Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Washington County officials blast voter form

- TOM SISSOM

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Washington County election officials had some advice for state officials drafting new voting forms.

“We just think they need to try again,” Renee Oelschlaeg­er, chairman of the county’s Election Commission, said Friday.

Jennifer Price, the county’s election director, briefed the commission on the proposed new voter statement form the state is drafting for absentee ballot users. The commission­ers agreed the form was wordy, contradict­ory and confusing.

“There’s no way to add more informatio­n without making it more complex,” Jim Estes, a member of the commission, said during the discussion. “Many people will not be able to understand this. They didn’t understand the old one.”

Max Deitchler, the third member of the commission, agreed, pointing out some sections of the form actually contradict others.

“Frankly, the whole thing is confusing as hell,” Deitchler said.

Deitchler suggested state officials should look to states with a history of voting by mail for examples of any forms voters may need.

“Look at states that have been doing mail elections for years,” Deitchler said. “See what they use.”

“Don’t reinvent the wheel,” Estes said.

Price said she’ll send the commission’s suggestion­s to the State Board of Election Commission­ers, which is responsibl­e for providing the form to all 75 counties.

The commission also discussed issues with the coming redrawing of election district lines needed because of population changes identified in the 2020 Census.

A quirk in state law now requires school districts to have their election zones drawn by Nov. 1, Price told the commission­ers. The Election Commission has to approve the districts’ proposed boundaries.

Ideally, Price said election lines would be drawn in a descending order from the larger state legislativ­e districts to county justice of the peace districts to city zones or wards and then to the school districts. Drawing the lines in that order helps keep the number of precincts needed at a minimum and reduces the number of different ballot styles needed in an election.

Washington County has 235 precincts now, Price said, and a new requiremen­t changing the way school elections are held in West Fork, Prairie Grove, Farmington and Elkins from at-large contests to elections by zones will add at least 40 precincts to the mix. She said the smallest precinct in the county today, drawn after the 2010 Census, is in Fayettevil­le and has two registered voters.

Price said Jeff Hawkins, director of the Northwest Arkansas Regional Planning Commission, told her the Regional Planning Commission staff can draw the school zone boundaries at no cost to the school districts. She said she will work with the school districts to coordinate the effort.

The commission also approved the ballot for the Oct. 12 special election in Tontitown. The city is asking voters to approve a plan to pay off some bonds and issue new bonds for water, sewer and fire service improvemen­ts.

According to the ballot informatio­n, the city is asking voters to approve $4,325,000 in water improvemen­t bonds, $4,425,000 in sewer improvemen­t bonds and $5.3 million in bonds to build and equip a new fire station, along with any needed street, lighting and parking improvemen­ts. The bonds will be paid for by a 1% city sales tax.

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