Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fixes for absentee ballots promised

System had numerous breakdowns in April

- Daphne Chen Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

Election officials vow major changes to the state’s absentee voting system after ballots failed to reach thousands of citizens in Wisconsin’s spring election, throwing an already chaotic vote into further disarray amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The fixes “will save so much work for the clerk and hopefully save work for the voters,” Wisconsin Elections Commission spokespers­on Reid Magney said.

The changes follow an investigat­ion by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, the PBS series FRONTLINE and Columbia Journalism Investigat­ions that revealed numerous breakdowns in the state’s absentee ballot system, including inadequate computer systems and misleading ballot informatio­n.

The investigat­ion found that voters may have been misled by the state-run election website MyVote, where they could track the progress of their ballot, including the date their ballot was “sent.” That date actually reflects the date the mailing label was generated, the investigat­ion found, not the date a

ballot was mailed.

Milwaukee election officials said it often took another three to seven days to assemble and mail the ballot due to severe backlogs, leaving many voters unaware that their ballots were delayed. At the time, the officials called the inaccuraci­es an “improvemen­t opportunit­y.”

On Thursday, Magney said the commission will implement a new tracking system with the U.S. Postal Service to eliminate that issue and other mailing problems.

The new system will consist of a unique barcode on each envelope that identifies it as election mail. The envelopes will be scanned at each postal facility, allowing voters to track exactly where their ballot is in the mail system.

In addition, barcode tracking will enable officials to monitor whether ballots are sent to the wrong place, such as when three tubs of absentee ballots intended for Appleton and Oshkosh were discovered in a mail processing center the day after the election.

The new system “is definitely going to happen,” said Magney. “That’s something we are definitely putting in place.”

A report released by the commission May 15 concluded that a record-breaking number of ballot requests, mailing issues and technical glitches caused thousands of ballots to go missing, although it called the absentee voting process as a whole an “overwhelmi­ng success.”

Of the absentee ballots delivered to voters, about 1 in 11 were never returned to clerks, a figure consistent with previous elections, according to the report.

So far, Wisconsin has been the only state to conduct a statewide election while residents were under a stay-athome order due to the pandemic.

Roughly 1.2 million voters cast an absentee ballot in the April 7 election, representi­ng about two-thirds of all ballots cast. Previous elections saw only 4% to 9% of ballots cast absentee by mail.

‘Not a success for voters’

Shauntay Nelson, the Wisconsin state director of All Voting is Local, an advocacy group that works to reduce barriers to voting, called the spring election a “debacle.”

“I don’t consider the absentee ballot request process a success,” Nelson said. “I know that it was not a success for voters, and because it wasn’t a success for voters, it was not a success.”

Nelson said she supports the addition of barcode tracking features so voters can make alternativ­e plans if their ballot looks like it will be late. She also called on election officials and lawmakers to make further changes, such as mailing absentee ballot applicatio­ns to all registered voters.

Lawmakers and election officials are currently debating that proposal, which is also the subject of a sweeping federal lawsuit filed Monday.

“No one was prepared to hold an election during a pandemic,” Nelson said. “The beauty of it is that we can make some changes coming into November.”

The elections commission is making a host of other changes to the state’s labor-intensive and largely manual absentee ballot request process.

For one, Magney said ballot applicatio­ns will be changed to collect contact informatio­n for the voter, such as their email address or phone number.

At the time of the April 7 election, the applicatio­n only asked for voters’ addresses, meaning that clerks were not able to easily contact voters to inform them about problems with their request. As a result, some people did not know that their absentee ballot applicatio­ns were pending or rejected.

“The clerk can certainly write back to the person or try to look them up in the phone book, but if they can’t find them, they just have to send them a letter,” Magney said.

In addition, the state will move away from tracking absentee ballot applicatio­ns via email.

Currently, each applicatio­n submitted through MyVote is converted into an email. Municipal clerks are in charge of opening each email, verifying the attached photo ID, manually entering the applicatio­n informatio­n into the voter registrati­on database and printing the mailing labels.

The process hindered clerks who had to individual­ly open thousands of emails and attached photos, some of which were so large that they bogged down the entire system.

Madison City Clerk Maribel WitzelBehl told reporters in April that the system only began working quickly after 10 p.m. She said staffers worked 110-hour weeks in an attempt to reduce the backlog.

“You reach a point of working so many hours, your eyes glaze over and you risk making an error,” she said.

Simplifyin­g the system

Magney said programmer­s are now building a way for clerks to view ballot applicatio­ns, verify photo IDs and approve requests within the MyVote system itself.

“One clerk described more than a dozen steps that they needed to take under the current system,” Magney said. “And the idea is to simplify that to a couple of clicks.”

Election officials are under a tight deadline to get the changes in place for the partisan primary on Aug. 11 and the all-important general election on Nov. 3. Officials anticipate the presidenti­al election will see higher turnout and more demand for absentee ballots, even if the coronaviru­s pandemic begins to subside.

Changes will be tested with both clerks and voters to gather feedback before launching, Magney said.

“Our developmen­t staff is working very hard on this now, and we certainly want to get as much of this in place in time for the Aug. 11 partisan primary,” Magney said. “We’ll be able to get that deployed and then have time to see how it’s working and potentiall­y make adjustment­s to it.”

 ?? MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Stephanie Rushing, an election service coordinato­r with the City of Milwaukee Election Commission, counts ballots in April.
MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Stephanie Rushing, an election service coordinato­r with the City of Milwaukee Election Commission, counts ballots in April.

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