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Hall County elections board hears legal opinion in dispute with commission

By Austin Eller News Director
Posted 6:15PM on Tuesday 19th April 2022 ( 2 years ago )

The Hall County Board of Elections at their meeting on Tuesday heard the opinion of a legal expert regarding their ongoing dispute with the Hall County Board of Commissioners.

The presentation from attorney Ken Jarrard of Jarrard and Davis, LLP, came several months after the Hall County Commission submitted a piece of proposed local legislation that would alter how Hall County elections board members are chosen.

Hall County Attorney Van Stephens said in a December 2021 Board of Elections meeting that a 2018 Georgia Supreme Court ruling made the board's current selection process unconstitutional.

The proposed legislation would require both the local Democratic and Republican parties to nominate seven people to serve on the board. The county commission would then choose two from each list. Commissioners would continue to appoint the chairman.

Currently, the two political parties name two people to the board and the commission appoints the chairman.

Jarrard said Tuesday many other local election boards across Georgia use the same selection process that Hall County currently uses. The State of Georgia Board of Elections uses a similar selection process, according to Jarrard.

"If in fact, that method is unconstitutional, then the issue is much bigger than Hall County," Jarrard said.

Jarrard said the recently passed SB202 contained the makeup of the state election board, a makeup that was not changed by the Georgia General Assembly.

Jarrard said that while Hall County believes the elections board's current selection process is unconstitutional, the change the Hall County Commission has suggested could be considered unconstitutional as well.

"It is a statewide issue, and needs to be addressed at the statewide level," Jarrard said. "I do not believe the local legislation that is being advanced will cure it."

Hall County Board of Elections Chairman Tom Smiley said that while there has been a fear that the elections board could be sued over their selection process, he believes they could still be sued under the changes in the local legislation.

"This is not a matter that the Hall County legal department needs to be addressing," Smiley said. "This is a matter that the state needs to be addressing. The Attorney General needs to address it."

The 2022 session of the Georgia General Assembly ended early in April. Lawmakers did not take any action on the proposed local legislation during the 2022 session. Lawmakers will not be able to pursue any further action on the legislation until the 2023 legislative session.

"We continue to operate exactly as we were commissioned to operate in 2014 by our enabling legislation," Smiley said. "We have some time to decide what we're going to do. I suppose that's where we stand now. I think it's best for us just to take some time to digest this, to discuss it further, to be prepared in the coming months."

 

Ken Jarrard presents his legal opinion to the Hall County Board of Elections on April 19, 2022, regarding a piece of proposed local legislation from the Hall County Commission.

http://accesswdun.com/article/2022/4/1095662/hall-county-elections-board-hears-legal-opinion-in-dispute-with-commission

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