Showing posts with label Absentee Ballots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Absentee Ballots. Show all posts

9.14.2020

The Case for VOTER MOBILES: NPR "Why Is Voting By Mail (Suddenly) Controversial? Here's What You Need To Know"

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Hello All:

Isn't it interesting how suddenly our United States Postal Service, which has been in existence since the days of Benjamin Franklin, who started it in Pennsylvania in the 1700s, has become a weapon against Americans under the dictatorship of the predator in chief and his newly hired hatchetman?  

Interesting how he started making noise and grunts against the USPS early in March when it became clear that they would become the goto alternative in an era of Pandemic, when folks were trying to figure out how to vote and stay healthy?  His utterings were that he was against mail-in votes because with them, no repuglycon would win. He began to, even then, start talking about how the USPS was not "making any profit," and how he was going to "make some changes," and curtail the budget, possibly by June.  It was then that I tried to circulate a petition, which I launched on May 25, 2020, under MoveOn, called "HANDS OFF OUR USPS!" 


However, it did not get the traction it should have,  partly because MoveOn did not keep their word in distribution, but also because people did not realize how really serious this cretin was.   It was incredible to believe that anyone in the position of president, or running for president, would be allowed to do something as nefarious and unethical as destroy a part of the Federal Government that is protected by the constitution.  It is why I constantly and continuously say that many of our elected officials are either in cahoots with T-rump, stuck on stupid, or just plain comatose.  

Of course, we all know that tampering with the US Mail is a federal offense and subject to arrest and heavy fines.   And it's hard to conceive that this could be happening in real time in an age when we are supposed to be move advanced, developed, technologically aware - this can't be happening in the most powerful country in the world.  We have to realize that denial does not make the evil go away. 

This has gotten so out of hand that while people are still advocating vote by mail, no one can guarantee that doing so will be secure, counted, delivered on time, not tampered with. 

With more and more evidence of the fact that the inquiries by the Congress against the actions of Dejoy have been flaccid, we had better have some serious alternatives to putting our votes in the hands of a system that has already been broken - and has no indication that it will be reinstated to it's former self in time to make sure our votes are counted.

Katherine Anne Porter wrote a book, Ship of Fools, that later became a movie, that depicted people returning from the US to what was becoming Nazi Germany, even though they knew they were the target population.  They had all kinds of rationalizations about why they would not turn back, or chart a different course.  I kind of think that's what we are, if we don't have in play alternatives to voting by mail.  It's a great alternative if you don't have a walking national disaster posing as a president who wants to continue devastating America's rights.  

But now, we have to have alternatives!  Which is why Philadelphians are putting together corona-safe transportation to physically carry the voters to the polls - let them vote in person, and return home.  The project is called VOTER MOBILE!  We can't allow our rights to usurped, trampled on, distorted, disrespected.  A cadre of concerned citizens are not going to allow the repuglycons to highjack their rights to vote.  Black people fought to get the right to vote.  And Philadelphians are looking to make sure their rights are maintained.

In the South, which has been doing this for quite some time, they have a program called SOULS TO THE POLLS - and it has made the difference in turn out and accessibility to the polls.  Of course, unlike Pennsylvania, many states in the south also offer early voting, making it possible for people to have a better turn out.    Get in touch with those in your area - volunteer to work with them to expand their effectiveness.

 Below are articles from NPR detailing some of the egregious acts against vote by mail that is taking place across the US.  Other evidence came by way of reports from California, Texas and other areas where mail carriers were sighted dumping mail into the river or dumpsters.  

We have to wake up
We have to Vote
We have to put a stop to this
America's future is being dumped on by T-rump 
Time to put a stop to this 
The vote you save may be your own!


