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Senate Bill 1479

Dear Editor, April 10, Arizona reached a significant

Attention Golfers! Grab your clubs and come make

KINGMAN – The Kingman Powerhouse Kiwanis Club is

Hanes takes plea in drive-by shooting event

KINGMAN – A Kingman man who fired upon

Hotel Beale neon sign relighting ceremony set

KINGMAN – Hotel Beale was built in 1898,

Senior takes plea for drug transportation

KINGMAN – A Kingman man arrested in a

Meth dealer gets five years

LAKE HAVASU CITY – Another five-year prison term

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Arizona governor orders more funding for elections, paid leave for state workers serving at polls

PHOENIX (AP) – Millions of dollars in federal pandemic relief funds will go toward bolstering the operation of Arizona elections, Gov. Katie Hobbs announced at the end of October.

The Democratic governor said around $2.3 million from the American Rescue Plan Act will be earmarked to “support free, fair and secure elections.”

Half of the money will pay for a state elections fellowship program, temporary support staff and consultants with election expertise across various counties. Counties that have had significant worker turnover will be the priority. The rest will go to a voter registration database and administration initiatives for the 2024 general election.

Hobbs also issued three election-related executive orders including paid “civic duty leave” for state employees serving as poll workers.

The other executive actions will make state buildings available as polling sites and mandate state agencies to offer voter registration information and assistance.

Hobbs is acting on recommendations from a review by a bipartisan task force she established in January. The task force formed after a particularly contentious 2022 midterm election where two Republican-leaning counties dragged their feet or initially refused to certify results. Officials at the time said they were doing it to protest voting issues in Maricopa County. Some GOP officials blamed the state’s most populous county for losses in top races including for governor and the U.S. Senate.

The task force was made up of state election and security experts, voting rights advocates, lawmakers and current and former election officials.

They made 16 policy recommendations in total. Improving poll worker recruitment, improving voter registration across counties, ballot return interference and an election worker code of conduct were among the issues addressed.

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Arizona governor orders more funding for elections, paid leave for state workers serving at polls

PHOENIX (AP) – Millions of dollars in federal pandemic relief funds will go toward bolstering the operation of Arizona elections, Gov. Katie Hobbs announced at the end of October.

The Democratic governor said around $2.3 million from the American Rescue Plan Act will be earmarked to “support free, fair and secure elections.”

Half of the money will pay for a state elections fellowship program, temporary support staff and consultants with election expertise across various counties. Counties that have had significant worker turnover will be the priority. The rest will go to a voter registration database and administration initiatives for the 2024 general election.

Hobbs also issued three election-related executive orders including paid “civic duty leave” for state employees serving as poll workers.

The other executive actions will make state buildings available as polling sites and mandate state agencies to offer voter registration information and assistance.

Hobbs is acting on recommendations from a review by a bipartisan task force she established in January. The task force formed after a particularly contentious 2022 midterm election where two Republican-leaning counties dragged their feet or initially refused to certify results. Officials at the time said they were doing it to protest voting issues in Maricopa County. Some GOP officials blamed the state’s most populous county for losses in top races including for governor and the U.S. Senate.

The task force was made up of state election and security experts, voting rights advocates, lawmakers and current and former election officials.

They made 16 policy recommendations in total. Improving poll worker recruitment, improving voter registration across counties, ballot return interference and an election worker code of conduct were among the issues addressed.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *