4 local counties receiving new voting equipment — at no cost

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Image: Courtesy Arkansas Secretary of State and Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Four local counties are among nine across the state set to receive new voting equipment for the Nov. 3 general election. The four local counties are Fulton, Newton, Searcy and Stone.The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reports Secretary of State John Thurston’s office has decided to use state and federal funds to pay for the equipment.Initially, the counties were to share a portion of the costs for new equipment. In contrast, Baxter County paid $278,000 for new voting equipment, with the state contributing about $180,000 toward the purchase.The county’s decision followed an announcement last August by Gov. Asa Hutchinson. Hutchinson advised $8.24 million in state funds were being released to fund new voting equipment in accordance with Act 808 of 2019, passed earlier last year by the state’s legislative branch. Baxter County was one of 21 counties at that time set to receive a portion of the state funds.Now, the COVID-19 pandemic is being cited as the reason for fully funding the remaining nine counties needing new voting equipment.

Kevin Niehaus, public relations director for the Republican secretary of state says, “Given the impact the COVID-19 pandemic has had across the state, the secretary of state’s office has had to reassess our plan in working with the remaining nine counties for new election equipment.”

Niehaus says in a written statement, “With the counties needing to realign their fiscal priorities, it became apparent to us that fully funding the election equipment for these counties was the only viable option. With the integrity of our elections at stake, having all 75 counties working off the new equipment has always been a top priority.”

Niehaus says the estimated cost for the new voting equipment for those counties is roughly $2.7 million.

Sixty-four of the state’s 75 counties had updated voting equipment for the March 3 primary election that was purchased through a mixture of state, local and federal funds in the past few years.

Those counties included 10 for which Thurston’s office purchased new voting equipment last year through Nebraska-based Election Systems and Software with the help of state funding made available under Act 808 of 2019 and funds from most of those counties, including Baxter.

Two days before the first reported positive test for the coronavirus in Arkansas on March 11, state Rep. Doug House, R-North Little Rock, floated the idea of the state treasury loaning money to the counties that can’t afford their share of the cost for new voting equipment. The idea that would have required legislation ultimately fizzled, state officials say.

Niehaus said Friday that “nobody pushed us” to decide to use state and federal funds to buy the machines for the nine counties that don’t have them.

He says, “That was an internal decision that we came to on our own.”

The secretary of state’s office ran the idea past Senate President Pro Tempore Jim Hendren, R-Sulphur Springs; House Speaker Matthew Shepherd, R-El Dorado; and Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Niehaus says.

Hendren, who sponsored Act 808 of 2019, said Friday he didn’t object to the secretary of state office’s plan, even if the counties aren’t required to provide matching funds.

With the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s important citizens in those counties have good voting equipment so they can vote safety and efficiently, he says.

Shepherd said earlier this month the secretary of state’s office plan “made sense to me.”

A spokeswoman for the governor said Saturday Hutchinson didn’t have “any objections to the use of federal funds to purchase new voting machines. There are no budgeted funds in general revenue for that purpose.”

Niehaus said the secretary of state’s office will use $1.96 million in state funds left over from the $8.24 million it received under Act 808 of 2019, combined with federal funds for the purchases.

The secretary of state will use roughly half of the $5 million federal Help America Vote Act grant the secretary of state’s office received this year for voting equipment, he says.

to have on hand in case of an emergency,” Niehaus says.

About $400,000 of the federal grant will be set aside for an online voter registration system, in case the General Assembly approves such legislation in the 2021 regular session, Niehaus says.

He says about $400,000 of the federal grant money will be used to make “internal upgrades for the secretary of state’s election night reporting system.”

In addition, $750,000 from the federal grant will be used to “ensure that poll locations and voting equipment storage sites are secure from cyber and environmental threats,” while $150,000 will be for cybertraining for secretary of state office’s staff and officials in the counties, Niehaus says.

Also, $72,250 will be used to combat cyber vulnerabilities by using multiple methods of authenticating access by workers to the voter registration system, he says.

The secretary of state’s office must provide $1 million in matching funds for the $5 million federal Help America Vote Act grant, he says. These funds were included in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2020 signed by President Donald Trump on Dec. 20. The act provides $425 million to the U.S. Election Assistance Commission to make grant payments to states using the voting-age population formula in the Help America Vote Act, according to the commission.

Niehaus says the secretary of state’s office also expects to receive a $4.7 million grant through the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act for which the secretary of state’s office will provide matching funds of $940,777.

“This grant is for COVID-19 related issues for the upcoming November election only,” he says.

On March 27, Trump signed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act into law.

The federal law includes $400 million in new Help America Vote Act emergency funds, made available to states to prevent, prepare for, and respond to the coronavirus for the 2020 federal election cycle, the U.S. Election Assistance Commission said. This supplemental funding, distributed by the commission, will provide states with additional resources to protect the 2020 elections from the effects of the novel coronavirus, according to the commission.

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