Texarkana Gazette

Mail-delivery delays raise voting concerns

With nearly all regions missing 5-day arrival goal, Postal Service expanding efforts

- ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Meghan Hoyer and Pia Deshpande of The Associated Press.

U.S. Postal Service records show delivery delays have persisted across the country as millions of Americans are voting by mail, raising the possibilit­y of ballots being rejected because they arrive too late.

Postal data through Oct. 9, released through a federal court order, show nearly all the agency’s delivery regions missing its target of having at least 95% of first-class mail arrive within five days. Parts of the presidenti­al battlegrou­nd states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio fell short of delivery goals by wide margins.

The districts that include the major urban areas and their suburbs in each of those states all performed below the national average for on-time delivery, with the area around Pittsburgh in western Pennsylvan­ia the lone exception.

In Michigan, ballots must be received by Election Day. Other states require a postmark by Nov. 3.

“We do encourage people who are worried about ballots not getting here on time to get them in as soon as possible,” said Perry County Commission­er Brenda Watson in Pennsylvan­ia.

She said her office has sent out more than 600,000 absentee ballots, more than double the number from the primary, and has extended office hours so staff can monitor a drop box.

With more than 2.9 million mail-in ballots requested in Pennsylvan­ia, on-time delivery is crucial. But delays are lingering throughout the state, according to the agency’s most recently available data released as part of the federal court order.

In the week that ended Oct. 9, first-class mail was delivered on time 79.7% of the time in the district covering Philadelph­ia and its suburbs, and 83.2% of the time in central Pennsylvan­ia, both below the national average of 86.1%.

A deadlock at the U. S.

Supreme Court this week allowed the state to count mailed-in ballots received up to three days after the Nov. 3 election, although Republican­s have filed another challenge.

Delays have plagued the Postal Service during the coronaviru­s pandemic and appear to have worsened under a series of cost-cutting policies implemente­d by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, who took over the agency in June. Following a series of court orders, the agency has reversed the policies and seen improvemen­ts but has not yet fully restored delivery times.

In a statement, Postal Service spokesman David Partenheim­er said offices have been authorized to use expanded processing procedures, additional delivery and collection trips, and overtime hours to ensure election mail arrives on time. The agency also announced it will treat election mail as first-class, which had previously been an informal policy.

“The Postal Service is fully committed and actively working to handle the increase in election mail volume across the country over the next two weeks,” Partenheim­er said.

Mail-in ballots arriving past the deadline is a main reason many of them get rejected. That has led election officials nationwide to urge voters to return ballots as soon as possible or take advantage of ballot drop boxes or early in-person voting.

Michigan has sent every registered voter a ballot applicatio­n, but mail-in votes must arrive by Election Day to count, following a court order that blocked a 14-day extension backed by Democrats. Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson has told voters who have not yet mailed in their ballots to skip the Postal Service altogether and put ballots in a drop box or take them to their local clerk’s office.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States