Signed, Sealed, Undelivered: Thousands Of Mail-In Ballots Rejected For Tardiness


A rally outside the Montclair, N.J., town hall on July 1. Protesters hung 1,101 absentee ballots to represent the number of votes that weren't counted in a mayoral election that was decided by just 195 votes.
Kate Albright/Montclair Local
Mail-in voting, which tens of millions of Americans are expected to use this November, is fraught with potential problems. Hundreds of thousands of ballots go uncounted each year because people make mistakes, such as forgetting to sign the form or sending it in too late.
An NPR analysis has found that in the primary elections held so far this year, at least 65,000 absentee or mail-in ballots have been rejected because they arrived past the deadline, often through no fault of the voter.
While the numbers are relatively small — around 1% in most states — they could prove crucial in a close election, especially one in which many more voters are expected to cast absentee and mail-in ballots to avoid going to the polls during a pandemic.
Those who use mail-in voting for the first time — especially young, Black and Latino voters — are more likely to have their ballots rejected because of errors, said Charles Stewart, a political scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who studies election administration.
''That's the sort of thing that makes me wary about what's going to happen in November when we get an even larger influx of people who haven't voted, or haven't voted by mail in the past," he says.
The political parties and voting groups are well aware of what's at stake and have launched aggressive legal campaigns to try to shape the rules for November.
Democrats and voter advocacy groups have filed suits in at least 10 states, challenging laws that require mail-in ballots to be received by or before Election Day. They're asking judges to allow ballots to be accepted as long as they are postmarked by Election Day, because of difficulties voters might encounter due to the pandemic and delayed mail delivery.
The Republican Party and election integrity groups are fighting back. They argue that extending the deadline will undermine public confidence in the results, which could be delayed for weeks. They also insist, without evidence, that it will raise the potential for fraud — a position President Trump has taken repeatedly.
In the meantime, voters have been left confused, discouraged and in some cases disenfranchised.
A Clark County election worker scans mail ballots following Nevada's June election.
Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Susie Sonneborn of Montclair, N.J., says she tried to be extra-careful to make sure her ballot was postmarked on time when she voted in a mayoral race in May. But when she heard that more than 1,100 ballots — 9% of the total — had been rejected, she checked with the local election office and was shocked to discover that hers was one of them.
"It was just really disappointing and surprising that by following the instructions that are printed on the ballot, I was set up for failure," she says. Sonneborn insists that she didn't see anywhere that her ballot needed to be received within two days of the election to count, which was especially frustrating because the mayor's race was decided by only 195 votes. Residents held a rally outside town hall the day the new mayor was sworn in, calling for officials to "count every vote" in future elections.

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/08/14/politics/usps-warn-states-mail-in-ballot-delivery/index.html

Other states are also reporting large numbers of rejected ballots. More than 5% were not counted in Virginia's June primary because they arrived too late. More than 1% of the ballots in Pennsylvania and Nevada were also not counted last month for the same reason.
In Wisconsin's chaotic April primary, 2,659 ballots were rejected for missing the deadline, but the number could have been much higher. About 79,000 ballots were received after Election Day but within a six-day period that was allowed on an emergency basis.
Tens of thousands of other ballots were discarded this year for other reasons, most often because of a missing or mismatched signature. Last week, the League of Women Voters filed suit in New York state, where more than 34,000 absentee ballots — or 14% of the total — were rejected in 2018. The group wants voters to have the opportunity to correct any problems before their ballots are discarded.
The suit is part of a flood of litigation over mail-in voting this year.

