Ohio Secretary of State says Votes cast at wrong place won't count
Thursday, October 7, 2004 at 02:30PM
TheSpook
Cuyahoga Co. defies ballot order: The elections board
in Ohio's largest county said Wednesday it will direct voters to their
correct polling place on Nov. 2 but will accept ballots from anyone who
insists on voting at the wrong precinct, despite a directive to keep
them from doing so. If a voter in Cuyahoga County insists on casting a
ballot, even at the wrong polling place, the board will allow it but
only after telling the voter that the vote may not be counted, said
Jane Platten, board administrator. "We will make every effort to find
what precinct the voter should be in and direct that voter to that
precinct. There will be times that the voter will say, 'I want to vote
and I want to vote here,'" Platten said. Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwell had sent a directive to the state's 88 county boards of
elections, advising them of state law concerning the collection of
provisional ballots, which voters may use if they have moved within
Ohio but failed to update their registrations. The directive states
that "under no circumstances shall precinct pollworkers issue a
provisional ballot to a person whose address is not located in the
precinct, or portion of the precinct, in which the person desires to
vote." Instead, if voters show up at the wrong polling place, poll
workers must find out their correct voting places and tell them the
location, the directive says. More than 100,000 provisional votes were
cast in the 2000 election. [more ] and [more ]
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