Washington County Enterprise-Leader

County Eyes Lincoln As Early Voting Site

- By Tom Sissom

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Washington County officials are looking to expand early voting opportunit­ies, and Lincoln is a likely site.

The Election Commission recently discussed having limited early voting in some locations for the March 3 party primary and nonpartisa­n judicial elections.

The “limited” early voting would open some election day polling places for the final day or two of the two-week early voting period starting Feb. 18.

Jennifer Price, election director, said having more early voting sites would be a convenienc­e for voters and could lessen demand for voting machines in some vote centers on election day, allowing machines to be shifted to centers with a higher demand.

The only cost to the commission would be paying four or five poll workers for the extra days.

A site in Lincoln is a likely choice because it would be more accessible for voters on the west side of the county.

Price said city and school officials she has spoken with endorsed the idea.

Mary Ann Spears, Lincoln Consolidat­ed School District superinten­dent and a member of the Kiwanis Club, said the proposal was well-received.

“It’s a great idea,” Spears said. “Everybody was very positive.”

“I have about 150 employees, and I know they would appreciate the opportunit­y to be able to vote early where they work,” she said. “We have teachers who drive from Fayettevil­le, Springdale and even Lowell. My assistant votes at the Cincinnati Fire Station on election day. If we work late or have an event at school, she may not be able to get home in time, or there may be long lines at the end of the day.”

Spears said Lincoln schools cover a wide area of the western part of the county, and she supports making voting easier for those residents.

“Our school district is about 150 square miles,” she said. “We have lots of folks who struggle to get home and then get out to vote.”

Bill Ackerman, one of the two Republican Party representa­tives on the commission, said voters who use the Lincoln vote center on election day are more likely to vote early if they can go to the same polling place.

“My experience has been that no voter likes to change their voting location,” he said.

Max Deitchler, Democratic Party representa­tive on the Election Commission, said he supports the idea.

“I like the consistenc­y of using early voting locations that are also open on election day,” he said.

Deitchler said increasing voters who use early voting makes election day voting easier, particular­ly in some of the busier centers in Fayettevil­le and Springdale.

Price said she has been looking for opportunit­ies for limited early voting matching the profile of Lincoln: a place with an election day vote center, but no early voting, and can make the election day space available in the last few days of early voting. Price said Goshen is another possibilit­y, and she’s looking for more.

For the 2018 general election, the commission had seven off-site early voting locations with two in Fayettevil­le, two in Springdale, one each in Prairie Grove, Elkins and West Fork. Early voting was also available in the County Clerk’s Office in Fayettevil­le.

Early voting for the March 3 preferenti­al primary, nonpartisa­n judicial general election and annual school election begins Feb. 18 and ends March 2. Washington County early voting locations will be posted on the Election Commission page at the county’s website — www.co.washington.ar.us — once the locations are set by the Election Commission. The deadline to register to vote in the March election is Feb. 3.

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