San Francisco Chronicle

County drops controvers­ial plan to close voting places

- By Brinley Hineman Brinley Hineman is an Associated Press writer.

ATLANTA — Election officials in a majority-black Georgia county voted Friday to scrap a widely condemned proposal to eliminate most of their polling places.

Concern about the proposal to close seven of nine voting locations in the rural county was “overwhelmi­ng” and is “an encouragin­g reminder that protecting the right to vote remains a fundamenta­l American principle,” the elections board in Randolph County said in a statement.

Voting and civil rights groups applauded the decision but said the episode demonstrat­es the need to restore Voting Rights Act protection­s that were tossed out by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2013.

The elections board, made up of a black woman and a white man, took about 30 seconds to vote down the proposal, county attorney Tommy Coleman said.

The plan to close polling places had drawn national media attention over the past week, and county officials were inundated with angry emails from around the country in what Coleman called “a tsunami of attention.”

Critics questioned why a county would make it harder to vote during the hotly contested governor’s race. Georgia’s top elections official, Republican Brian Kemp, is running against Democrat Stacey Abrams, who is trying to become Georgia’s first black governor. Both said they oppose the plan.

An independen­t consultant recommende­d the consolidat­ion and said the seven polling places in question don’t comply with the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act. The county fired that consultant in a letter sent Wednesday.

The polling places had all been used for the primary election in May and the primary runoff election in July, and officials should have been aware of ADA compliance issues.

Randolph County and the Department of Justice entered a settlement agreement in 2012 promising to fix the ADA violations in three years. The settlement specifical­ly included a section on polling place compliance. A grant was used to fix issues in the courthouse, but the other updates didn’t happen, Coleman said.

Coleman said the decision not to close the polling places was in the best interest of the county.

He said he didn’t know what would be done to address the ADA compliance problems, saying the county doesn’t have the money to make the necessary fixes, certainly not before the November election.

Civil rights groups and black lawmakers said black voters would be disenfranc­hised if the voting locations were shuttered. Census figures show the county, about 160 miles south of Atlanta, is more than 61 percent black, double the statewide percentage.

The circumstan­ces leave “a reasonable observer to wonder whether the real motive behind these closures is indeed to make it harder for African Americans to cast a ballot,” American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia attorney Sean Young said in a letter sent to county officials Aug. 14.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States