After long lines and electioneering complaints, Escondido to send letters seeking vote‑center and poll‑worker changes
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City staff recommended and council approved sending letters to the state legislature and county supervisors after problems at a Nov. 4 special election vote center; recommendations include aligning special‑election vote‑center ratios with general elections and asking county supervisors to review stagnant poll‑worker stipends.
City staff reported on Escondido’s experience with the California Voter’s Choice Act (VCA) and recommended several administrative and advocacy steps after problems at the Nov. 4 special election at the Park Avenue Community Center.
The clerk said special‑election vote‑center rules provide one vote center per 30,000 registered voters—three times fewer than the one per 10,000 rule for general elections—and that the Park Avenue site experienced long lines, restroom access problems and electioneering near entrances. The clerk said the city will coordinate with the county Registrar of Voters (ROV) to reserve a larger space (the auditorium) for future elections and serve as a local ombudsman for site selection.
Staff relayed the registrar’s concern that poll‑worker stipends are unchanged and may hamper recruitment. The clerk recommended two advocacy letters: one to the state legislature asking that special‑election vote‑center ratios be aligned with general elections and corresponding funding be considered, and another to the county Board of Supervisors asking a review of poll‑worker stipends.
Councilmembers described on‑site issues at the Nov. 4 election: competition over where to measure the 100‑foot no‑electioneering boundary, confusion about where observers may stand, understaffed check‑in points and delays assisting disabled voters. Council approved the recommended letters and the clerk’s proposed role as a local ombudsman to improve coordination with the ROV.
What happens next: The council authorized staff to send the draft letters to the state legislature and county supervisors and to continue working with the ROV to improve site selection and operations for the June primary and upcoming elections.
