L.A. County Registrar Dean Logan said a beefed-up assessment process, which requires the county’s “Voting Solutions For All People” system to undergo a vigorous third-party testing regimen independent of the county and its election vendor, began 10 days ago.
That testing seeks to ensure that the problems that plagued the March 3 primary and its early in-person voting — from ePoll Book breakdowns to paper jams to touch-ballot problems — don’t happen again at highly touted voting centers. The process culminates with a certification from the Secretary of State’s Office, Logan said.
The centers in March displaced the old-style neighborhood precincts and replaced them with hubs that housed rows and rows of new ballot machines, anchored by touch screens, where any county voter could come to vote early, cast a ballot on Election Day, register to vote or drop off a ballot.
“We know we have to make sure those kinds of issues don’t happen again,” Logan said, responding to a series of questions from County Supervisor Janice Hahn during a board meeting that included critiques from the public.
The aftermath of the March 3 primary has generally been buried amid the headlines from the COVID-19 pandemic and waves of protests inspired by the death of George Floyd.
But as November looms, county election officials say they’ve been working behind the scenes to redeem voters’ confidence after meltdowns that left gaps in trust among voters, poll workers and candidates.
County election officials had voiced confidence that the glitches that sprinkled the early voting period would be worked out by March 3, Election Day.
But by late that day, Logan was forced to extend voting hours beyond the normal 8 p.m. closing, as long lines of frustrated voters flooded local sites and short-staffed poll workers battled technical and communication.
Amid intense post-primary criticism, the registrar’s office initiated its own audit, buffered by an independent audit by Slalom Consulting LLC, a Seattle-based business and technology consulting firm, commissioned by the Board of Supervisors.
Along with rigorous testing, county officials are working on:
- Earlier recruitment and expanded training for poll workers;
- Creating local action teams made up of community groups that can help elections officials identify “trust gaps” and lack of voter access in the community; and
- Forming field-tech group to streamline and speed up responses to issues at vote centers.
A new vendor will be contracted specifically to ensure that the county’s ePoll Books are synced with the state’s voter registration data base, Logan said.
Elections officials are looking to generate confidence on a voting landscape that has changed drastically since March 3 — just before the pandemic gripped the region.
In the run-up to March 3, the buzz was all about the highly touted in-person voting centers. Now, in the midst of a pandemic, the emphasis has shifted to a premium on public safety, staying close to home and to mail-in ballots. All this while getting caught in the middle of a national discussion over preserving the need for in-person voting while also promoting the need for mail-in ballots amid a pandemic.
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill in June requiring all registered voters get mail ballots for the November election. The Board of Supervisors approved the same measures, specific to L.A. County.
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