County Election Officials Want State To Unfreeze Funds For Election | WFAE 90.7 - Charlotte's NPR News Source
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Charlotte Area County Election Officials Want State To Unfreeze Funds For Election WFAE | By Lisa Miller Published February 8, 2012 at 12:00 PM EST Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
http://66.225.205.104/LM20120208.mp3
Election officials in counties across North Carolina are asking lawmakers to release $4 million in federal funds to help pay for the 2012 elections. Counties largely bear the cost of paying
for elections. After the 2000 presidential election came down to a recount in Florida, Congress passed the Help America Vote Act, or HAVA. That gave states money to upgrade voting systems.
North Carolina has about $4 million in that fund. The thing is to get that money, State Board of Elections Director Gary Bartlett says the state has to keep its own election funding at the
same level as 1999. But lawmakers decided to cut election money this year. "To completely comply with these grant requirements they would've had to put up a maintenance effort of an
additional $668,000 and they said because we already met HAVA requirement we wouldn't fund it," says Bartlett. Bartlett says state lawmakers wanted to give the money back to the federal
government. Instead, he convinced them to hold onto it with the hope that some day the state would be able to take advantage of it. The letter was signed by a bipartisan group of election
officials in nearly all of the state's counties. They say cash-strapped counties need the federal money to provide adequate early voting facilities. Mecklenburg County has used about
$350,000 in HAVA funds each year over the past few years to maintain its voting machines. The county's director of elections Michael Dickerson says in 2008 the funds allowed the county to
open a handful of early voting sites. "It was a great use of the money for us and we were able to get all those folks to vote early and not have to worry about long lines and buying
additional voting equipment for a presidential election," says Dickerson. If the HAVA money remains frozen, counties will have to decide whether to pick up the tab.