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Major Michigan city decides against verifying mail ballots early, potentially slowing results

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Major Michigan city decides against verifying mail ballots early, potentially slowing results
News

News

Major Michigan city decides against verifying mail ballots early, potentially slowing results

2024-10-25 06:47 Last Updated At:06:50

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — A decision by the elections clerk in Michigan's third-largest city is raising concerns of a slowdown in reporting election night results in a county that is being targeted by both presidential campaigns and includes a competitive congressional race.

The city clerk in Warren, who also runs elections in the Macomb County city, has opted against using a new state law that allows election offices to start processing mail ballots before Election Day. The vast majority of voting jurisdictions in the presidential battleground state are taking advantage of the law, which allows them to start verifying signatures and other identifying information eight days early.

City Clerk Sonja Djurovic Buffa said that in light of other changes taking effect for election administrators this year, such as expanded early voting, she decided to process mail ballots on Election Day, just as her office has done for years.

She said processing those ballots at the same time is more efficient and suggested that processing them before Election Day opens the possibility of results being leaked early.

“Accuracy is the number one priority for me, and then speed is second,” Buffa, who has worked in elections for more than two decades, said in a written statement.

Under the law, passed as part of a broader 2022 citizen initiative that also expanded early voting, municipalities with populations of 5,000 or more have the option to start processing absentee ballots early but don't have to. Results would not be reported until after polls closed, the same as in previous years.

Macomb County Clerk Anthony Forlini, a Republican, said he is disappointed by Buffa’s decision, saying it could hold up unofficial results on election night. He said people in Michigan and across the country will be looking to their county for results in races that are “razor thin.”

Macomb County is part of suburban Detroit and is considered important to winning statewide elections. It also includes part of Michigan’s 10th Congressional District, where voters will settle a competitive rematch between incumbent John James, a Republican, and Democratic challenger Carl Marlinga.

Warren, its most populous city, is a Democratic stronghold within a county that has trended Republican in recent years. Trump won Macomb County handily in 2016 and 2020.

The deadline has passed for clerks to notify the Secretary of State's office if they will be preprocessing absentee ballots. Angela Benander, a spokesperson for Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, said 245 municipalities are taking advantage of the new law allowing early processing. Smaller towns get a one-day head start, rather than eight days.

“More notably – every one of the top 15 largest jurisdictions, except Warren, will preprocess,” Benander said in a written statement.

Michael Siegrist, clerk in Canton Township, said not processing mail ballots ahead of time in such a populated city will mean a longer wait to know winners in certain races. He added that the need for instant gratification on election night makes it harder for the public to wait and could open the door to misinformation.

“Nature abhors a vacuum, and people will fill that vacuum,” Siegrist said on a call with reporters.

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Associated Press writer Christina A. Cassidy in Atlanta contributed to this report.

A drop slot for voting ballots and absentee applications is shown outside of the Warren City Hall complex Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024, in Warren, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

A drop slot for voting ballots and absentee applications is shown outside of the Warren City Hall complex Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024, in Warren, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

A drop slot for voting ballots and absentee applications is shown outside of the Warren City Hall complex Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024, in Warren, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

A drop slot for voting ballots and absentee applications is shown outside of the Warren City Hall complex Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024, in Warren, Mich. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — The death of the world’s most famous grizzly bear on a highway in western Wyoming has made an orphan of its cub, but biologists say the youngster’s chances of surviving -- even with a chilly mountain winter coming on -- are good.

"High chances of survival going forward for the yearling, even being on his own,” said Grand Teton National Park bear biologist Justin Schwabedissen.

It should be reassurance to the many worrying.

After grizzly No. 399 died in a vehicle strike Tuesday south of Jackson Hole, her male cub's fate has been a big topic of discussion on a popular Facebook page dedicated to following the bear and her previous cubs. Evidently unhurt by the crash, the cub hasn't been seen since.

Some online commenters say the cub — known informally as “Rowdy” or “Spirit” — should be found and rescued.

Others agree with the usual approach of wildlife managers: Don't interfere with nature. There are no plans to capture the cub but wildlife managers are watching the area to keep it away from the road if need be, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman Joe Szuszwalak said Thursday.

Had the cub been born last winter, survival would be much less likely.

But this youngster's age of nearly two years, its healthy size and the season — almost time to den up, safe and snug for the winter — are factors working in his favor, according to Schwabedissen.

Perils for grizzlies in the region besides highways include getting shot when the smell of game carcasses draw them into unintentional confrontations with elk hunters. Others are killed when they acquire too much of a taste for apples, dog food, garbage and other human sources of food near homes and become a risk for people.

This 28-year-old momma bear was the oldest known reproducing female grizzly in the Yellowstone ecosystem. Starting in 2004, she birthed 18 cubs in eight litters and had a penchant for hanging out with them near roads in Grand Teton.

Such behavior made her a hit with tourists, sometimes drawing hundreds at a time and causing traffic jams. Dozens of wildlife photographers and scientists — she's named for a numbered tag they put in her ear — watched her as well.

She's not the only famous animal in the region. Last summer, a confirmed sighting of a rare white buffalo calf in Yellowstone stirred widespread excitement.

Just a handful of people saw the bison calf soon after it was born and there have been no sightings since. But according to Native American legend, the calf fulfills an old prophesy and foretells better times ahead.

In 2009, a 725-pound (330-kilogram) Yellowstone bull elk known by his ear tag number drew attention when he died at a ripe old age of at least 15. Famous for getting aggressive with other males — and cars — elk No. 6 suffocated after tripping on a fence and getting pinned between rocks on his back.

Other Yellowstone-area wildlife are known only in death, such as a wolf which a man ran down with a snowmobile and brought into a bar in western Wyoming before killing it last winter.

Grizzly No. 399 and her cub leave a more uplifting legacy: helping people appreciate grizzlies as their numbers in the Yellowstone region continue to rebound from just over 100 in the 1970s to around 1,000 today.

Some of her offspring have had cubs that are now much older than her youngest who's now out there alone, fending for himself.

“She truly was an icon and ambassador for not only for of her species but also the wildness of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem,” Grand Teton Superintendent Chip Jenkins said.

In this undated photo provided by Grand Teton National Park a grizzly bear known as No. 399 stands along side a cub. (C. Adams/Grand Teton National Park via AP)

In this undated photo provided by Grand Teton National Park a grizzly bear known as No. 399 stands along side a cub. (C. Adams/Grand Teton National Park via AP)

In this undated photo provided by Grand Teton National Park a grizzly bear known as No. 399 walks along side a cub. (C. Adams/Grand Teton National Park via AP)

In this undated photo provided by Grand Teton National Park a grizzly bear known as No. 399 walks along side a cub. (C. Adams/Grand Teton National Park via AP)

In this undated photo provided by Grand Teton National Park a grizzly bear known as No. 399 walks along side a cub. (C. Adams/Grand Teton National Park via AP)

In this undated photo provided by Grand Teton National Park a grizzly bear known as No. 399 walks along side a cub. (C. Adams/Grand Teton National Park via AP)

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