Signs direct people to the entrance of the Clark County Election Department during Nevada's election last month.
Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Democrats and progressive groups are suing to change the rules in Florida, where 18,504 vote-by-mail ballots — more than 1.3% of the total — were rejected in the state's March primary for a variety of reasons, including missed deadlines. The lawsuit argues that mail-in ballots should have to be only postmarked — not received — by 7 p.m. on Election Day.
Kirk Nielsen, one of 10 plaintiffs in the case, says the fate of a ballot is out of a voter's hands once it goes in the mail. His was one of thousands of ballots rejected in the state in 2018. Nielsen says he mailed it eight days before Election Day, but it was not received until eight days after. He worries about being disenfranchised again.
"I want to vote by mail this year because of the pandemic. I don't want to get sick at a crowded polling place and I don't want to contribute to spreading the virus by going to a crowded polling place, but that said, I think there's an even greater risk this year voting by mail that my mail ballot might not be counted, along with thousands of others," Nielsen says.
His case is scheduled to be heard this month, but Republicans were heartened by the judge's refusal to issue a preliminary injunction against the state's mail-in rules.
The judge said the Election Day receipt deadline "eliminates the problem of missing, unclear, or even altered postmarks, eliminates delay that can have adverse consequences, and eliminates the remote possibility that in an extremely close election — Florida has had some — a person who did not vote on or before Election Day can fill out and submit a ballot later."
These are all arguments that Republicans have made in defense of keeping the Election Day deadline currently in place in most states.
"Allowing massive amounts of ballots to arrive or the counting to continue well after Election Day really allows room for fraud," says Mandi Merritt, national press secretary for the Republican National Committee. "It allows losing candidates or other partisan operatives to go find more late votes that could potentially change the legitimate outcome of an election and really just leaves room for unnecessary litigation."
While Merritt did not offer an example, she says even the possibility of fraud would undermine voters' confidence in the results.
Most election officials would disagree that candidates could "find more late votes" to change the results, but some do worry about extending the deadline for other reasons.
Katie Hobbs, Arizona's Democratic secretary of state, thinks voters would be confused if the deadline were switched so close to the election, especially in a year when the pandemic has upended voting in so many other ways. She says it takes time to educate the public and to implement such changes, which can be more complicated than people think.
"There's an assumption that every piece of mail automatically gets postmarked, and that's just not the case," says Hobbs. "Our ballots are postage paid, so they're sent with bulk permits, and oftentimes those pieces of mail are not postmarked."
Hobbs says having a postmark deadline would require the state to arrange with post offices to provide such postmarks or to come up with another system to track the ballots.
Arizona recently reached a settlement with progressive groups that had sued to extend the ballot deadline. The state has agreed to boost voter education and outreach programs and to encourage other options, including drop boxes where voters can deposit their absentee ballots, to be picked up later by election officials. Hobbs says this option allows voters to get their ballots in on time without risking exposure to the coronavirus at the post office or a polling site.
A number of states have increased their use of drop boxes. But the Republican National Committee and the Trump campaign don't like that option either. They recently filed a lawsuit against the state of Pennsylvania, arguing that such drop boxes are insecure, are prone to fraud and should be prohibited.

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11.02.2016

SEPTA ON STRIKE? RIDERS MUST STRIKE BACK - MOBILIZE VANS TO WORK AND TO THE POLLS - PHILLY WILL NOT LOSE!!!

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson
Hello All:

Phildelphians are being hamstrung by their own transit system - SEPTA, which is the acronym for South Eastern Pennyslvania Transportation Authority.  Now, interestingly enough, not all of SEPTA is striking - just the bus and subway operators that "service" the local communities.  

It appears that the Regional Rail portion of SEPTA that primarily services Non-Black communities, are not on strike.  Now isn't that special???

This means that the prime target is Philadelphia and Philadelphians, which, by some strange coincidence, is 68% Black, primarily comprised of working poor who are dependent on SEPTA to get them to and from work, and their children to and from school.

And of course, being the largest in population, Philadelphia is prime for putting Hillary over the top in much the same way they did twice for President Obama.

Does anyone smell a rat here?

In most metropolitan areas, these kinds of strikes are not allowed because of the impact they have on the populous - so why is this being allowed to happen in Philadelphia.  Police, Fire department, Hospital Care and mass transit are essential services - where is the State in dealing with this problem?

Image result for septa strike



Why is it that the union can selectively designate who they are and are not going to strike against?  If it had shut down the entire SEPTA (or is it  SEPTIC?) system, I guarantee you that the federal government would have stepped in and slapped an injunction and a 90 day cooling off period on them so fast it would have made your head swim.  There would have been mandatory arbitration imposed on both sides!!1

And, I don't buy the "working conditions" and "benefits"argument from the SEPTA workers either.  Having won the APTA award in 2012 and 13 - American Public Transit Award - given to the best run, most efficient (a laugh) transportation system in an urban area, I don't think they really have a leg to stand on.

Riders are being gouged by fares that are actually higher than those in New York City. The SEPTA subway system - The Market Street EL and The Broad Street Line - don't even run 24 hours, except on weekends, with shuttle buses taking over from approximately 1:00 AM til 5:00 AM; and there are some buses in the system that are so slow that they should provide a couch, tea and a TV to make the 30 to 40 minute wait worth your while.  Yes, you could actually watch an entire show by the time the buses that do run on time show up; and God help you on those lines (like the 16 and the 43) that take forever to show up and are almost always crowded when they do.

