Civics
Gov-Politics

Office of Maricopa County Recorder Sent Wrong Letter to 83,000 Voters

83,000 voters in Arizona received a letter from the Office of the Maricopa County Recorder stating that if they didn't respond, their name would be moved to an inactive voter list.

The Office of the Maricopa County Recorder mailed about 83,000 voters an incorrect letter warning them that they would be moved to the inactive voter list if they didn’t respond, a mistake the Recorder’s Office blamed on a printing error.

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The voters, roughly 3% of the total registered voters in Maricopa County, were supposed to receive a different letter entirely, according to Sam Stone, chief of staff in the Recorder’s Office.

The letter’s recipients were incorrectly told that the Recorder’s Office had received notification from the Arizona Department of Transportation that they had obtained a driver’s license in a different state. The voters were also told they would be moved to the inactive voter list if they didn’t respond within 90 days.

These voters will not be moved to the inactive voter list, Stone confirmed.

The owner of the print shop could not immediately be reached for comment.

The voters were supposed to be sent a letter telling them that they are among those caught in a state error and will need to provide their proof of citizenship in order to continue to be able to vote a full ballot.

Under state law, Arizona voters must provide citizenship proof to vote in state and local elections. But the state announced last summer that they had not collected the citizenship proof from about 200,000 voters statewide. Some Arizona counties have started notifying these voters in the mail of the need to prove their citizenship, and Maricopa County’s mailing was supposed to do so as well.

It’s unclear when the correct letter will be sent to the affected voters.

Jen Fifield is a reporter for Votebeat based in Arizona. Contact Jen at jfifield@votebeat.org.

This article was originally published by Votebeat, a nonprofit news organization covering local election administration and voting access. Learn more about third-party content on AntifaHQ.com.

I cover Phoenix and Maricopa County government and politics. It's my pleasure to cover my hometown and my community. After graduating from Arizona State University's Cronkite School in 2009, I moved to the D.C. area, where I first covered government and education for local papers in Maryland and then covered trends in state policy across the U.S. for Stateline, a journalism project of The Pew Charitable Trusts. In 2018, I landed a job at The Arizona Republic and came home. My work has been published in The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, PBS NewsHour and other outlets. Regional press associations in Arizona and Maryland have recognized my investigative and feature reporting, as well as my coverage of local politics and education. I was a City University of New York Ravitch Fiscal Reporting Fellow in 2015 and a National Press Foundation Paul Miller Reporting Fellow in 2017.

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