The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ballot requests missing in Fulton ahead of primary

Forms voters attached to emails to county were not always recorded.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com and Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

Absentee ballot requests from an unknown number of Fulton County voters are missing, apparently lost in the election office’s swamped email system.

Fulton Elections Director Richard Barron said he ordered an audit to find emailed absentee ballot requests that are unaccounte­d for.

Some affected voters might not receive absentee ballots in time for the June 9 primary. In-person voting is also available, but election officials encouraged voters to mail absentee ballots during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Barron thought the county cleared its backlog of absentee ballot requests Tuesday, but some

voters have complained that their ballot status still has not changed on the state’s My Voter Page. The county had processed nearly 130,000 absentee ballot applicatio­ns through Thursday.

“There’s going to be an oversight here and there with the volume you’re talking about,” Barron told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on on Thursday.

There’s no way of knowing how many ballot requests the county missed. Election officials processed mailed absentee ballot request forms, but forms that voters attached to emails to the county weren’t always recorded.

State Sen. Jen Jordan, the chairwoman of the Fulton legislativ­e delegation, emailed her absentee ballot request form on April 6, nearly two months ago. The county’s elections office has no record of her ballot request, according to public election data.

“It’s a mess, and I haven’t really gotten a clear answer,” said Jordan, a Democrat from Atlanta. “Fulton County needs to do something to get out the message to folks that this affected a lot of people, possibly thousands of people.”

Ballot requests could have been overlooked in a number of simple ways, Barron said. Election workers could have made mistakes when opening emails, or they forgot to grab all the applicatio­ns that were printed out. Jammed printers could also be responsibl­e.

There’s still time to request and receive absentee ballots, but voters might not have enough time to return them by mail. The county has set up 20 ballot drop boxes under an emergency rule the State Election Board approved in April. Ballots must be received by county election offices or deposited in drop boxes by 7 p.m. on election day. Drop box locations are posted online on Fulton’s elections website.

Fulton has the state’s highest population but second-most absentee ballot requests processed, according to state election data. Cobb County, with 267,000 fewer registered voters, has mailed 9,000 more absentee ballots.

Janine McGrath of Roswell said she emailed her absentee ballot request April 8 but never received her ballot in the mail. She emailed her ballot request again Thursday, and an elections employee told her it would be processed.

“I don’t want to be in a situation where I could catch COVID, so I don’t want to go into the polling place,” McGrath said. “I hope people have a chance to vote. Otherwise, this is going to be a big problem.”

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, who sent absentee ballot request forms to the state’s 6.9 million active voters, said he believes voters have time to request absentee ballots and return them.

“There was a situation in Fulton County. They have taken responsibi­lity for their missteps, and they have done the hard work to catch up,” Raffensper­ger said during a news conference Thursday.

Devin Price, a 46-year-old Roswell

computer animator, said he sent his applicatio­n on April 15. Over the weeks, he’s called and emailed to ask about the status of his ballot. As of Thursday, no one had responded to his messages.

Barron said the county’s elections office recently added 19 librarians to process applicatio­ns. He doesn’t know when the audit of emailed absentee ballot requests will be completed.

Price said he knows that a county elections employee, Beverly Walker, died from COVID-19 last month, slowing the processing of absentee ballot requests as the county’s elections office closed for two days for cleaning.

“I’m empathetic to that, but at a certain point you have to be realistic in wanting your request to be addressed,” Price said.

The Fulton elections office will start sending emails to voters when their absentee ballots are processed.

Across Georgia, over 1.5 million voters requested absentee ballots through Thursday. Nearly 655,000 voters have returned their absentee ballots, and an additional 118,000 have voted in person during early voting.

Barron said Fulton voters who have problems should call his office at 404-612-7060. Voters can check their absentee ballot status online at www.mvp. sos.ga.gov.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? Early voters for theJune 9 primary wait to cast their ballots May 22 at the South Fulton Service Center in College Park.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC Early voters for theJune 9 primary wait to cast their ballots May 22 at the South Fulton Service Center in College Park.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Fulton Elections Director Richard Barron, seen in January as new voting machines arrived at Fulton County Election Preparatio­n Center in Atlanta, said he ordered an audit to find emailed absentee ballot requests that are unaccounte­d for.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Fulton Elections Director Richard Barron, seen in January as new voting machines arrived at Fulton County Election Preparatio­n Center in Atlanta, said he ordered an audit to find emailed absentee ballot requests that are unaccounte­d for.

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