Phildadelphians cannot afford to take a wait and see attitude in the light of this situation, and have to be pro active - not only for getting back and forth to work, but also for making sure that those who need transportation to and from the polls on Tuesday, November 8 are not stranded.  
Image result for septa strike



So I'm recommending that the wonderful churches that populate the Philadelphia communities, press their Church Vans into action to help people get to and from the polls.  Additionally, those school buses that are not being utilized during school hours after 9:00 AM, night also be called into service.

Philly should put SEPTA on notice that when they go low and try to deprive the people, the people go high and work around them.  You cannot, must not and will not allow them to steal your power, your right to vote, your capacity to get to and form your job or place of business.

You cannot and will not allow them to single you out as the victim while the rest of Pennsylvania continues to enjoy the convenience of their Regional Rail System.

Contact your local churches, as well as citizen volunteers - and put together an ANTI-SEPTA Transit system - If you work together you can accomplish anything.  If you allow yourself to be manipulated by them, you will continue to lose.  Other organizations are consolidating their efforts, there's no reason why those in the northern reaches of Philadelphia's predominantly African American neighborhoods cannot do the same (check out this link:  http://6abc.com/traffic/penn-drexel-chop-partner-for-septa-strike-plan/1581833/ ).  This affects us all - and we should make it our business to pull together.  

And for those Senior Citizens and folks with limited mobility, it was announced at a Town Hall Meeting headed by State Representative Stephen Kinsey and City Councilwoman Cindy Bass, that you may vote using the ABSENTEE BALLOT - so that you do not lose your opportunity or right to have your voice heard and your vote  count.

And make no mistake about it - YOUR VOTE COUNTS - and of course, since this is my blog, I'm standing for HILLARY CLINTON, DWIGHT EVANS, KATIE McGINTY, etc.  You cannot afford to blow this opportunity.



At this time - a week before the election, we have sufficient opportunity to rally these resources so that Philly does not come up short in the polls.  It's up to us all to make their efforts to gouge and undermine the election and the people of Philadelphia fail.   There are shuttle buses being made available in Center City - it's time those in the Olney Transportation Center, Fern Rock, 69th Street, and other areas  that access to transportation.  If you need absentee ballots, contact your local state representative, or SETH BLUSTEIN  - Deputy Commissioner, to have them delivered to your Church, Senior Citizens Center, senior residences and other areas - they will deliver them, and personally pick them up from you to make sure they are counted.  

The bottom line to this message is this:  YOU ARE IN CHARGE, THIS IS YOUR CITY, YOU HAVE RIGHTS THAT NEED TO BE RESPECTED - DON'T LET ANY ONE RIP YOU OFF.

