, a Washington Post report Friday stated that Nevada was one of only four states not warned by the post office about possible issues with mail-in balloting.

The president acknowledg­ed on Thursday that he’s starving the U.S. Postal Service of money to make it harder to process an expected surge of mail-in ballots. Without the additional money, he said, the Postal Service won’t have the resources to handle a flood of ballots from voters who are seeking to avoid polling places during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Dead removed from voter rolls

According to county records, 92,337 of the undelivera­ble ballots belonged to Democrats, 53,129 came from Republican­s and 78,003 were identified as nonpartisa­n or third party.

Clark County Registrar Joe Gloria confirmed the undelivera­ble ballot numbers but said he could not verify the number of dead registrant­s cited by Public Interest. He said the county frequently removes deceased people from its rolls when notified of their death by family members or

through the state.

Wayne Thorley, the state’s deputy secretary of state for elections, said Nevada updates its rolls daily with informatio­n from the state Office of Vital Records and every other month with reports from the Social Security Administra­tion’s Social Security Death Index.

The state is also one of 31 members of the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center, a nonprofit through which states share and compare voter data in an attempt to keep records up to date.

Neverthele­ss, Gloria said the county is working to update its active voter rolls and will continue to send out mailers confirming addresses.

As of Monday, the state has more than 1.16 million active voters and about 1.35 million total registered voters.

Gloria said his office learned valuable lessons during the primary and purchased additional equipment for processing mail-in ballots. And unlike during the primary, the county will open 35 in-person early voting sites and more than 100 traditiona­l Election Day polling places in November.

 ?? Hali Bernstein Saylor Boulder City Review file ?? The all-mail Nevada primary held in June resulted in the return of more than 230,000 ballots to Clark County as undelivera­ble.
Hali Bernstein Saylor Boulder City Review file The all-mail Nevada primary held in June resulted in the return of more than 230,000 ballots to Clark County as undelivera­ble.

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