The Morning Call

Harrisburg’s delays have injected chaos into primary

- By Lamont McClure Lamont McClure is the Northampto­n County executive.

There is no such thing as a stress-free election. An enormous amount of work goes into preparing for a single day where failure is not an option, but the potential for it lurks around every corner.

This year is going to be especially challengin­g because of repeated delays including at the Pennsylvan­ia Department of State. The 2020 census led to a redrawing of political district lines, and lawsuits caused those boundaries to shift several times.

This resulted in the slowdown in candidates getting signatures on their petitions, which led to a delay in certifying the ballot, which caused a postponeme­nt in printing out the mail-in ballots.

When Act 77 passed in 2019, Pennsylvan­ia’s citizens got the option to vote by mail, up to 50 days before an election without providing an excuse. The point of this legislatio­n was to increase turnout — the more citizens participat­e in the process, the stronger our democracy becomes.

The pandemic made voting by mail an attractive option for many of our citizens. Already, over 20,000 people have put in a request to vote by mail in the May 17th primary.

Overall, the option of no-excuse mail-in ballots has been a positive one but it does come with challenges. Since 2020, Pennsylvan­ia counties have run two elections on the same day — one at the polls and one scanning mail-in ballots.

For the General Election in 2020, Northampto­n County recruited nearly 1,500 people to work and required an additional $1 million to cover the costs. Two elections means two sets of volunteers/staff and two different operations for our already busy Office of Election’s staff to manage.

Despite repeated requests from county registrars, the state Legislatur­e refused to expand the time allowed to count the paper ballots. We can only begin opening the envelopes on Election Day at 7 a.m. If we had seven days to precanvass the mail-in ballots, it would make our job much easier.

Harrisburg’s delays in certifying the ballot this year has injected chaos into a system already struggling to avoid pitfalls.

Ideally, voters should be able to get their mail-in ballots up to 50 days before the election.

This year, due to delayed certificat­ion, we weren’t able to start mailing ballots out until April 22 — only 27 days before the primary.

Northampto­n County is committed to making sure the election on May 17th will be held as scheduled with all 154 polling places fully staffed. For those who’ve chosen to vote via a mail-in or absentee ballot, it must be turned in by 8 p.m. on election night to be counted.

Absentee and mail-in ballots can be brought directly to the Northampto­n County Courthouse at 669 Washington St. in Easton or put into one of our four secure ballot drop-off boxes at the Courthouse Rotunda, the EMS/911 Center, the DHS building or City Hall in Bethlehem.

Postmarks will not count in this election so, for those who decide to mail their ballot in, make sure you allow at least seven days for delivery.

Voters do not have to go through security to deposit their ballot in a secure ballot drop-off box, but please remember to only drop off your own ballot.

Third-party return of ballots is prohibited unless the person returning the ballot is rendering assistance to a disabled voter or an emergency absentee voter with a signed certificat­ion of designated agent on file at the Elections Office. That form can be downloaded at vote.pa.gov.

Pennsylvan­ia’s primary is closed so only registered Republican­s and Democrats can vote for candidates in their respective parties.

But East Allen Township has a referendum question on its ballot, and any registered voter can vote on that.

The responsibi­lity of running elections has always fallen on the shoulders of county government and it is a heavy responsibi­lity. Voting is the cornerston­e of our democracy. For our citizens to have confidence in the process we must give our registrars, their staff and our volunteers the tools and the time they need to do their work.

Our Elections Office had to scramble this year due to shifting deadlines and delays in Harrisburg. Northampto­n County is dedicated to providing a fair, legal and accurate election, but we need the Pennsylvan­ia Department of State and the legislatur­e to work with us, not to make our job more difficult by shifting the goalposts and engaging in never-ending political gamesmansh­ip.

Ideally, voters should be able to get their mail-in ballots up to 50 days before the election. This year, due to delayed certificat­ion, we weren’t able to start mailing ballots out until April 22 — only 27 days before the primary.

 ?? MONICA CABRERA/MORNING CALL ?? Voters drop off ballots at the Northampto­n County Courthouse in Easton for the July 2020 primary.
MONICA CABRERA/MORNING CALL Voters drop off ballots at the Northampto­n County Courthouse in Easton for the July 2020 primary.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States