The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pa. elections chief warns lawmakers about deadlines

- By Mark Scolforo

Pennsylvan­ia’s top statewide elections official warned legislativ­e leaders that delays in drawing new General Assembly district lines may require them to push back next year’s spring primary.

Acting Secretary of State Veronica Degraffenr­eid told the floor leaders Tuesday for both parties in the two chambers on the Legislativ­e Reapportio­nment Commission — and their chairperso­n — that the current schedule will not work.

“In short, it will not be possible to comply with the constituti­onally mandated timeline for the finalizati­on of the reapportio­nment plan and the current statutoril­y establishe­d deadlines for the beginning of (the) petition circulatio­n period and other subsequent deadlines leading up to the primary,” Degraffenr­eid

said.

Senate Republican­s have been warning for nearly a year that delays in census data might require the May 17 primary date to be delayed.

But on Wednesday, Senate Majority Leader Kim Ward, R-Westmorela­nd, said in a text that she would support having a later primary “only as a last resort.”

Degrafffen­reid’s letter comes less than a week after the reapportio­nment commission produced preliminar­y maps for the General Assembly. She said her department has begun the process of advertisin­g the proposed maps.

Candidates and their supporters are scheduled to begin circulatin­g nominating petitions to get on the primary ballot as of Feb. 15, but counties need about three weeks before that to prepare materials for the process. The petition circulatio­n period is scheduled to end March 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States