San Francisco Chronicle

Dodge City scrambles to bus voters to sole polling site

- By John Hanna John Hanna is an Associated Press writer.

TOPEKA, Kan. — The Kansas county clerk who moved the only polling site for the historic Wild West town of Dodge City sought to reassure a federal judge that voters can take buses to get there and that people who show up in the wrong place will get help.

But Ford County Clerk Deborah Cox acknowledg­ed during a federal court hearing Thursday that she’s still uncertain about arrangemen­ts for moving people to the new facility outside the city limits if they show up at the old site in town instead.

The only polling site for the city’s now 13,000 registered voters for two decades was a civic center in a mostly white part of town. Cox decided to move the site to a new county Expo Center after learning that a constructi­on project was planned for late October at the civic center — though work had not started as of Thursday.

The American Civil Liberties Union asked U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree to order Cox to open both the old and new polling sites for Tuesday for Election Day. The ACLU argues that moving the only polling site makes it more difficult for the city’s mostly Hispanic population to vote.

The hearing ended with Crabtree questionin­g Cox and her attorneys about arrangemen­ts for voters who show up at the old polling site. They said the city has offered to take voters from their homes and jobs to the new polling place, and Cox said she reached out to the city again Thursday morning about moving voters between the old and new polling sites.

“They do have a limited number of buses, however,” she said.

Crabtree did not issue a ruling from the bench but said he would have a decision soon because, “I know what day Election Day is.”

The southwest Kansas city, located 160 miles west of Wichita, once was a destinatio­n for cattle drives where cowboys and gunslinger­s tangled. In recent decades, meatpackin­g plants have drawn to the town thousands of Hispanics, who now make up a majority of the 27,000 population.

Cox is a Republican who has served as the elected county clerk since 2016. She sent a notice to voters on Sept. 28 that she was moving the location for the upcoming election outside the city limits to the new Expo Center, which she acknowledg­ed in the mailing was inconvenie­nt. It is more than a mile from the nearest bus stop.

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