Judge expected to rule Monday on request to sequester problematic Delco ballots
After hours of testimony Saturday afternoon for an emergency motion filed on behalf of Delaware County Council Republican candidates Frank Agovino and Joe Lombardo over problems with mailed and absentee ballots, Superior Court Judge Kelly Eckel asked the lawyers to file briefs Monday before she rules.
In order to protect the integrity of the election, Michael Puppio, a lawyer for the candidates, asked Eckel to order continued sequestration of some 5,500 ballots that were mailed past the Oct. 19 date required by statute, along with about 700 other ballots that were either mailed to the wrong address or had the wrong voter’s information on the inside envelope.
A third-party vendor the county hired to print and mail the ballots, ElectionIQ LLC based in Akron, Ohio, apparently made these errors, according to James Allen, county elections director. Puppio noted that other counties have had issues with the same vendor.
Read More: Delco officials admit sending hundreds of ballots to wrong voters
Puppio said school board races could hang on a handful of ballots. Those races have become hotly contested this year as parents have taken issue with everything from Critical Race Theory to age-inappropriate books in school libraries to the fear that schools might be shut down again if there is another COVID outbreak.
People running for the school board have been working hard, knocking on doors, passing out campaign literature and getting signatures.
“Their races deserve as much transparency as the Supreme Court race does,” he said.
Some 35,000 Delco voters requested mail-in ballots for the Nov. 2 general election, Puppio said.
Allen told the Board of Election on Oct. 13 there had been a delay in sending out some of the ballots but assured them that they would be in the mail by Oct. 15. Those ballots were not sent until Oct. 25, Puppio said.
In the meantime, “people were waiting and looking for their ballots” and called the county. Delco officials blamed the post office, said Puppio.
“That was not the case,” he said. “It only takes two days for mail to go from Philadelphia to Springfield. That should have been a red flag for these people.”
“Where were (the ballots) for two weeks?” Puppio asked. “Who knows?”
Problems appeared when area voters began to receive their ballots in the mail. Some mail-in ballots went to the wrong addresses or for absentee ballots, and some had a different person’s name on the return envelope where the voter is supposed to sign.
And some people have not received the ballot they requested.
Former Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice William Lamb testified that he and his wife had applied for mail-in ballots because she is a cancer survivor and has a weakened immune system. Their ballots never came.
County officials told the retired justice to either keep waiting or hope their ballots come, to go to the Voter Services Center in Media to request a new ballot or to go to the polls and cast a provisional ballot. However, Puppio said, county officials printed new ballots and delivered them to voters in a nearby apartment complex with a three to one voter registration favoring Democrats who had not received theirs.
Some mail-in ballots went to the wrong addresses or for absentee ballots, and some had a different person’s name on the return envelope where the voter is supposed to sign.
“Nobody knows the extent or the depth of these problems,” said Puppio.
“It is not about partisanship for me,” said Puppio. “I filed not only for the candidates but for the voters.”
Linda Stein is News Editor at Delaware Valley Journal.
This articles was republished with permission from the Delaware Valley Journal