The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some ballots in metro area inaccurate or incomplete

Most problems are voters misassigne­d after redistrict­ing.

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

An unknown number of voters throughout metro Atlanta have received ballots with missing or incorrect local races, including a Fulton County commission­er running for reelection.

Elections leaders from Cobb, Dekalb and Fulton counties said some voters were given inaccurate ballots during the first week of early voting. Most of the problems were caused by voters being assigned to the wrong areas after redistrict­ing.

Fulton appeared to have the most issues Wednesday, after Cobb and Dekalb said they had resolved discrepanc­ies.

Fulton Commission­er Marvin Arrington Jr. was surprised when he went to vote for himself Monday only to find his name missing from the ballot.

“I am more than extremely frustrated by this,” said Arrington, a Democrat representi­ng part of south Fulton, during a Wednesday meeting of the Fulton County Commission. “The secretary of state is interferin­g with the integrity of the election by … maintainin­g a database with wrong informatio­n.”

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said counties are responsibl­e for ensuring that voters have accurate districts.

“Fulton’s attempt to pass the buck is just a continued disservice to their voters,” Raffensper­ger said Wednesday. “Their attempt to blame state systems is disproven by the fact that other counties, with less people and less resources, aren’t having these issues while using the same systems. Instead of fixing issues, Fulton points fingers, and their voters suffer.”

In Dekalb, about 6,800 voters were initially assigned to incorrect County Commission districts on Monday, according to reporting from The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

In Cobb, Elections Director Janine Eveler said that poll workers had to manually pull up the correct ballots

on voting machines because voter informatio­n hadn’t been updated on equipment provided by a vendor for the secretary of state’s office. Replacemen­t equipment was installed by Tuesday morning.

Commission­er Liz Hausmann, a Republican who represents part of North Fulton, said she had heard similar

reports but cautioned Arrington against the “pretty serious allegation” he had made.

Chairman Robb Pitts said he wanted to talk about the topic in executive session, despite no active litigation on the topic.

The secretary of state’s office confirmed that it had

identified 8,764 Fulton voters who were potentiall­y assigned to incorrect districts as of Thursday. By comparison, there were 2,878 voter records flagged for possible inaccuraci­es in Cobb, Dekalb and Gwinnett counties combined.

The number has been shrinking since then as county election officials have been verifying district informatio­n.

One such official, Fulton’s interim elections director Nadine Williams, said the number was originally 28,000 voters. “We’re kind of working in the unknown,” she told the AJC.

The early indication of the problem is that redistrict­ing caused a mad rush to get people assigned to the correct district and commission races. The secretary of state’s office said it is entirely the county’s responsibi­lity to assign voters to correct districts.

Williams said that, as soon as the problem was reported, she notified all the poll managers and put in place measures to make sure voters knew how to double-check their ballots.

Every facet of elections, even the operations of voting, have become partisan — with Democrats like Arrington suspicious of the Republican-led state government that has chastised the county for sloppy elections management.

The State Election Board is conducting a performanc­e review of Fulton’s elections operations that could result in Georgia temporaril­y taking over Fulton elections.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM ?? Early voting has begun at the Buckhead Library and elsewhere, but an unknown number of metro area voters have received ballots with missing or incorrect local entries. Most of the remaining issues appear to be in Fulton County.
JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM Early voting has begun at the Buckhead Library and elsewhere, but an unknown number of metro area voters have received ballots with missing or incorrect local entries. Most of the remaining issues appear to be in Fulton County.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Commission­er Liz Hausmann of North Fulton says she has heard the ballot reports but cautioned against “serious” allegation­s.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Commission­er Liz Hausmann of North Fulton says she has heard the ballot reports but cautioned against “serious” allegation­s.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Fulton Commission­er Marvin Arrington Jr. was “more than extremely frustrated” after he wasn’t on a ballot when he went to vote.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Fulton Commission­er Marvin Arrington Jr. was “more than extremely frustrated” after he wasn’t on a ballot when he went to vote.

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