The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Elections

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nators and to provide more technologi­cal equipment and services.

Their proposal also suggests using existing county workers as temporary election staff to reduce costs.

But during a meeting last week between the Board of Commission­ers and elections board leaders, commission­ers expressed wariness that the proposed increase was not specific enough and said it didn’t include enough of the consultant­s’ suggestion­s.

The DeKalb Democrats also issued a call to action this week, urging supporters to contact officials and ask them to implement some of the recommenda­tions.

“I don’t think that this list is complete,” Commission­er Jeff Rader said during the recent meeting.

At the time, elections board chairman Sam Tillman said the county would run better “if everybody would stay in their lane.”

This is not the first time tensions between the County Commission and elections board have emerged.

The commission­ers, who allocate funding but have no direct oversight of the elections office, began pushing for an audit following a tumultuous 2018 election that included, among other things, some 4,700 absentee ballot applicatio­ns going missing.

After tense conversati­ons and some pushback, the elections board agreed in January of this year to cooperate instead with a review by outside consultant­s. After the review was conducted this spring, a final report was issued a week before last month’s primary election.

‘Too many moving parts’

The consultant­s suggested funding a new executive-level management team that would include a dedicated communicat­ions director, a full-time project manager to lead implementa­tion of the state’s new voting system, a stakeholde­r engagement leader and a chief operating officer.

The consultant­s wrote that elections supervisor Erica Hamilton “was significan­tly involved in many day-to-day tasks,” which they called noble. However, they wrote, “there are simply too many moving parts to ask [Hamilton] to be the sole operations taskmaster for the organizati­on while also managing policy and executive functions.”

That mirrored the complaints of several commission­ers, who suggested the department does not have enough high-level staff to handle the demands of the upcoming election cycle.

Tillman, the elections board chairman, said hiring a communicat­ions director and a project manager is already in the works. He admitted that Hamilton has a lot to handle — but said that’s not unique, especially now.

Georgia’s new statewide voting system, the coronaviru­s pandemic and previously unseen levels of absentee ballot requests make elections hard to orchestrat­e everywhere, Tillman said.

Much of the commission­ers’ frustratio­n, though, has focused on leadership.

“When you balance your entire operation on two people, then those two people are going to bear a great deal of responsibi­lity on things turning out well. And they haven’t,” Rader said during last week’s meeting.

The commission­er added that the elections board’s four other members are also not intimately involved in the budget process.

“That is the very first participat­ion that we have had,” elections board member Dele Lowman Smith said, referring to a budget subcommitt­ee that recently began meeting. “We have not seen budget documents . ... That has not been a part of the process up until now.”

Lowman Smith said she hopes to come to an agreement that gives the board members more agency.

Hamilton said last week that she is conducting an analysis of the June primary and considerin­g what can be improved for August and

November.

“This is not my first rodeo,” she said, adding that she has worked in elections for 15 years. “After every election I go back and look at issues.”

The consultant­s’ report recommende­d a dramatic overhaul of the vote-by-mail process as well, calling the elections office’s existing infrastruc­ture underwhelm­ing.

The county received just over 100,000 absentee ballots last month — a figure larger than advance and in-person election day voting combined.

Tillman said the plan is to acquire more ballot scanners and have more people working on the process.

The chairman said the board is also taking measures to ensure voting equipment is set up earlier than 7 a.m. on Election Day, and is exploring plans to obtain additional ballot scanners. They plan on training “twice as many” poll workers as they expect to need and will have technician­s on hand to address election day problems, Tillman said.

Still, he said, “it’s difficult for us to determine, even at this time, exactly what we’re going to need.”

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? With a nod to safety amid the pandemic, a poll worker wears gloves to hand out “I voted” stickers at the Cross Keys High School polling place.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM With a nod to safety amid the pandemic, a poll worker wears gloves to hand out “I voted” stickers at the Cross Keys High School polling place.
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