Sandy-hit NY, NJ scramble to arrange alternate voting sites


New York, Nov 6: A day before the US presidential elections, officials in New York and New Jersey, the two worst hit states by hurricane Sandy, were scrambling to put in place alternate voting sites to enable millions disrupted by the storm to cast their ballot.

City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said election officials were grappling with "real problems" amid continued power outages, a partially restored public transport system and freezing temperatures that made voting the last of the concerns of residents impacted by Sandy.

Due to the damage caused to polling stations in the wake of Sandy, thousand of registered voters in New York will be forced to go to polling sites different from the one they had been assigned to, Bloomberg said.

Local elections officials are having "real problems and we have got to make sure that everybody can vote," Bloomberg told reporters here yesterday.

"The Board of Elections tells us that about 143,000 voters in all five boroughs will be assigned to poll sites different from their usual site.

"Our NYC Service volunteers are letting many New Yorkers know about their temporary polling places," he said, adding that it is going to be critical that the Board of Elections communicates the new polling arrangements to their poll workers.

The city has identified alternative sites for those polling stations that have been rendered unoperational due to the storm.

A total of over 60 alternate sites have been identified, including three in Manhattan, three in the Bronx, two on Staten Island, 28 in Queens and 25 in Brooklyn.

Bloomberg was critical of the Board of Elections' preparedness in the past saying officials would have to "work hard to make sure that poll workers and voters know where they're supposed to go on Election Day".

Officials across the region are taking unprecedented steps to ensure residents are able to cast their vote on the November 6 election, which promises to be a close race between President Barack Obama and his Republican rival Mitt Romney.

In states like New Jersey, where the massive storm made landfall and caused significant damage, military trucks will be deployed to serve as polling stations.

"In places where the polling stations have been damaged, voters will find a Department of Defence truck with a well-situated National Guardsman and a big sign saying, 'Vote Here' ".

"There is no reason not to vote," New Jersey's Secretary of State, Lieutenant Governor Kim Guadagno, who is responsible for overseeing the division of Elections, said.

The New Jersey Department of State directed county elections officials to permit registered voters displaced by Sandy to vote electronically.

Posted by Unknown on 04:04. Filed under . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0

0 comments for Sandy-hit NY, NJ scramble to arrange alternate voting sites

Leave comment

ISTV News

Courtesy:ISTV Imphal

FLICKR PHOTO STREAM

2010 BlogNews Magazine. All Rights Reserved. - Designed by SimplexDesign