Denver and three other counties have been placed on an election watch list because of serious voting problems last November, and the state will send monitors to help local officials find solutions, Secretary of State Mike Coffman said Monday. Monitors will be sent to Denver, Pueblo, Douglas and Montrose county election offices as soon as arrangements can be made, Coffman said. Coffman said Denver and Douglas counties were placed on the list because of long lines at voting centers last November.
Pueblo was placed on the list because election officials broke the law and didn't verify signatures, and Montrose
However, four out of 64 counties had major problems," Coffman said. The top election officials in all four counties are no longer in office mdash;one resigned, one retired and two were term-limited. Coffman said that provides an opportunity for change.
Alton Dillard, spokesman for the Denver Election Commission, said he was unaware of the watch list. Denver mdash;the state's largest city, with a consolidated city-county government mdash;has a municipal election in May, but that will be conducted by mail, avoiding at least some of November's problems. Coffman said Attorney General John Suthers told him he has the authority under state election laws to set up the watch list and send in
(Post / Hyoung Chang)
Final results were delayed for a week when misprinted absentee ballots forced officials to sort them by hand and a counting scanner broke down. Denver got so far behind that police officers were called in to sort ballots. In Montrose, a shortage of experienced poll workers working with new voting machines was blamed for programming errors, failures to test the machines and failure to secure the machines.
Coffman said Pueblo needs to set up a system to verify signatures on absentee ballots and Douglas County needs to reduce delays that prevented some people from being able to vote.
