Fulton County reverses controversial changes to polling sites

Toni Kuhn, left, hands her voter card to Birdel Jackson III at Alpharetta Fire Station 82 during an election in April. (DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM)

Toni Kuhn, left, hands her voter card to Birdel Jackson III at Alpharetta Fire Station 82 during an election in April. (DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM)

Fulton County officials on Monday reversed a decision that would have changed polling locations in several majority African-American precincts, effectively bowing to the wishes of community advocates concerned about voter confusion ahead of municipal elections in November.

The decision came after the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia sued the county Board of Registration and Elections claiming it did not give the public enough notice about the changes before it initially voted in mid-July to approve them.

“We heard from members of the public that they would be very inconvenienced and disrupted by certain changes,” said Mary Carole Cooney, the chairwoman of the elections board. “We decided that we would not change anything prior to the November election. We can always revisit that” after the election is complete, she said.

The changes in question would have affected more than 5,500 voters in predominately African-American communities, including those who vote at Harper Archer Middle and Towns Elementary schools in the Adamsville area; at the John Birdine neighborhood facility; and at Fickett Elementary School in southwest Atlanta.

County officials said they proposed the changes to make it easier for people to figure out where to vote and to reflect a decline in Election Day usage of the precincts as the popularity of early voting has surged across Fulton.

Advocates, however, had warned that those changes in particular could make it harder for some people to vote. In a letter to the board in July, the national Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, on behalf of several Georgia groups, said they believed officials had not fully considered "the significant burden and negative, disparate impact the closure of these polling locations will have on low-income and minority voters."

Other community advocates told the board Monday that they felt officials needed to talk more with neighbors and other residents who vote at the locations in question. They said officials had not fully considered the impact on voters — including the elderly — who typically take public transportation or need help getting to the polls in order to cast their ballots.

“Let’s just leave it the way it is now to lessen the confusion,” said Melissa Wardley, who teaches civics classes in the Adamsville area. Residents understand the importance of voting, she said, but making the changes now was “just too soon.”

“When you change the polling locations,” she said, “that makes it twice as hard to get people out.”

While the board reversed itself on those changes, it did approve other proposals to tweak precinct boundary lines and change the names of precincts in other parts of the county.


Coming soon

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution is getting ready to launch a new premium experience for readers across the state who care about Georgia politics, policy and state news. PoliticallyGeorgia will bring you reporting you can’t get anywhere else, thought-provoking opinion writing, and tools to help you navigate the world of government and make your voice heard.