Posted on 09/29/2019 8:47:18 PM PDT by Windflier
With Texas five largest counties now approved to use countywide voting, a majority of Texans who vote on Election Day this November will do so at countywide vote centers, meaning voters can cast ballots at any polling location within their county. But a hearing last week revealed concerns about technology and whether election officials are prepared for the transition. At the same time, a new Texas study shows countywide voting has no impact on voter turnout.
This will be the first election in which voters in all five of the states largest counties use countywide voting. In all, 69 counties will use countywide polling places in the November 5, 2019 election, representing 27 percent of Texas counties but 73 percent of Texas voters.
We are ready to make history as the largest county in the country to implement countywide voting centers, said Harris County Clerk Diane Trautman at a September 12 public hearing on countywide voting held in Harris County by the Texas House Elections Committee. Harris is the largest county in Texas, with over 2 million registered voters, and was just added to the growing list of counties approved to use countywide polling places on a permanent basis.
Trautman and other proponents say countywide polling places make voting more convenient, potentially increasing turnout, and they prevent eligible voters from being turned away or given provisional ballots for going to the wrong precinct polling place on Election Day.
Harris Countys Democrat Party Chair Lillie Schechter, one of several witnesses invited to testify at the hearing, applauded Trautman, saying countywide voting increases accessibility and turnout.
Skeptics, though, arent convinced election officials are ready to successfully implement the program or that it will increase voter turnout.
Several testified about inadequate technology, long wait times, fewer polling locations, a potentially politicized site selection process, allocating scarce translators that are required by the federal Voting Rights Act, and a heightened risk of fraud.
State Rep. Valoree Swanson (RSpring) said she was surprised Harris County got approval to use the countywide voting program based on a single-trial election this May that involved low turnout, short ballots, and only about a third of the county.
Technology and Wait Times
Swanson, whose district is within Harris County, told Trautman she was concerned about reports of long check-in wait times at some polls. Election workers attributed the problem to poor connectivity of the electronic poll books that are a key requirement for participating in the program. Swansons House Bill 4130, which took effect September 1, directs the Secretary of State to set specific standards and requirements for certifying electronic poll booksa safeguard that currently doesnt exist.
Trautman acknowledged isolated connectivity challenges in the May trial but said they had been addressed for November. She also said she is confident the countys equipment will meet the new poll book standards.
Keith Ingram, director of elections with the Texas Secretary of States office, said the new certification requirements in HB 4130, along with House Bill 1421 addressing cybersecurity of voting systems and election-related technology, will go a long way toward making Texas elections more secure. Ingrams office gave Harris and other counties the green light to use countywide voting, indicating he believes they are ready to meet the programs current requirements.
State Rep. Stephanie Klick (RFort Worth), who chairs the Elections Committee, said shes concerned lengthy ballots will lead to long wait times for voters. Trautman confirmed Harris County has the longest ballot in the country, but said with countywide vote centers, there will never be a need to wait in line.
Brazoria County Clerk Joyce Hudman testified they still had lines when her county implemented countywide polling in 2015, but voters didnt have to be turned away and sent to their home precinct to vote.
Number and Location of Polling Places
A key factor in the program is the number of Election Day polling places. While Brazoria cut its number of polling places in half, to around 30, Trautman said Harris will open 757 countywide vote centers on November 5the same number as there were with precinct polling locations.
But Harris County Republican Party Chair Paul Simpson said its inevitable the county will reduce the number of polling places in future elections.
One of the drivers of countywide vote centers is lowering costs by reducing the number of locations, Simpson noted. Texas Election Code allows counties using vote centers to reduce the number of Election Day polling places by 50 percent of the number of precinct polling locations.
Simpson also doubts the countys electronic poll book system can manage such a large number of vote centersover 700 Election Day locations, compared to about 50 used during early voting. Its not simply a question of connectivity, he said. Its about the ability of [the] system to handle the volume of data from the e-poll books.
Another concern, also noted by Swanson, is that counties can place up to twice as many polling places in one commissioners court precinct as are in any other, opening the selection process to political mischief and gamesmanship, Simpson said.
Simpson said the Republican Party agrees voting should be convenient, easy, and accessible to all voters across the county, as well as fair and equitable to everyone, but Harris Countys vote center program is not ready for prime time.
State Rep. Briscoe Cain (RDeer Park) asked Trautman if she was looking at putting polling locations in jails. She said a county commissioner asked her office to study the idea, but they determined it will not be a possibility at this time.
Impact on Voter Turnout
While proponents of the program tout its beneficial effect on accessibility and turnout, a recent University of Houston study of countywide voting in Texas that found vote centers impact on voter turnout is marginal and not statistically significant. The research published in July 2019 showed:
For presidential elections the impact of vote centers on turnout is basically zero, the opposite of what was expected. For midterm and constitutional elections turnout is higher in those counties that implemented vote centers the last comparable election cycle but the impact for each election type is not statistically significant from counties that did not implement vote centers.
Researchers concluded that any bump in voter turnout is temporary.
Then it will be a lot like early voting, I would guess, but they’re still going to have to figure out which ballot you’re going to use based on your precinct & congressional district. I suspect maybe you will be waiting in line for a longer amount of time though. Harris county has had republicans in charge of the county clerk office for many years, but that changed in the last election. With the Dems in charge, I’m a bit suspicious too.
...with countywide vote centers, there will never be a need to wait in line.
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Want to bet?
Absentee voting is where the real fraud is at.
You can vote in advance at any polling center for several weeks before the general election.
Not sure why they need to have that opportunity on ‘election day” as well.
Good I guess because some polling centers move and there can be confusion on election. Bad because of the opportunities for vote fraud and “knock and drag” buses collecting up voters to take them to the nearest polling center (even if it isn’t their district).
Yes, the RAT FORCES want to flip Texas BADLY....for obvious reasons. Expect and suspect anything and anyone. Time for a Kevlar helmet, not a tinfoil hat...
This should help the far left commie ‘RATs “turn Texas blue.”
-PJ
I can see politicians showing up at your door with a band of Antifa thugs to collect your ballot during the 2022 election.
Texas would have to go full blown commie for that to ever happen.
Sadly, for the communists, there are millions of red blooded American patriots here, who are armed to the teeth and willing to go to war to preserve their state.
THE VOTING FRAUD MO:
<><> democrat operatives request absentee ballots for the unsuspecting in rest homes, hospitals, jails, etc........ then "help" them fill it out.
<><> the PO box scam....going from one PO to another, retrieving absentees discarded in the trash....filling them out...accumulating hundreds of votes for the democrat
We can already do that during early voting. This doesnt change much.
I agree, I live in one F-up’d state when it comes to voting.
Democrat Party initiative - there can be only one purpose.
IF voting is that important to you, you will get to the polls.
Naturally there are going to be changes to the way voting has been traditionally done in Texas.
They need a means for voter fraud so they had to change the system.
“Sadly, for the communists,...”
Sorry but I did not say “so sorry” as I pulled the trigger in Nam.
More ways to engineer voter fraud as “voters” showing up have no local relationship with those manning the polling stations, and vice versa.
Who has the voter registration books, like the local ones we sign in with each time we vote (NJ), on pages that have our previous signings?
County-wide voting seems it must be a Dim engineered thing to steal more votes and turn Texas blue.
My Aunt’s Medicaid renewal application, from the State of Texas, included a voter registration card. They know she is in a nursing home with dementia.
She’ll be having “visitors” at election time.......
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