Los Angeles Times

2020 will test voting system’s success

- JOHN MYERS

California lawmakers had high hopes when they enacted a sweeping new election system in 2016. They pledged it would result in higher turnout, lower costs and a better overall experience for voters.

Three years later, it’s difficult to discern whether the California Voter’s Choice Act has delivered on those promises. And the stakes have never been higher, as counties that represent almost half of the state’s registered voters are preparing to switch to the setup for 2020.

The law was designed to provide a more f lexible experience than what traditiona­lly happens on election day. The most far-reaching change was the eliminatio­n of tens of thousands of local polling places, replaced by absentee ballots and secure drop boxes.

Multipurpo­se “vote centers” are open for several days before the election in the counties that chose to participat­e. There, voters can fill out a ballot or simply drop one off, update their registrati­on or get a replacemen­t ballot if they’ve lost the original.

The system is optional — thus keeping state government from having to pay for a new mandate imposed on California’s 58 counties. Fourteen counties were eligible to make the switch last year, but only five took the plunge: Madera, Napa, Nevada, Sacramento and San Mateo.

A new study by some of the state’s most prominent election researcher­s found those counties had a modest boost in average voter turnout — 3% from the midterm election four years earlier — compared with communitie­s that stuck to the traditiona­l election model. Turnout seemed higher, too, among often underrepre­sented groups, including young voters, Latinos and Asian Americans.

The real test will come in the state’s presidenti­al primary next March. Ten counties — some with large electorate­s like Los Angeles, Orange and Santa Clara — will join the switch from election day polling places to multiday vote centers.

Special attention should be paid to Los Angeles County, which was given a one-time exemption from having to mail a ballot to each of its 5.4 million voters in 2020. Many residents will have to seek out the county’s vote centers — not guaranteed to be as close as polling places once were — to cast a ballot. Getting the word out over the next few months will be crucial.

Researcher­s from USC and UC Riverside, in a summary of their study on how the new state law worked in 2018, found elections officials faced a number of unexpected hurdles with the Voter’s Choice Act.

Costs went up in some counties, as workers at vote centers needed additional training and counties replaced polling places typically hosted at no charge with buildings that had to be rented for a week or more. Some local officials said they needed more vote centers than the minimum required by the state law, especially on election day — for whatever reason, a number of voters didn’t use the service until the last minute.

Nor does success have a single definition. Some local officials say the new law’s impact should be measured by voter turnout. Others told researcher­s it’s about making elections more efficient.

In short, every county — perhaps every voter — will expect something different. And what happens in 2020 could be key to whether California is on the verge of a major transforma­tion of its electoral democracy.

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