STAY BLESSED & 
ECLECTICALLY BLACK

Gloria 



11.03.2012

Take The Voting Machines to the Victims of Hurricane Sandy

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson Hurricane Sandy roared through here on a mission, and with a ferocity never before witnessed on the East Coast, leaving devastation and destruction in his path. New York and New Jersey sustained major damages - physically, mentally and spiritually and the aftermath is still being assessed. President Obama and Governor Chris Christie surveyed the utter destruction of the Jersey Shore. Mayor Bloomberg kept New Yorkers abreast of rescue efforts, transportation delays, and plans for reconstruction over the next days weeks and months. First responders, FEMA, and other organizations tried to make sure those hardest hit had food clothing and shelter. And everybody prayed. And as we continue to clean up after Sandy, grieve over those who have lost their lives, their homes, their loved ones. My condolences to all who were victims of this horrible force of nature. But the 800 pound gorilla in the room is how will the voting be handled come Tuesday, November 6th, 2012? With so many power outtages, so many people displaced, so many people in a state of shock and despair, how will we as a nation, get through this election? This question was posed to me by my best friend, Annie Gee in Philly, who is highly concerned about making sure the victims aren't further victimized by not being able to vote on election day. With the Rep-ugh-blicans already trying to disenfranchise so many of us, will this deter others from voting and give them an ersatz victory? Power outtages have rendered some of the original sites useless. Many of the buildings no longer exist - especially in the hardest hit areas of New Jersey, Staten Island, Far Rockaway , and affected states along the coastline, where Sandy tossed them around, pulling them off their foundations as though they were mere doll houses. John Conklin, New York Board of Elections spokesman, said changes in polling sites are possible.“We don’t know what the changes will be,” Conklin said. “The local boards in the storm areas are assessing their poll sites right now, so they’re looking at whether the poll site has power, whether it could have power by Election Day, whether it’s accessible to the general public — can voters get to it? Can the board get to it and get machines there? And is the building structurally sound?” In listening to the news reports, there seems to be no plan in place to make sure that these sites are replaced. The New York State Board of Elections also announced Thursday that it would extend application and submission deadlines for absentee ballots, and local boards in storm-impacted areas have spent much of the week surveying polling places and considering alternatives for Election Day. They've extended the deadline for voters to apply in person for abseentee ballots to Monday, November 5, and had voted to accept mailed or faxed applications for absentee ballots through Nov. 2, easing the original Oct. 30 deadline. (what?) Rockland County residents, however were unable to get to the post office for the last three days according to Louis Babcock, Republican elections commissioner for Rockland County.The board also extended the deadline to submit the ballots in person by six days, from Nov. 13 to Nov. 19. Ballots returned by mail still must be postmarked Nov. 5 but have until Nov. 19 to reach the local board. For those who can’t vote in person, they may designate another person to submit absentee ballots on their behalf to local boards before polls close Nov. 6. Polls will be open Election Day from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. But whether the various boards of elections in the most highly affected states have made preparations and allowances for people already suffering from devastating losses is still unclear. And the real question is, considering the trauma they've experienced, will people even be interested in voting? They need some additional hand holding and encouragement during this period of despair. They've got enough to contend with without having to go running around trying to jump through these latest hoops in order to vote. I think the boards of elections in each state and municipality hit by Sandy can do a lot better. So here are some suggestions that may be helpful in making sure no one's vote goes uncounted: 1) Provide mobile trucks with the voting machines on them at the emergency shelters where people still can't get back to their homes. They can be positioned at the different rescue centers and shelters on election day to provide them with an opportunity to vote. 2) Deliver the absentee ballots for early voting prior to the election day to the various emergency shelter sites, rather than requiring them to travel to postal facilities. And have postal trucks positioned at the sites so they can be mailed out directly from them. 3)Volunteers can organize vans and other modes of mass transportation to and from polling places for victims of Hurricane Sandy. 4) Where there are power outtages, generators can be installed t run the electronic voting machines; and/or paper ballots can be substituted for electronic voting; 5) Volunteers and community based organizations can coordinate with local municipalities and to make sure the election process goes smoothly. Provide those people who have lost their homes with coffee, tea, and other comfort items while they're voting. 6) FEMA and the Red Cross can provide options for voting places and opportunities for victims. 7) Additionally, since there are many who do not have radio or TV contact with the outside world, door knocking, flyers, and other modes of communication and outreach should be developed and put into effect immediately so that they are informed of their options. 8) Since the New York Marathon has been cancelled the equipment and hospitality set up they would have been used for them can be deployed to the various shelters - not just for election day - but for food and comfort stations while people are transitioning back to their homes, or into new homes. 9) This not exhaustive. There's room for more creative ideas. We definitely can't leave things to chance, or to the just bureaucrats. These plans should be put into action immediately, if not sooner. Regardless of your race, ethnicity, gender, or political pursuasion, it's much too important to leave something as important as your vote to the bureaucrats. I'm posting this on my blog: www.gloriadulanwilson.blogspot.com. Regardless of whether you are in any of the effected states or communities, or not, please pass this on, take action and make it happen. We are really all in this together, and can't allow geography or neighborhood divide us. Churches, community action groups, elected officials, need to be about it. Remember "Teamwork makes the dream work!" It will be far worse to have endured this horrible experience and then wake up on November 7th and find out that the aid and assistance you had been promised, and so desperately need, are now in the hands of heartless individuals who care more for the dollar bottom line than your welfare and recovery. Paraphrasing a time honored institution, the United Negro College Fund (UNCF): A VOTE IS A TERRIBLE THING TO WASTE. My prayers and condolences to those who were victimized by this vicious hurricane. Stay Blessed & ECLECTICALLY BLACK Gloria Dulan-Wilson