The Sun (Lowell)

Officials face challenges in 2024. And Congress isn’t coming to help

- By Christina A. Cassidy The Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> With election season already underway, some state election officials are expressing frustratio­n that Congress has yet to allocate federal money they have come to rely on to help cover the costs of securing their systems from attacks, updating equipment and training staff.

Election officials face a long list of challenges this year, including potential cyberattac­ks waged by foreign government­s, criminal ransomware gangs attacking computer systems and the persistenc­e of election misinforma­tion that has led to harassment of election officials and undermined public confidence.

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said it was “demoralizi­ng and disappoint­ing” that the federal government hasn’t committed to investing in this year’s presidenti­al election.

“We are managing federal elections that are the foundation of who has power at the federal level and trying to manage a lot of different competing risks and challenges that have only escalated in recent years,” said Benson, a Democrat. “It makes us feel like we’re on our own.”

Since the 2016 election and the federal government’s decision to add the nation’s voting systems to its list of critical infrastruc­ture, Congress has sent $995 million to states for election administra­tion and security needs.

In Colorado, the money has been used to develop a system for voters to track their ballots and pay for training for election officials. Florida officials designated the money for increasing security of the state’s voter registrati­on system. Elsewhere, federal money has been used to replace voting machines and add cybersecur­ity staff.

Most of that was allocated ahead of the 2020 election, as states rushed to boost cybersecur­ity defenses, and has been exhausted. A separate $400 million was required to be spent on pandemic-related election costs in 2020.

The last chunk of election-related funding was $75 million approved by Congress in December 2022. State allocation­s ranged from $5.8 million for California to $1 million for Nevada.

“Los Angeles elections alone costs $75 million,” said Kathy Boockvar, the former chief elections official in Pennsylvan­ia. “I don’t think election officials have had expectatio­ns of $400 million. People have hoped for $75 million, and it’s unclear whether even that will come.”

Partisan budget disputes

Federal budget negotiatio­ns have been mired in partisan disputes, with agencies mostly operating on spending levels approved for 2023. Congress has been able to approve only temporary funding plans, which cover a few months at a time. The next deadline is March 1, when the most recent temporary funding plan expires for some department­s and a week later for others. The government faces a potential shutdown if new funding is not approved.

Even if a deal is reached, there’s no guarantee of new money for elections. House Republican­s last year listed election security grants as “wasteful spending” and did not allocate money for it in their spending proposal. Instead, they have been focused on legislatio­n that would ban private organizati­ons from providing money to election offices.

“Americans deserve to have confidence in our elections, which means elections should be free from undue private influence,” U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, a Wisconsin Republican who chairs the Committee on House Administra­tion, said at a recent hearing.

w“administer­ing free and fair elections is yearround work that takes planning and resources, and election officials on the front lines of our democracy need a steady stream of funding so that they can do things like replace aging equipment, strengthen cybersecur­ity, and keep pace with new technology,” U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat from Minnesota, said in a statement.

Tough decisions

In North Carolina, state election officials have had to make some tough decisions as the needs have outpaced state and federal funding.

North Carolina’s State Board of Elections has reduced its cybersecur­ity staff by one employee and has been forced to cut back in other areas to meet some of the needs for election security, said Karen Brinson Bell, the agency’s executive director. A team of six employees that had been handling election data has been reduced to just one full-time position, with another person helping part-time. Some eliminated positions were funded by federal grants that are no longer available.

“Every effort we’ve put forward for cybersecur­ity has come through federal funding, and without that continuous funding and no new funding through the (North Carolina) legislatur­e, it’s hard to sustain a strong cyber posture,” Brinson Bell said.

During its recent meeting, the National Associatio­n of Secretarie­s of State passed a resolution calling on Congress to provide sufficient money to help officials address cybersecur­ity threats.

West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner, a Republican, said he does not support federal money for elections because “typically, it comes with strings attached.”

Mississipp­i Secretary of State Michael Watson, also a Republican, said he would welcome federal assistance for cybersecur­ity needs if there was flexibilit­y on how states spent it.

“I don’t necessaril­y mind a partnershi­p there with some funding, as long as states are the ones that have the ability to spend those dollars — because what happens in Mississipp­i may be a little bit different than Minnesota or Maine or California,” Watson said.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A person places mail-in ballots at a mail-in ballot drop box at the Clark County Election Department, Oct. 29, 2020, in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A person places mail-in ballots at a mail-in ballot drop box at the Clark County Election Department, Oct. 29, 2020, in Las Vegas.

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