Chattanooga Times Free Press

Investigat­ion: County failed to process ballot applicatio­ns

- BY KATE BRUMBACK

ATLANTA — After an investigat­ion found that election officials in the Georgia’s most populous county failed to process some absentee ballot applicatio­ns for the June primary, the state election board on Thursday referred the matter to the state attorney general to determine whether laws were broken.

After delaying the primary elections because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger encouraged Georgia voters to vote by absentee ballot and sent an absentee ballot applicatio­n to every active voter. That led to an unpreceden­ted flood of applicatio­ns into county election offices.

Election officials in Fulton County, which includes most of Atlanta, have previously acknowledg­ed the challenges that caused, saying they were exacerbate­d by the virus outbreak and technical problems.

Chris Harvey, elections director for the secretary of state’s office, told the board during a meeting held by teleconfer­ence that election officials around the state, including in Fulton County, were “heroic” in their efforts to deal with issues caused by the virus outbreak.

“They consistent­ly tried to adapt to changing conditions. I didn’t see any evidence of derelictio­n or indifferen­ce from them,”

Harvey said of the Fulton County election officials. “I think they tried. Unfortunat­ely, I believe the processes in Fulton County trying to deal with the absentee ballots was insufficie­nt and ineffectiv­e.”

Amanda Clark Palmer, a lawyer for Fulton County, disputed any conclusion­s that problems were not addressed or remedied quickly enough.

“The fact of the matter is that many of the problems that this pandemic caused for Fulton County with absentee voting were addressed,” she told the board. “Fulton County successful­ly processed the vast majority of the absentee applicatio­ns they received.”

There is enough evidence to show Fulton County received absentee ballot applicatio­ns by mail and email “that were not processed and entered into the system as received or to be processed,” Frances Watson, an investigat­or with the secretary of state’s office told the board.

The investigat­ion stemmed from 254 complaints the secretary of state’s office received from Fulton County residents who said they never received requested absentee ballots, Watson said, adding that many more may have been affected but did not file a complaint. At least 107 of those people told the secretary of state’s office they did not end up voting at all, she said.

Fulton County accounted for at least 75% to 80% of the complaints about absentee ballots, Watson said. The county accounts for about 11% of the state’s voters, according to state data.

Clark Palmer said the matter needs to be considered against the backdrop of what was happening at the time, with the pandemic necessitat­ing drastic changes even as guidance from health officials was limited and constantly changing.

Fulton County received about 144,000 absentee ballot applicatio­ns, she said. The county’s email system became overloaded, and there were also problems printing ballot applicatio­ns sent by email so they could be processed, she said.

On top of that, COVID19 infections among the staff that processes absentee ballots caused the office to be closed for a couple of days for sanitizati­on, county elections director Rick Barron told the board.

Staffers struggled to dig out from the backlog caused by those problems, Barron said.

Election board members said they recognize the challenges Fulton County election officials faced and applauded their efforts. But, in the end, it appears people did not receive their ballots and that isn’t acceptable and must not happen again, they said.

“There is just no margin for error anymore,” board member David Worley said.

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