The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Election panel rethinks poll at cop shop

At issue is a decision to move voting site to police academy.

- By Matt Bruce

Cobb County elections officials, amid pushback for moving a polling place used predominan­tly by Black voters to a police training facility, will reconsider the change.

In a 4-1 Monday vote, the Cobb County’s Board of Elections and Registrati­on decided to revisit a decision made less than two month earlier. The five-member panel will hold a public hearing Oct. 11 and hold another vote on whether to return the polling site to Cooper Middle School from the Cobb County Police Academy just a few blocks away.

“We’re tasked with making sure that elections are free, impartial and accurate,” elections board Chairwoman Tori Silas said. “And I just did not believe that any facility where you know that there will be a police presence provided that.”

The site switch is currently set for Jan. 1. It would not affect elections in November.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia was among those critical of the relocating the South Cobb polling site to a law enforcemen­t training facility, fearing that the police presence could intimidate Black voters in particular from casting ballots.

More than 58% of the 5,234 registered voters assigned to the Austell precinct are African American, Cobb County election records show. Silas said she was unaware of any other voting location in the county that’s at a law enforcemen­t-affiliated facility.

Local ACLU attorneys sent Cobb’s election board a letter Monday urging them to reverse course. Rahul Garabadu, an ALCU voting rights attorney, said the move could deter voters of color from “exercising their sacred right to vote.”

During Monday’s meeting, Garabadu said the move may violate federal voting laws because it could have an unintended consequenc­e of suppressin­g votes. He added that moving the polling place could be confusing for voters, who will be facing new restrictio­ns next year when Georgia’s statewide election reform laws go into effect.

“Why make things even more confusing for voters when we’re looking at an election cycle that will see so many changes to begin with?” he told the board.

The elections commission approved the move by a 3-2 vote during its July 19 meeting. The police training center is located at 2435 Eastwest Connector.

Board members Jessica Brooks, Steven Burning and Pat Garland favored the move during the initial vote. Silas and elections commission­er Jennifer Mosbacher voted against it.

Garland was unmoved by the recent criticism. He described the police academy as a “beautiful building” and said he didn’t believe voters would be intimidate­d by police on the premises.

“I don’t think people are scared to come in there,” he said. “I noticed the people there getting their driver’s licenses, they weren’t worried about all the police.”

Janine Eveler, Cobb’s elections director, said the county has tried to shift its polling locations away from schools in recent years because they pose security problems and have limited accessibil­ity. Cobb once had 63 polls inside schools, she said. Now there are just 29 such locations.

According to Eveler, the county has cut down on the school locations by shifting voting sites to churches and more government facilities like the police academy.

Silas said she’d received several letters, phone calls and emails from residents, state lawmakers and other members of the community who expressed concerns about changing the polling location. She said that compelled her to take the “unpreceden­ted” step of bringing the resolution back before the board to reconsider.

Brooks and Bruning both seemed poised to flip their votes from the July decision.

“If we hear people that have said they would be dealing with intimidati­on, I believe them,” Bruning said. “I have no reason to question their honesty. And I don’t believe we should approve any location as a precinct voting place that might result in somebody not voting.”

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