The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

$1.5M pays for absentee ballot requests

- By Farnoush Amiri Report for America/Associated Press

Every registered voter in Ohio will receive an absentee ballot request form in the mail through the use of federal funding, in a move some officials say could help mail-in voting in the critical battlegrou­nd state go more smoothly in November than it went during the primary.

All 7.8 million registered Ohioans now have the option to mail in their ballot for the November election, Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose said.

“Sending the request – not the ballot — helps voters participat­e in the election and means each registered voter in Ohio can continue to choose one of three options available to them — early voting, absentee voting by mail, or voting in person on Election Day,” the elections chief said in a release.

Absentee ballot requests have been sent out in every general election in Ohio since 2012.

The only difference this year is the use of federal coronaviru­s aid funds to send the ballots, which was authorized Monday by the state’s Controllin­g Board.

The estimated cost of mailing the request forms is around $1.5 million, which will be covered entirely through federal funds, not state dollars, the Secretary of State said.

Hours before voting in Ohio’s March 17 primary was set to start, officials postponed it amid concerns attendance at polling places would contribute to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Shortly after the primary was reschedule­d, the Republican-controlled state Legislatur­e prevented LaRose, a supporter of online absentee applicatio­ns, from mailing similar forms for the April 28 vote. Their emergency legislatio­n instead required his office to mail voters a postcard explaining all the options for

casting a ballot.

The primary was moved to mostly absentee voting despite claims of President Donald Trump and fellow Republican­s at the state level about the largely debunked notion that universal vote by mail will lead to fraud.

Around 1.9 million voters requested an absentee ballot for the primary, leading to delays in arrivals and frustratio­n that forced some to vote in person despite the potential health risks.

The request forms will be mailed out around Labor Day and can be returned by those who wish to vote by mail even as the state continues to reopen after being

in lockdown since midMarch.

LaRose said additional funds will be used to ensure a safe and clean environmen­t for those who choose to vote in person.

The deadline to register to vote in the November election is Oct. 5 and voters have until three days before the election to request an absentee ballot.

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