The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State confident voting machines will be on time

Delivery of thousands of devices in process for March primary.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

Cellophane-wrapped pallet by cellophane-wrapped pallet, workers rolled some 2,800 new voting machines into the DeKalb County elections warehouse on Monday.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger described it as the largest delivery to date for

the new voting system, and said he’s confident every community in Georgia will be equipped and fully prepared for March’s presidenti­al primary.

“We’ll have every county at 100% capacity before the end of the first week in February,” Raffensper­ger said.

As recently as last month, officials had put the target date at the end of January.

The new system, run on equipment provided by Dominion Voting Systems through a $107 million state contract awarded this

‘We’ll have every county at 100% capacity before the end of the first week in February.’ Brad Raffensper­ger

Georgia Secretary of State

summer, will replace Georgia’s 18-year-old electronic machines with a combinatio­n of touchscree­ns, printed ballots and scanners. Counties across the state must make the switch for the March 24 primary, which in some places will include as much as three weeks of early voting.

The holidays have slowed deliveries somewhat, but Raffensper­ger said Cobb County already has “virtually 100%” of its equipment and DeKalb will be ready after this week’s deliveries. Fulton County is scheduled to get its equipment next week and Gwinnett County the week after that, he said.

Raffensper­ger said that, statewide, about 70% of the new voting machines have been certified, a necessary step before they’re shipped to their respective jurisdicti­ons.

Elections offices across

Georgia have had voting systems to train staff for several months and have attended training events with the state. But giving poll workers and the public as much time as possible to learn the new system will be crucial.

The state conducted a test run with the much-debated new voting system in November, using the Dominion machines in six counties for local elections: Bartow, Carroll, Catoosa, Decatur, Lowndes and Paulding. A total of 45 incidents were reported, including machines that rebooted in the middle of voting and problems with the tablets used to check in voters.

State officials described the issues as “mainly humanbased” and Raffensper­ger said runoff elections a month later in two of the counties were “flawless.”

“We did learn from that and a lot of it was human error,” the secretary of state said Monday. “That’s why it gets back to training, training, training, and then training, training, training. You can never do enough of it.”

In DeKalb, voters could be spending a lot of time with the new machines in 2020. A special election to fill the term of former Sheriff Jeffrey Mann will be held during March’s primary and, if necessary, a runoff would be held a month later.

The election to decide DeKalb’s next full-term sheriff will be held in May, and a runoff could follow that as well.

DeKalb County elections director Erica Hamilton said she’s confident her team will be ready. They’ll continue training ahead of March’s primary while also trying to get the public up to speed. Hamilton said her office has already hosted a handful of community outreach events and has many more planned, including a large event for the public to try out the machines on Jan. 10. DeKalb Commission­er Lorraine Cochran-Johnson also plans to host a “voting town hall” on Feb. 5.

 ??  ?? Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger is interviewe­d Monday in front of old voting machines while awaiting more than 2,800 of Georgia’s new secure paper-ballot voting machines being delivered to the DeKalb County Voter Registrati­on and Elections offices in Avondale Estates.
Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger is interviewe­d Monday in front of old voting machines while awaiting more than 2,800 of Georgia’s new secure paper-ballot voting machines being delivered to the DeKalb County Voter Registrati­on and Elections offices in Avondale Estates.
 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER ?? Phillip Simmons unloads a stacked pallet Monday from the largest shipment of Georgia’s new secure paper-ballot voting machines so far — more than 2,800 of the machines at the DeKalb County Voter Registrati­on and Elections offices.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER Phillip Simmons unloads a stacked pallet Monday from the largest shipment of Georgia’s new secure paper-ballot voting machines so far — more than 2,800 of the machines at the DeKalb County Voter Registrati­on and Elections offices.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER ?? Samuel Tillman (from left), chairman of the DeKalb elections board, talks with Erica Hamilton, director of voter registrati­on and elections in DeKalb, and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger as Kentavious Ford unloads machines.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER Samuel Tillman (from left), chairman of the DeKalb elections board, talks with Erica Hamilton, director of voter registrati­on and elections in DeKalb, and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger as Kentavious Ford unloads machines.

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