When the Board of Elections in majority-black Randolph County, Georgia introduced a proposal earlier this month to close seven of the county’s nine polling places, many residents were angry. Some even accused the Board of trying to hide the proposal.
The truth is less damning: Even if the Board wanted to hide the plan, it would have been prevented from doing so by Georgia law, which required the county agency to publish two notices about it in a local newspaper. And the notices worked exactly as the law intended, drawing widespread attention to the proposal. In fact, it briefly received national attention, with many characterizing the plan as a Republican effort to suppress the African-American vote before this fall’s election. Nevertheless, when local activists accused the Board of a cover-up, some national media outlets took the bait. For instance, here’s how the Washington Post described the notice process:
AP Reports on “Fight Against Publishing Notices in Newspapers”
On the final day of 2016, the Associated Press provided subscribing news organizations with a brief story about the “fight against publishing notices in newspapers”. The piece covered Gov. Chris Christie’s stalled attempt to eliminate newspaper notice in New Jersey, and also mentioned new public notice laws passed last year in Arizona and Massachusetts.
“I think with the state legislatures it’s just simply a matter of saving a few bucks,” Kip Cassino, a media analyst at Borrell Associates, told AP reporter Josh Cornfield. “It’s going to keep coming up and I think before the next decade ends, I don’t think you’re going to see the legals in newspapers anymore.”