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Dean Logan, Los Angeles County Registrar‑Recorder/County Clerk, briefed the Board of Supervisors on Oct. 7 about preparations for a Nov. 4 statewide special election called by the Legislature; the county has begun mailing ballots, will open 251 vote centers and operate 418 official drop boxes, and said the state provided an upfront allocation to cover estimated election costs.
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The election, an unscheduled statewide vote on a proposed constitutional amendment affecting congressional districting, required a rapid operational response. County staff described the vote‑by‑mail program, multilingual and accessibility services at vote centers, security planning and post‑election counting procedures, and urged voters to use drop boxes or allow seven days for U.S. Postal Service delivery if mailing ballots.
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Registrar Dean Logan said the county had 75 days to prepare after the governor signed the legislation and that the state provided an upfront funding estimate for Los Angeles County — roughly $67 million — with a carryforward provision if county expenses come in under the state allocation.
Logan described operational details: ballots were mailed beginning Oct. 2; voters who do not receive a ballot should check the county’s lookup tools; 251 vote centers are planned, with 111 opening Oct. 25 for an extended in‑person voting period and another 140 opening in the final four days before election day; official secure ballot drop boxes (418) remain available countywide and are emptied daily; equipment at every vote center includes multilingual audio ballots in the county’s 18 required languages and accessibility features.
Logan emphasized situational awareness and urged voters who feel uncomfortable at a particular site to use another vote center or a drop box, noting that the county will coordinate with law enforcement and provide trained county troubleshooters and de‑escalation staff to respond to disruptions.
The board accepted the report; supervisors also moved the board’s Nov. 4 meeting time to 11 a.m. to accommodate election day scheduling.
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The registrar said the county will continue daily public updates during the post‑election canvas and livestream ballot processing at the tally center. Officials urged voters to sign up for the county’s ballot‑tracking service and to drop ballots in official boxes or mail them at least seven days before Nov. 4 to ensure they arrive on time.