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UTA could lose early voting site in November election

UTA may lose out on an early voting site for a second time in two years after the Tarrant County Commissioners Court last week failed to approve a list of early voting locations for the 2024 November election. College campuses like UTA were included in the list that failed to win approval. After a debate, the resulting vote was 2-2, with Commissioner Manny Ramirez absent. In past years, the Maverick Activities Center was an active voting location but was not available for early voting during the 2023 November constitutional amendment election, according to previous Shorthorn reporting. However, in March the MAC was a voting site for the primary election. At last Wednesday's meeting, County Judge Tim O’Hare questioned the need for two Arlington early voting sites within a mile of each other, referring to the Tarrant County Sub-Courthouse on Abram Street and the MAC. He said using both sites would be “a waste of money and manpower.” “A ton of the housing that UTA students use is actually closer to the Arlington Courthouse than it is the campus,” O’Hare said. The distance from the University Center to the courthouse is .8 miles or an 18-minute walk, according to Google Maps. Commissioner Alisa Simmons, who voted for the original list, said due to Arlington’s lack of public transport, students without a car would take an hour to walk to the courthouse, vote and walk back. While the courthouse sees more voters, Clinton Ludwig, Tarrant County Elections Administrator, said both locations are high volume and UTA’s polling site generally falls within the top 50 percent of all locations for voter turnout. Early voting lasts for 12 days. Ludwig said the wait times for polling locations will be available online, and having two sites nearby allows voters to divert when one is too busy. Commissioner Roy Charles Brooks said college polling locations were adopted in 2020 to make voting easier for students and typically have a high turnout. “To eliminate them, I think, would be an act of voter suppression,” Brooks said. O’Hare questioned if any other voting locations in Tarrant County were geared towards helping a specific demographic vote. “I don't believe that’s the role of the Commissioners Court, to make sure we get more of this group to vote or more of that group to vote,” he said. “That's up to voters, political parties [and] candidates.” Brooks responded that it’s not about favoring any group, it’s about making voting more accessible, which he said was the Commissioner Court’s job. Bill Hanna, Tarrant County public information officer, said a proposed list of early voting sites will be considered at another meeting. Despite differing opinions on early voting locations, the commissioners voted 3-1 on Election Day polling sites which included UTA. O’Hare voted against the list. @PMalkomes news-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu

UTA could lose early voting site in November election

Voting at the Maverick Activities Center will open at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. March 5. 

UTA may lose out on an early voting site for a second time in two years after the Tarrant County Commissioners Court last week failed to approve a list of early voting locations for the 2024 November election. College campuses like UTA were included in the list that failed to win approval.

After a debate, the resulting vote was 2-2, with Commissioner Manny Ramirez absent.

In past years, the Maverick Activities Center was an active voting location but was not available for early voting during the 2023 November constitutional amendment election, according to previous Shorthorn reporting. However, in March the MAC was a voting site for the primary election.

At last Wednesday's meeting, County Judge Tim O’Hare questioned the need for two Arlington early voting sites within a mile of each other, referring to the Tarrant County Sub-Courthouse on Abram Street and the MAC. He said using both sites would be “a waste of money and manpower.”

“A ton of the housing that UTA students use is actually closer to the Arlington Courthouse than it is the campus,” O’Hare said.

The distance from the University Center to the courthouse is .8 miles or an 18-minute walk, according to Google Maps. Commissioner Alisa Simmons, who voted for the original list, said due to Arlington’s lack of public transport, students without a car would take an hour to walk to the courthouse, vote and walk back.

While the courthouse sees more voters, Clinton Ludwig, Tarrant County Elections Administrator, said both locations are high volume and UTA’s polling site generally falls within the top 50 percent of all locations for voter turnout. Early voting lasts for 12 days.

Ludwig said the wait times for polling locations will be available online, and having two sites nearby allows voters to divert when one is too busy.

Commissioner Roy Charles Brooks said college polling locations were adopted in 2020 to make voting easier for students and typically have a high turnout.

“To eliminate them, I think, would be an act of voter suppression,” Brooks said.

UTA could lose early voting site in November election

The Maverick Activities Center transformed the basketball court into the All Majors Job and Internship Fair on Sept. 20. 

O’Hare questioned if any other voting locations in Tarrant County were geared towards helping a specific demographic vote.

“I don't believe that’s the role of the Commissioners Court, to make sure we get more of this group to vote or more of that group to vote,” he said. “That's up to voters, political parties [and] candidates.”

Brooks responded that it’s not about favoring any group, it’s about making voting more accessible, which he said was the Commissioner Court’s job.

Bill Hanna, Tarrant County public information officer, said a proposed list of early voting sites will be considered at another meeting.

Despite differing opinions on early voting locations, the commissioners voted 3-1 on Election Day polling sites which included UTA. O’Hare voted against the list.

@PMalkomes

news-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu

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