Thursday, October 22, 2020

County Commissioners: Patience Needed As Counties Process Accurate Election Results


For the past several months, counties have been pleading with the General Assembly and administration to change the state’s election laws that would allow counties to begin pre-canvassing absentee and mail-in ballots before Election Day. 

As there are now no more legislative session days scheduled before November 3, it appears these pleas will go unanswered for this election, depriving counties of valuable time to take care of manual tasks that would have helped us have as many votes as possible counted on election night.

Therefore, counties in Pennsylvania today are now pleading with voters, candidates and the media to be patient regarding the timeline for completion of election results, because state law continues to only allow counties to begin pre-canvassing starting at 7 a.m. on Election Day. 

That time-consuming process involves verifying the voter’s information, opening two envelopes for every ballot and preparing the ballots to be scanned – all while administering an in-person election on the same day. 

Nearly three million applications for mail-in ballots had been received a week prior to the application deadline of October 27. 

These sheer numbers make it highly unlikely that counties will be able to complete processing and counting of all mail-in ballots on Election Day, and thus highly unlikely that Pennsylvania will have complete results that night. 

In fact, based on counties’ experience in the June primary, it could take at least several days before results are known, especially in close races.

Let me emphasize – if Pennsylvania does not have complete results on election night, or if it appears that results are changing in the days afterward, it is not because there is anything wrong with the election results, or the process, or because it indicates fraud of any sort. 

It’s simply the sheer volume of processing and counting all the ballots.

While counties also wish to have complete results on election night, our first priority is to run a fair, secure and accurate election. 

If it takes days or even weeks to accomplish that, counties will not sacrifice the integrity of the election in favor of speed.

Elections are one of many critical services that counties provide to residents and we will continue to uphold our responsibility as the stewards of our democracy. 

Your vote will count – it just may take a little longer than we all would have liked.


Lisa Schaefer, Executive Director, County Commissioners Assn. of Pennsylvania

NewsClips:

Ford Turner: Anti-Corruption Group Condemns PA Lawmakers, Calls For Immediate Action On Mail-In Ballot Legislation 

Talks Collapsed On Deal To Let Counties Open Mail Ballots Before Election Day

Republicans Appear Unwilling To Let Counties Count PA Mail-In Ballots Before Election Day

[Posted: October 22, 2020]

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