Yuma Sun

Maricopa County eyes smooth Election Day

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PHOENIX — In the past few big election years, Arizona’s most populous county encountere­d major voting issues.

The Maricopa County Board of Supervisor­s is looking to get ahead of potential problems in 2020 by restructur­ing the county’s entire election system and dedicating millions of dollars for new ballot-counting technology.

“The 2020 election could come down to Maricopa County. We know that,” board Chairman Bill Gates told the Arizona Republic. “We want these elections to be best in class.”

The board assembled profession­als from a multitude of county department­s earlier this year and tasked the group with solving the issues that have plagued Maricopa County’s elections.

The improvemen­ts to the election process will prevent major issues such as those that occurred in 2016 and 2018 and will speed up vote counting and relieve concerns about the integrity of elections, according to Gates.

In 2016, former County Recorder Helen Purcell’s office drasticall­y reduced the number of polling places during the presidenti­al preference election.

That resulted in hourslong lines that caused some people to walk away from the polls without casting a ballot.

Voters ousted Purcell from office that year.

During the 2018 August primary, 62 polling places around the county weren’t set up and ready to accept voters when polls were supposed to open.

The early-morning woes gave way to a multitude of other issues that lingered throughout the day.

The November general election had far fewer logistical issues, but criticism of current County Recorder Adrian Fontes continued.

Republican-backed groups challenged the legality of new procedures he implemente­d and accused him of rigging the system for Democrats.

When the board relinquish­ed its responsibi­lities to the recorder in the 1950s, Gates said Maricopa County had a population of 330,000. The county’s population currently is about 4.5 million.

Gates said it is no longer reasonable to place all of the responsibi­lity of elections under a single elected official.

The board recently voted to create a new position — Election Day & Emergency Voting director. That person will work with the County Recorder’s Office but report directly to the board.

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