The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Elections board told to get proactive

Residents note primary, runoff , integrity concerns.

- By Tia Mitchell tia.mitchell@ajc.com

DeKalb County’s Board of Registrati­on and Elections got an earful from residents with complaints about problems during May’s primary and last month’s runoff, as well as those with concerns about whether enough is being done to ensure the integrity of upcoming votes.

Residents came to the board’s regularly scheduled monthly meeting to question why some people received the wrong ballot in a state House race, why only one site was open for early voting, and why the county isn’t more actively pursuing ways to guard against tampering in upcoming elections.

Some voters who live in Rep. Scott Holcomb’s north DeKalb district received bal- lots listing a different House race during the May primary. The error wasn’t caught until after votes had been cast.

Holcomb said that about 700 voters lived in the area where the mix-up occurred, though the county said the issue ultimately affected just 122 people. Neither the county nor the state elections office have taken responsibi­lity for the blunder, Holcomb said.

However, the Voter Registrati­on and Elections office said it has begun “working to place the voters in the correct district in time for the November election. The staff also is implementi­ng additional checks and balances to be used in future redistrict­ing.”

Regarding early in-person voting sites, the county has not said how many will open ahead of the November general election. There were 10 sites prior to the May primary, but just one — at the main elections office on Memorial Drive — for the July runoff.

That was the reason for many residents’ complaints to the election board. Holcomb said he decided to voice concerns particular­ly because the county did not provide any early voting sites within the 6th Congressio­nal District where there was a competitiv­e Democratic runoff.

think that we should have voting locations that are responsive to the elec- tions that are taking place,” he said.

The Board of Elections said that, usually, it has offered one early in-person voting site during runoffs. Turnout is historical­ly low in these elections; only 9.4 percent of DeKalb voters cast ballots.

The county said that it did provide Saturday voting ahead of the runoff although it wasn’t required by law. However, some residents called for more sites and lon- ger hours to increase access.

Board members said some of the issues raised by resi- dents who attended the July 30 meeting are outside of their control.

“There are decisions we cannot make at this level,” Samuel Tillman, a Demo- cratic-member of the election board, told the crowd. “It must be made at the state level.”

That includes discussion about replacing the state’s electronic voting machines with a system that allows everyone to receive a paper ballot. The Secure, Accessible & Fair Elections Commission, working through the Secre- tary of State’s office, is review- ing options and is expected to make a recommenda­tion to the General Assembly by the 2019 session.

Nancy Larson, who lives in Avondale Estates, has been working for years on issues around voter access and elec- tion integrity. She said the DeKalb Board of Elections could choose to lead the pack.

d like to see them step up and use the power that they have to help implement change rather than just waiting on the Secretary of State’s office or the state election board,” she said.

 ?? KENT D. JOHNSON / FILE ?? DeKalb County voters go to the polls in Stone Mountain in 2016. The county election board got an earful from residents about problems during May’s primary, last month’s runoff and voting integrity.
KENT D. JOHNSON / FILE DeKalb County voters go to the polls in Stone Mountain in 2016. The county election board got an earful from residents about problems during May’s primary, last month’s runoff and voting integrity.
 ??  ?? The Brookhaven City Council took out a legal ad for a public hearing on a proposed moratorium for developmen­t along Buford Highway.
The Brookhaven City Council took out a legal ad for a public hearing on a proposed moratorium for developmen­t along Buford Highway.

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