Current:Home > NewsAlaska did not provide accessible voting for those with disabilities, US Justice Department alleges -AssetLink
Alaska did not provide accessible voting for those with disabilities, US Justice Department alleges
View
Date:2025-04-18 17:06:54
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The state of Alaska has violated the Americans with Disabilities Act for not providing accessible machines for in-person voting, the U.S. Department of Justice said Tuesday. The state was also faulted for selecting inaccessible polling places and operating a state elections website that can’t be accessed by everyone.
The department informed Carol Beecher, Alaska’s election chief, in a letter dated Monday that the state “must, at a minimum, implement remedial measures to bring its voting services, programs and activities into compliance.”
Beecher did not return emails or a phone call to The Associated Press seeking comment Tuesday.
The state has until July 1 to respond to the justice department about resolutions. Failure to reach a resolution could result in a lawsuit, the letter to Beecher said.
The federal investigation began after complaints about several voting locations during elections for regional education boards last October and for state and federal elections in August and November 2022.
For the education election, two voters complained that only paper ballots were used with no magnification device available. Another voter with disabilities that make it difficult to walk, move, write and talk struggled to complete the paperwork but received no offer of assistance, the letter said. No accessible voting machine was available.
In state and federal elections, not all early voting and Election Day sites had accessible voting machines. In some places, the machines were not working, and poll workers were not able to fix them. In one location, the voting machine was still unassembled in its shipping box.
The letter also claims that in at least one polling place, poll workers reported that they received training on the machines but still couldn’t operate them.
A voter who is blind said the audio on an accessible voting machine was not recognizable in the August 2022 primary and had to use a paper ballot. That machine, the letter alleges, still was not fixed three months later for the general election.
The investigation also found the state’s website was not usable for those with disabilities. Barriers found on the state’s online voter registration page included no headings, inoperable buttons, language assistance videos without captions and audio descriptions and graphics without associated alternative text, among other issues.
Many voting places of the 35 surveyed by Justice officials in the August 2022 primary were not accessible for several reasons, including a lack of van parking spaces, ramps without handrails and entrances that lacked level landings or were too narrow.
The state must, at a minimum, furnish an accessible voting system in all elections and at each site that conducts in-person voting, the letter says. It also must make its online election information more accessible and remedy any physical accessible deficiencies found at polling places.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Colombian judge orders prison for 2 suspects in the kidnapping of parents of Liverpool soccer player
- Venezuela’s planned vote over territory dispute leaves Guyana residents on edge
- Warren Buffett's sounding board at Berkshire Hathaway, Charlie Munger, dies at 99
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Winds topple 40-foot National Christmas Tree outside White House; video shows crane raising it upright
- New book about the British royal family pulled in the Netherlands over name of alleged commenter about Archie's skin tone
- Families of American hostages in Gaza describe their anguish and call on US government for help
- Giants, Lions fined $200K for fights in training camp joint practices
- Five things to know about Henry Kissinger, a dominant figure in global affairs in the 1970s
Ranking
- NCAA hands former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh a 4-year show cause order for recruiting violations
- Fantasy football rankings for Week 13: Unlucky bye week puts greater premium on stars
- Three teenagers injured in knife attack at a high school in Poland
- Sweden halts adoptions from South Korea after claims of falsified papers on origins of children
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Average US life expectancy increases by more than one year, but not to pre-pandemic levels
- Sewage spill closes 2-mile stretch of coastline at Southern California’s Laguna Beach
- Whale hunting: Inside Deutsche Bank's pursuit of business with Trump
Recommendation
9/11 hearings at Guantanamo Bay in upheaval after surprise order by US defense chief
American woman among the hostages released on sixth day of Israel-Hamas cease-fire, Biden confirms
Why Jamie Lynn Spears Abruptly Quit I'm a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!
Pastor disciplined after pop singer Sabrina Carpenter uses NYC church for provocative music video
Carolinas bracing for second landfall from Tropical Storm Debby: Live updates
How one Oregon entrepreneur is trying to sell marijuana out of state, legally
Are quiet places going extinct? Meet the volunteers who are trying to change that.
6-year-old South Carolina boy shot, killed in hunting accident by 17-year-old: Authorities