Committee hears complaints about Nov. 2025 polling problems; staff outline fixes
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City election officials and councilors discussed parking shortages at Rebecca Johnson, a possible move of the MLK site, a late-opening poll at Highland House, postcard notices following polling-location changes and staffing/volunteer contingencies; staff described the formal site-change process and pledged follow-up meetings.
Springfield election officials told the General Government Committee on Feb. 5 that a cluster of operational problems at some Nov. 2025 polling locations likely affected voter access and that the office is pursuing fixes and follow-up meetings.
Council members and residents raised several recurring complaints: lack of parking at the Rebecca Johnson site (double precinct 4A/4B) that led some voters to leave without voting; the administration of an in-service day at a school used as a polling place; voter confusion after the JC Williams Center polling site moved to Brookings School; and a Highland House location where poll workers and a police officer could not access the building on time. The committee also heard concerns about volunteer shortages and machines not being ready when polls were scheduled to open.
Election staff said the Rebecca Johnson parking problem arose when the school hosted in-service activities at multiple sites that day and staff only learned of the conflict after receiving calls. The office has an established liaison process with central office custodians and said it will press the superintendent’s office to minimize in-service scheduling conflicts on election days. "We have about 41 polling sites and at least half are school locations," the election official said.
On the JC Williams relocation, staff described the formal procedure: identify a site within the ward and precinct boundaries, negotiate logistics with the host, bring the change to City Council for approval, and then mail postcards to each voter in the moved precinct no later than 20 days before the election. For JC Williams the office posted signage at the old site and Facebook notices in addition to the required postcards.
The Highland House incident, staff said, was not a staffing shortage but a failure by the property manager or custodian to open the building on time. Equipment that had been set up inside was inaccessible while poll workers and a police officer stood outside; staff said they have contacted the property manager and put measures in place to prevent recurrence. "Anything less than that is unacceptable," an election official said about opening delays.
Committee members requested further briefings. The chair scheduled follow-up meetings that will include additional witnesses (the Highland House property manager and the administrator at the MLK site were suggested) and said outstanding issues such as voting machines that malfunctioned, absentee/mail ballot concerns and election-result questions will be addressed in subsequent sessions.
What happens next: the committee will hold additional meetings dedicated to election operations, with staff returning with proposed steps for advance checks with host sites, stronger site-change notice practices and options for contingency staffing if volunteers are short.
