The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Confusion, coronaviru­s precaution­s force long lines

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Georgia’s primary quickly turned into an ordeal for voters who waited for hours Tuesday when it became clear officials were unprepared for an election on new voting computers during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Poll workers couldn’t get voting machines to work. Precincts opened late. Social-distancing requiremen­ts created long lines. Some voters gave up and went home.

The primary was a major test of Georgia’s ability to run a highly anticipate­d election in a potential battlegrou­nd state ahead of November’s presidenti­al election, when more than twice as many voters are expected. Elections officials fell short.

“What is going on in Georgia? We have been waiting for hours. This is ridiculous. This is unfair,” said 80-year-old Anita Heard, who waited for hours to cast her ballot at Cross Keys High School, where poll workers couldn’t start voting computers and ran out of provisiona­l ballots.

Problems have been building for weeks as precincts closed, poll workers quit, and the primary was postponed because of the health danger posed by the coronaviru­s crisis. Some voters south of Atlanta waited eight hours to vote on the last day of early voting Friday.

But the election went worse than expected Tuesday, especially in metro Atlanta, when poll workers couldn’t get Georgia’s new $104 million voting system running. The system uses touch screens and printers to create paper ballots.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger and House Speaker David Ralston opened separate investigat­ions Tuesday into elections management, focusing on Fulton County, where the largest number of problems were reported.

“Obviously, the first time a new voting system is used there is going to be a learning curve, and voting in a pandemic only increased these difficulti­es,” Raffensper­ger said. “But every other county faced these same issues and were significan­tly better prepared to respond so that voters had every opportunit­y to vote.”

Some local officials say the secretary of state bears responsibi­lity.

DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond called issues with voting machines “an attack on the democratic process.”

“If there was a failure of leadership, it starts where the buck should stop, at the top. The eradicatio­n of any ‘learning curve’ rests squarely at the feet of the Georgia secretary of state, Brad Raffensper­ger, and his office,” Thurmond said. “It is the secretary of state’s responsibi­lity to train, prepare and equip election staff throughout the state to ensure fair and equal access to the ballot box.”

Raffensper­ger’s office denied there were any technical glitches with the voting equipment itself. Instead, poll workers didn’t know how to encode voter access cards, enter PIN numbers correctly or plug machines into power supplies.

Poll workers said that wasn’t always the case. They said they couldn’t log into voter check-in tablets, and ballots didn’t always display on touch screens.

The secretary of state’s office dispatched tech support contractor­s across the state, but they were overwhelme­d by calls when precincts opened at 7 a.m.

Most of the difficulti­es with voting machines were resolved, but long lines remained in some precincts. Other counties in Georgia, especially rural areas with lower population­s, reported fewer problems.

But challenges with voting machines spread to several major cities, resulting in polls held open late in parts of metro Atlanta, Columbus and Savannah. In Columbus, for example, election officials said they had difficulti­es setting up ballot printers because they only gathered for training once because of the coronaviru­s.

At the Parkside Elementary School precinct in Fulton, the state’s most populous county, Danielle Johnston had to wait three hours and 45 minutes to cast her ballot. Voters relayed word voting machines weren’t working. Johnston said poll workers never communicat­ed with the voters in line, and she was not offered a provisiona­l ballot.

“This is insulting to our constituti­onal right to vote,” Johnston said. “I don’t know what their excuse is this time.”

Fulton has a long history of lines and delays in its elections, but elected officials said change is needed.

State Rep. William Boddie said Fulton was in a “complete meltdown.”

“My phone hasn’t stopped ringing. We’re having issues throughout the county,” the East Point Democrat said. “Did they not know this was going to be a voting day for months? Fulton County’s Board of Elections can’t be let off the hook this time. It’s inexcusabl­e.”

Fulton County Commission­er Liz Hausmann, who stood in line for 2½ hours, put the blame squarely on the county’s elections department.

“It’s another black eye for Fulton County,” Hausmann said. “We have management problems, I don’t know how you say otherwise.”

Many of the problems resulted from election workers who weren’t adequately trained, the subject of a lawsuit against the state government by Fair Fight Action, a voting rights group founded by Democrat Stacey Abrams after her defeat in the 2018 race for governor. The lawsuit seeks sweeping changes and federal court interventi­on in Georgia’s elections. “Unfortunat­ely, poll workers don’t always have the training and support that’s needed from the secretary of state,” said Seth Bringman, a spokesman for Fair Fight Action. “If poll workers statewide are not trained properly, the responsibi­lity lies at the top.”

Over 1 million Georgians voted on absentee ballots before election day — an unpreceden­ted increase in remote voting in Georgia — but that still left hundreds of thousands of in-person voters Tuesday.The voting problems in the primary foreshadow­s difficulti­es facing voters in the presidenti­al election in November, said Michael McDonald, who runs the United States Elections Project at the University of Florida. About 5 million Georgia voters are expected to turn out this fall.

“I have never seen the scale of election failures happening in Georgia today,” McDonald said. “This does not bode well for November.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Fulton County employee Shaye Moss scans mail-in paper ballots at the Georgia World Congress Center during the Georgia primary elections Tuesday.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Fulton County employee Shaye Moss scans mail-in paper ballots at the Georgia World Congress Center during the Georgia primary elections Tuesday.
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN / FOR THE AJC ?? Voters wait in long lines, at times in the rain, at New Beginnings Full Gospel Church. The location opened at 7 a.m. with only one machine working.
JENNI GIRTMAN / FOR THE AJC Voters wait in long lines, at times in the rain, at New Beginnings Full Gospel Church. The location opened at 7 a.m. with only one machine working.

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