The Morning Call

Time running out on mail-in ballots

Some states urging voters to drop off tallies in person

- By Christina A. Cassidy

ATLANTA — Just days before the presidenti­al election, millions of mail ballots have yet to be returned in key battlegrou­nd states, and election officials warn that time is running out for voters who want to avoid a polling place on Election Day.

At least 35 million mail ballots had been returned or accepted as of Wednesday, according to data collected by The Associated Press. That surpasses the 33.3 million total mail ballots returned during the 2016 election, according to the U.S. Election Assistance Commission.

Yet about 1.9 million ballots were outstandin­g in Florida, along with 962,000 in Nevada, 850,000 in Michigan and 1 million in Pennsylvan­ia. In most states, the deadline for ballots to be received is Election Day.

“Don’t wait until Election Day,” Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf implored voters this week. “Hand-delivering your own ballot now will give you the peace of mind that your vote will be counted, and your voice will be heard in this historic election.”

Combined with early, in-person voting, at least 71.5 million votes have been cast, more than the total number of advance votes four years ago. Many states made it easier to request a mail ballot this year amid the coronaviru­s pandemic and concerns about crowded polling places on Election Day.

One challenge has been ensuring that voters who are not used to voting absentee return their ballots in time to be counted. Compoundin­g concerns are mail delivery delays

that have persisted across the country. Delivery data from the U.S. Postal Service does not offer much assurance that these ballots will reach their destinatio­ns if they have not already been mailed.

Throughout the fall, as ballots moved through the postal system, the agency has consistent­ly missed its goal to have more than 95% of first-class mail delivered within five days. In the week that ended Oct. 16, the most recently available weekly figures, the Postal Service reported a national on-time delivery rate of 85.5%. Postal districts

in many presidenti­al battlegrou­nd states failed to reach that mark.

The district that covers the eastern part of Michigan, which includes Detroit and its suburbs, has had one of the country’s worst delivery rates — 71.5% of first-class mail was on-time in mid-October.

Michigan’s top election official was among those warning it was too late to try to return a ballot in the mail. She urged voters to use an official drop box or to return their ballot in person at their local election office. “We are too close to Election Day, and

the right to vote is too important, to rely on the Postal Service to deliver absentee ballots on time,” Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said.

This year, Michigan has deployed hundreds of drop boxes across the state. The state’s ballot deadline is 8 p.m. Eastern time Election Day.

The same deadline holds for Wisconsin, after the U.S. Supreme Court rebuffed a Democratic effort to extend it. In the state’s April primary, some 80,000 ballots arrived after Election Day.

Voters in the state appeared to

be heeding the call to return ballots early, with only about 287,000 ballots outstandin­g out of some 1.8 million that were sent. That amounts to roughly 16% yet to be returned.

Nevada voters have more time to return their ballots, which are not due until Nov. 10 if postmarked by Election Day. There, an estimated 962,000 ballots were still outstandin­g as of Wednesday, although it’s unlikely all those will be returned because the state decided to send a ballot to all 1.7 million active registered voters in the state. Some voters will choose to show up at the polls or just not cast a ballot.

In Florida, 4 million of a record 6 million mail-in ballots requested had been returned as of Wednesday morning. The state was on pace to eclipse the return rate of 2016, when 81% of 3.3 million requested mail-in ballots were returned.

To be counted in Florida, ballots must be received by 7 p.m. Election Day.

“We are not necessaril­y concerned about the number of outstandin­g vote-by-mail ballots, other than trying to hammer home the message that postmarks will not count, and to get them in our office by Election Day,” said Danae RiveraMara­sco, spokeswoma­n for the Orange County supervisor of elections.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the crush of mail-in votes is a record, more than 10 times the number received by counties in 2016’s presidenti­al election.

The deadline for ballots in Pennsylvan­ia to be received is three days after the election, but last-minute litigation could move that deadline to Election Day.

In most states, voters who requested an absentee ballot but did not receive one in time or decided not to return it can still show up at their local polling place on Election Day and vote. In a few states, these voters could be required to cast a provisiona­l ballot, which will be counted after the voter’s eligibilit­y is confirmed and it’s determined that they did not already cast their absentee ballot.

Large numbers of voters showing up at polling places on Election Day after requesting an absentee ballot could trigger delays and long lines. The process for checking in will take longer, and casting a provisiona­l ballot also is more involved.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? About 1.9 million mail-in ballots are outstandin­g in Florida. Above, an election worker inserts a ballot into a drop box this month in Miami.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP About 1.9 million mail-in ballots are outstandin­g in Florida. Above, an election worker inserts a ballot into a drop box this month in Miami.

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