The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voters, officials want more from Fulton election board

- By Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

Following a Tuesday election marred by long lines and technical issues, voters and elected officials on Thursday lobbed complaints and concerns at the board in charge of running Fulton County elections.

It was the first time the Fulton Board of Registrati­on and Elections had met since polls closed, capping a day that left Fulton the subject of national ridicule, a political fight and multiple investigat­ions.

The board spent the first two hours of its 10 a.m. Zoom meeting listening to public comment. The message was simple: Do better.

Many who spoke complained of more issues in so u thern Fulton than were seen on the Northside. Officials say that’s

because southern turnout was higher.

“What I witnessed myself was a tragedy,” said Khadijah Abdur-Rahman, Fulton commission­er-elect to represent a Southside district. “We look like the laughingst­ock when it comes to protecting voter rights, and we must do better.”

Georgia’s counties had to manage one crisis stacked on top of another — and did so after getting a new system of voting equipment from the state.

Considerin­g it’s the most populous county in the state, and with its history of election foulups, Fulton was always going to attract the most attention. And with everyone watching, it failed to competentl­y adjust to precincts and poll workers dropping out over concerns from COVID-19.

Fulton’s elections department head Richard Barron told the board that 10 precincts opened late on Tuesday, caused mostly by staff unable to work brand new voting machines. That caused lines to stay long, he said.

First-time poll worker Vanessa Kelly said during public comment that her precinct opened late because machines weren’t working. She said she completed video training over the weekend after answering the county’s emergency callout to hire 250 extra workers. She didn’t get her assignment until 10:30 p.m. Monday.

Kelly said the older poll workers didn’t feel comfortabl­e with the machines.

One of the 90 techs the county hired to fix technical problems was there, but couldn’t solve the problem, she said.

So she was given a voting scanner manual and told to troublesho­ot the issue, which she did.

Barron said they intend to hire a consultant to review their procedures, specifical­ly the backlog of absentee ballot applicatio­ns that forced people to vote in-person.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger mailed absentee ballot request forms to the state’s roughly 6.9 million voters in hopes of keeping people out of lines on Election Day.

But Fulton’s servers were overwhelme­d with emailed applicatio­ns, and many voters never received their requested ballots.

Barron said he will work with the county’s IT department to get an auto-confirmati­on for emails. Many voters never heard back from the county on their emailed ballot requests.

He also said they’re planning a survey of poll workers. In addition, he wants to talk with activist and civic groups to get input and ask them to help the county sign up younger poll workers who are more tech-savvy.

Board member Vernetta Nuriddin wanted more from Barron and the lieutenant­s at his side, elections chief Blake Evans and registrati­on chief Ralph Jones Sr.

“What I’m hearing from the three top leaders of the elections department is that the three of you don’t actually know what to do to fix it,” she said.

Most everyone who spoke said they want these issues fixed before the August runoff and November general elections.

“I was hoping that ... (you three) would have some type of plan in place or contingenc­y that we can speak on right now because we don’t have six more months to convene councils and task forces because we have an election in August and an early vote in July,” Nuriddin said.

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Voters wait in long lines to vote Tuesday at the Park Tavern polling place near Piedmont Park in Atlanta.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Voters wait in long lines to vote Tuesday at the Park Tavern polling place near Piedmont Park in Atlanta.
 ?? BEN BRASCH / BEN.BRASCH@AJC.COM ?? Fulton County’s elections chief Blake Evans (from left), director of registrati­on and elections Richard Barron and registrati­on chief Ralph Jones Sr. discuss what went wrong in Tuesday’s election during Thursday’s meeting of the Fulton County Board of Registrati­on and Elections.
BEN BRASCH / BEN.BRASCH@AJC.COM Fulton County’s elections chief Blake Evans (from left), director of registrati­on and elections Richard Barron and registrati­on chief Ralph Jones Sr. discuss what went wrong in Tuesday’s election during Thursday’s meeting of the Fulton County Board of Registrati­on and Elections.

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