The Capital

Requested ballots on the way toMaryland voters

Elections board says state is on track to meet demand

- By Emily Opilo

Ballots for the November election began arriving Thursday in voters’ email inboxes, and another 800,000 printed ballots are expected to enter the mail stream beginning Saturday.

The timing of the deliveries, announced during aMaryland State Board of Elections meeting Thursday, means Maryland is on schedule to meet demand for mail-in ballots for theNov. 3 election.

State officials are encouragin­g voters to participat­e by mail as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact Maryland. Residents also have the option of Election Day voting at more than 300 centers across Maryland and early voting, startingOc­t. 26, at more than 80 locations.

Maryland has received just over 1million requests for mail-in ballots thus far. There are about 4 million registered voters in the state. Ultimately, state election officials expect half the voters who participat­e in the election to opt for a mail-in ballot. Requests must be received by local election boards by Oct. 20.

Just over 111,000 of those requests asked for ballots delivered electronic­ally (voters can look for a @marylandel­ections.us in the“From :” field ). Those voters will have to print their ballots before returning them via the Postal Service or placing them in drop boxes.

Installati­on of more than 280 drop boxes is also on schedule, state election officials reported Thursday. Drop boxes will begin to be placed throughout the stateMonda­y. By Wednesday, officials expect to have them open at all early voting locations.

More boxes will be installed in October as they arrive fromthe manufactur­er.

Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore, which will be used as an early voting center as well on Election Day, will have two ballot drop boxes.

This week, Maryland election officials opened a data processing center to assist local elections boards with receiving and processing requests for mail-in ballots. Local boards typically process such applicatio­ns, but they’ve been inundated with an unpreceden­ted number of requests. Before this year, the most absentee ballots Maryland sent outwas 233,000 in 2008.

The processing center, at the Motor Vehicle Administra­tion building in Glen

Burnie, has a staff of 25 and processed 5,000 ballotsWed­nesday, its first full day of operation, state officials reported.

Maryland’s mail-in ballots are being printed in Minnesota by Taylor Corp. Unlike the state’s June primary, when a different printer mailed the ballots from Minnesota, the general election ballots are being privately shipped to Maryland and then placed locally in the mail stream. Officials hope the change hastens their arrival.

During the lead-up to the primary, ballots for voters in Baltimore City and Montgomery County were delayed by a week, leaving some voters less than two weeks to fill them out. State election officials blamed the delay on the former ballot printing vendor, SeaChange. SeaChange is not printing any ballots for theNovembe­r election.

 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA ?? A Baltimore County voter uses a dropbox in a special election on April 28 at Martin’s West.
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA A Baltimore County voter uses a dropbox in a special election on April 28 at Martin’s West.

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