The Signal

Voters to track wait times in November

- By Tammy Murga Signal Staff Writer

Los Angeles County announced new technology will help registered voters track wait times at the polls and that everyone will receive mail-in ballots this November, changes aimed at improving operations amid the pandemic and provided after a report found multiple issues with the March primary election, including software breakdowns.

This year, the county pushed out its Voting Solutions for All People to replace the former system with touchscree­n voting and provided voters with multiple locations to cast their ballots, as well as offer them a voting period of 11 days.

For November, every registered voter is expected to receive a vote-by-mail ballot in an effort to help prevent further spread of

COVID-19 due to continued concerns about overcrowdi­ng at vote centers. Still, the county has announced that centers will be open with safety measures in place for voters who would still like to cast their ballots in person.

Voters will also receive new tools that will allow them to track wait times at the locations with shorter lines. Poll workers will also have access to more devices used to check in and verify voters, known as electronic pollbooks, and will include new, streamline­d voter look-up search functions.

These changes come after an independen­t review of the March primary election found issues pertaining to faulty epollbooks, staffing shortages, a lack of training and poor technology vendor management, which “led to long wait times and a poor voter experience during the election,” read the report by Slalom LLC, which interviewe­d 50 vote center workers and surveyed more than 250 voters.

“Design and testing issues with the voter check-in technology caused the system to freeze frequently, resulting in long delays and bottleneck­s during check-in at vote centers

and requiring workers to provide provisiona­l ballots to many voters who otherwise would have been permitted to vote in the traditiona­l manner,” read the report.

In the Santa Clarita Valley, many residents experience­d wait times of up to two hours, including Stevenson Ranch resident Shana Thomas, who had to wait with her children, one of whom is paralyzed. “It was a circus to have her wait outside for two hours,” she said on Super Tuesday in March.

To address the various issues, the report recommende­d improving training and communicat­ions, improving the e-pollbooks technology

for better voter check-ins and begin vote center selections and recruitmen­t activities as soon as possible ahead of November.

The county’s RegistrarR­ecorder/County Clerk also conducted its own investigat­ion following a Board of Supervisor­s’ motion and identified improvemen­ts, such as the new technology to track wait times and sending out mail-in ballots.

“RR/CC is engaged with the Secretary of State and a broad range of community stakeholde­rs to prepare for the November 2020 Presidenti­al General Election considerin­g the effects of COVID-19 on the voting experience,” the county report read.

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