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To: cuz1961

A similar lag led to concerns at the other end of the voting process. In some cases, counties didn’t immediately inform the state after receiving a batch of ballots. Accordingly, BallotTrax may have told those voters that their ballot was accepted later than they expected.

“Your ballot is not being transmitted up to [a] satellite and back down to us. We’re not Amazon.”

ROSE GALLO-VASQUEZ, COLUSA COUNTY REGISTRAR
In reality, BallotTrax’s data indicates California didn’t see the type of postal service delays many voters feared, Olsen said. BallotTrax provides a dashboard to county elections officials that tracks ballot flows down to the zip-code level.

Some voters read ambiguity between the lines of phone or email alerts that stated, for example, that “Your ballot has been received and will be counted.” Inyo County registrar Kammi Foote said, “I cannot tell you how many voters angrily reached back out to me saying, ‘I never got an affirmation that it actually was counted.’” Placer County officials also received calls about the “will be counted” message, registrar Ryan Ronco said.

In other cases, the messages didn’t match up with election practices in a given county, CalMatters found. In Plumas County, BallotTrax messages referred to polling places, even though Plumas has long used vote-by-mail and has no traditional polling locations, said registrar Kathy Williams.

While BallotTrax delivered the messages, the Secretary of State’s office dictated the language in most cases and has plans to review it, said spokesman Sam Mahood.

In Solano County, which had launched its own tracking system in 2013, voters were suspicious of the fresh wave of ballot-tracking signup messages that didn’t appear to come from the county, said John Gardner, the assistant registrar. Many opted out of using BallotTrax, and the county ended up with a patchwork of two systems, Gardner said. Orange County also received questions about BallotTrax’s relationship with its existing service, registrar Neal Kelly said in a statement.

Still, both BallotTrax and the Secretary of State’s office seem confident that such problems can be resolved. Olsen said he’s hoping to sign a new contract with the state by January. Currently, BallotTrax is the only service available that can satisfy the ballot-tracking requirements of California law. The cost to taxpayers is a few cents per ballot tracked.

Voters opt in to use BallotTrax, providing the company with their contact and other information. BallotTrax says that voters’ information is encrypted, and the company works with private security experts and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to keep its system safe.

Based in Denver, BallotTrax is also used by Nevada, Colorado, North Carolina and Georgia, as well as individual counties in ten other states.

Aaron Leathley is a reporter at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism. VoteBeat reporters Lewis Griswold and Michael Lozano, along with Freddy Brewster and Katie Licari of UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism, contributed reporting.

This coverage is made possible through Votebeat, a nonpartisan reporting project covering local election integrity and voting access. In California, CalMatters is hosting the collaboration with the Fresno Bee, the Long Beach Post and the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.


4 posted on 05/09/2022 7:48:40 PM PDT by cuz1961 (USCGR Veteran )
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To: cuz1961

Votebeat.org

Non partisan huh ?
Well let’s look at this site
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Ohio’s redistricting mess threatens a smooth election in November

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Election administrators have an ally in the fight against misinformation

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The truth about ERIC, the voter roll program targeted by extremists

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The surprising exception to conspiracy theories about private election grants
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Pa. Republicans eye greater control over redistricting in response to new political maps

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Legislators ban private grants for elections yet leave elections underfunded

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Download Lynette’s Newest Report -
Your Global Reset Independence
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What’s likely to happen to Arizona’s proof of citizenship law

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What went wrong with Harris County’s primary in Texas

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Why the debate over a computer scientist’s Dominion report is so heated

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Nothing has changed to prevent another Jan. 6

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Non partisan my arse.


5 posted on 05/09/2022 8:13:49 PM PDT by cuz1961 (USCGR Veteran )
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