The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Election Day absentee ballots rejected

New voting rules also call for mobile ballot printers.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

The State Election Board voted down a citizen petition Tuesday that would have allowed voters to deliver their absentee ballots to the polls on Election Day, but the board moved forward with several other rules for running elections with printed-out paper ballots.

One of the new rules calls for mobile ballot printers that can print absentee, provisiona­l and back-up paper ballots on demand in each of Georgia’s 159 counties. The mobile ballot printers will prevent local election officials from running out of ballots.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, the chairman of the State Election Board, said the rules will ensure that votes are counted when the state’s new $104 million voting system is rolled out to all voters during the March 24 presidenti­al primary. The system will use touchscree­ns that are connected to printers that create paper ballots.

The State Election Board voted 4-0 to open a 30-day public comment period on the rules, which require voting equipment testing, voter registrati­on applicatio­n forms, ballot security, provisiona­l ballot access and notificati­on of voters about rejected absentee ballots within three days.

“These rules, and the verificati­on procedures they contemplat­e, are critical in assuring voters that their choices will be recorded faithfully and counted accurately,” Raffensper­ger said.

Though the board rejected the proposal allowing voters to bring absentee ballots to their Election Day precincts, that idea could be revisited, election officials said. Several board members said it would be too great of a change for next year’s elections, when the state is also installing the new voting machines. But they said it could be considered in 2021.

Supporters of the idea said it would allow voters to complete a hand-marked paper ballot on Election Day rather than use voting machines, and it could reduce the number of absentee ballots rejected. County election officials disqualifi­ed 7,500 absentee ballots last year.

The board also turned down proposals to position the state’s new 21.5inch touchscree­ns so other voters couldn’t see them.

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