Archive for July 2020
Over 100K CA Mail Ballots, Many Late, Not Counted in March Primary
Over one hundred thousand California mail ballots went uncounted in the state’s March primary – most of them because they arrived late.
Read MoreCongress to Consider Increasing 2020 Elections Funding
There are signs on Capitol Hill that support for additional federal 2020 elections funding could be forthcoming as lawmakers begin to grasp the massive challenges facing state and local election officials nationwide.
Read MoreDC Proposal Would Allow Inmates to Vote
The Washington, DC City Council is set to approve emergency legislation that would allow inmates to vote and could eventually include ballots being sent to residents held in federal prisons across the country.
Read MoreCTCL to Fund 5-City Wisconsin Safe Voting Plan
The Center for Tech and Civic Life is moving beyond technical assistance to local election offices to embrace the role of funder, announcing recently that it would make grants to five Wisconsin cities for work on a Wisconsin Safe Voting Plan in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Read MoreMassachusetts Approves Vote-by-Mail for 2020
Massachusetts’ governor has signed legislation approving the use of vote-by-mail in the Bay State for the 2020 election in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Read MoreDallas, TX’s Pippins-Poole to Retire after 2020 Election
Dallas County, TX election administrator Toni Pippins-Poole, who oversees voting in one of the Lone Star State’s largest jurisdictions, will retire after the November 2020 election.
Read MoreNew CSG OVI Recommendations on “Fail Safe” Options for Overseas Voters
The Council on State Governments’ Overseas Voting Initiative (CSG OVI) has a new set of recommendations for states about “fail-safe” options for overseas voters facing postal disruptions due to the global coronavirus pandemic.
Read MoreAs COVID-19 Resurges, Florida Election Officials Preach Flexibility
Florida local officials are preaching flexibility as they contemplate elections in August and November even as the coronavirus surges again in their state and elsewhere nationwide.
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