Sorry about the length of this post, but this article was only available
after registering at the newspaper website..... I wonder if Secretary of
State J. Kenneth Blackwell is Democrat or Republic... Or maybe just related
to G. Bush :-)  At the bottom of this post is a link to the Secretary of
State website.



Gary


Blackwell rulings rile voting advocates
Boards of elections told to strictly follow two provisions
By Jim Bebbington and Laura Bischoff

Dayton Daily News

DAYTON | Voters-rights advocates are criticizing two recent decisions by
Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell that they say will unfairly
limit some people's ability to vote Nov. 2.
  
Blackwell's office has told county boards of elections to follow strictly
two provisions in Ohio election law:

.One requires Ohio voter registration cards be printed on thick, 80-pound
stock paper.

.The other ordered boards to strictly interpret the rules regarding
provisional ballots, the ones cast by voters who move before the election
but are still registered in Ohio.

The paper-stock issue is frustrating Montgomery County Board of Elections
officials, who have a backlog of registrations to complete. If they get an
Ohio voter registration card on paper thinner than required, they are
mailing a new card out to the voter. But if they still have the backlog by
the registration deadline, Oct. 4, voters will not have another chance to
get their correct paperwork in, said Steve Harsman, deputy director of the
Montgomery County board.

"There is just no reason to use 80-pound paper," Harsman said.

In Montgomery County there is a backlog of around 4,000 registrations,
Harsman said. A few hundred could be affected by this provision, he said.

Cuyahoga County board of elections officials are ignoring the edict because
they have already had an avalanche of new registrations submitted on forms
printed on newsprint in The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer.

"We don't have a micrometer at each desk to check the weight of the paper,"
said Michael Vu, director of the Cuyahoga County Board.

Blackwell's office has given the Cuyahoga board a special dispensation to
accept the newsprint registration forms. The requirement is because the
forms are designed to be mailed like post-cards and must be thick enough to
survive mechanical sorters at the U.S. Post Office, according to Blackwell's
spokesman Carlo LoParo.

"Our directive stands and it is specifically in place to protect new
registrants to make sure the forms are not destroyed," LoParo said.

Confusing the matter further is a national registration form available off
the Internet at the federal Elections Assistance Agency. That form must be
accepted by Ohio boards regardless of what it is printed on, Blackwell has
said.

The heavy-weight paper was a requirement when the cards were kept for years,
were used to keep track of when a person voted, and were the main way to
check signatures to combat voter fraud and verify petitions. But many
boards, including both Montgomery and Cuyahoga, scan the signatures into a
computer database and no longer record voting history on the cards.

The League of Women Voters of Ohio on Thursday called on Blackwell to
clarify his position. League national president Kay Maxwell said she knows
of no other states that are requiring the 80-pound paper stock for voter
registration cards. "This is the first I've heard of it," she said on
Thursday in Columbus.

The other directive forbids poll workers from giving a provisional ballot
unless the person can prove they live in that precinct. Peg Rosenfield,
spokeswoman for the league, said she interprets federal to be less
restrictive. Rosenfield says people who show up at the wrong precinct should
be given a ballot and allowed to vote on the non-local races.


The article can be found here, but the Dayton Daily News requires
registration to access their content...
http://tinyurl.com/687xn


Here is a link to the Secretary of States website and the directive:  
http://www.sos.state.oh.us/sos/news/index3.htm



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