The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New registrati­on system should speed up elections

Officials say $4M GARVIS will mean shorter wait times.

- By Mark Niesse

Georgia’s new, faster voter registrati­on system is now running across the state, an upgrade that election officials said Thursday will ensure security and shorter wait times at polling places.

Surrounded by dozens of county election directors at the Georgia Capitol, Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said the registrati­on system successful­ly launched last month, replacing the state’s 10-year-old technology that at times broke down under the heavy load of high turnout.

“When people ask us, ‘How do we know who voted? How do we know it’s real? How do we know it’s fair?’ Because we have the receipts we keep on this secure system. That’s how we know,” said Gabriel Sterling, Raffensper­ger’s chief operating officer. “Don’t let anybody believe there are dead voters voting or there’s double voting in any significan­t way, because it’s just not true.”

The registrati­on system, nicknamed GARVIS for the Georgia Registered Voter Informatio­n System, stores registrati­on records for Georgia’s 7.9 million voters, verifies voters’ informatio­n when they check in and processes absentee ballot informatio­n.

At a cost of about $4 million, GARVIS replaces Electionet, which failed during the first days of early voting in October 2020, leading to voting lines that lasted for hours. The problem was corrected, and enet didn’t experience similar slowdowns during last year’s elections.

Both voters and election workers will experience improvemen­ts under the new system, said Christina Redden, assistant elections director in Glynn County.

New voter registrati­ons and address changes will be updated almost instantly after informatio­n is verified, and voters will be able to quickly see that their ballot has been counted on the state’s My Voter Page. In addition, a faster connection to the system will keep early voting lines moving, she said.

“It’s been a long time coming,”

Redden said. “It’s just automatic. It happens within minutes.”

Voter registrati­on informatio­n will be stored on remote servers that comply with federal government security requiremen­ts for cloud data.

GARVIS took 15 months to implement since Raffensper­ger announced it in January 2022. The system was developed by Salesforce, a large software company. MTX Group Inc., a technology consulting firm, developed the user interface for election officials.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger speaks at the Capitol in Atlanta on Thursday, when he said a new voter registrati­on system launched last month, replacing 10-year-old technology.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger speaks at the Capitol in Atlanta on Thursday, when he said a new voter registrati­on system launched last month, replacing 10-year-old technology.

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