Cobb absentee ballot dropboxes open at 4 East Cobb locations

Cobb absentee ballot drop boxes

Last week we noted the addition of an absentee ballot dropbox at the Sewell Mill Library, to go along with a dropbox that had been at the East Cobb Government Service Center during the primaries.

Cobb Elections announced this week that more dropboxes have been opened around the county, including two at library branches in East Cobb.

They’re the Gritters Library (880 Shaw Park Drive) and the Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road).

A total of 16 dropboxes are now open (see full list here) and are available 24/7 up through 7 p.m. on the Nov. 3 election day. For a map of dropbox locations, click here.

The dropboxes are secure and are not used for any other purpose, and Cobb Elections says ballots are collected daily. They also have video cameras installed for security surveillance.

As they did during the primaries, Cobb Elections officials are strongly encouraging voters to send in absentee ballots. That’s how the vast majority of Cobb voters cast their votes this summer in primary and runoff elections.

Heavy voter turnout is expected with a presidential race and competitive local races on the ballot, social-distancing measures will be enforced and there is a shortage of poll workers.

More absentee ballot information in Cobb can be found here and Cobb Elections is seeking poll workers.

Earlier this week Cobb Elections director Jeanine Eveler answered questions about the elections, voter registration and absentee balloting (before the Gritters and Mountain View library locations were announced).

On Tuesday she will discuss related topics in a Zoom meeting of the Mableton Improvement Coalition that begins at 7 p.m. Attendance is free but registration is required and can be done by clicking here.

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Sewell Mill Library added as absentee ballot dropbox location

Cobb Absentee Ballot Envelope

On Tuesday the first batch of absentee ballots requested by voters in Cobb County and Georgia will be mailed out, 50 days before election day on Nov. 3.

As noted here previously, absentee ballot dropboxes have been placed at various locations throughout the county by the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration.

The elections office said on Monday that those dropboxes, which were to have been opened on Wednesday, will now open starting Saturday, Sept. 19, and will be available 24/7 until 7 p.m. on election day.

They include the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) and the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road).

The latter location is a late addition and will be one of 10 dropbox locations.

You can also mail in your absentee ballot to:

  • Cobb County Board of Elections and Registration
    P.O. Box 649
    Marietta, GA 30061-0649

Those ballots must be postmarked by 7 p.m. on Nov. 3.

Absentee ballot applications can be requested from Cobb Elections by clicking here, and you can also get a prompt to a customized application that will be mailed to you.

The deadline for registering to vote is Oct. 5, and you can do that and check your registration status, polling location and get sample ballots by clicking here. More information about registering can be found here.

The Cobb County Public Library System and the Cobb Collaborative are holding a voter registration drive, and there are two upcoming dates to register at branches in East Cobb.

There will be sign-up periods this Friday, Sept. 18, from 12-5 p.m. at the Mountain View Regional Library (3320 Sandy Plains Road), and next Monday, Sept. 21, from 3-6 p.m. at the East Cobb Library (4880 Lower Roswell Road).

For more about that click here.

Here’s a list of the local and state candidates on the ballot for East Cobb voters

As they did during the primaries, Cobb Elections officials are strongly encouraging voters to send in absentee ballots. That’s how the vast majority of Cobb voters cast their votes this summer in primary and runoff elections.

Heavy voter turnout is expected with a presidential race and competitive local races on the ballot, social-distancing measures will be enforced and there is a shortage of poll workers.

More absentee ballot information in Cobb can be found here and Cobb Elections is seeking poll workers.

Advance voting will start on Oct. 12, and there will be several East Cobb locations to cast ballots in-person before election day.

They include:

  • East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) from Oct. 12-Oct. 30, Monday-Friday, 7 a.m.; Oct. 17 and 24 (both Saturdays), 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
  • The Art Place-Mountain View Black Box Theater (3330 Sandy Plains Road) from Oct. 12-Oct. 30, Monday-Friday, 7 a.m.; Oct. 17 and 24 (both Saturdays), 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
  • Noonday Baptist Church East Campus (4120 Canton Road) from Oct. 26-30, Monday-Friday, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

For more information on advance voting click here.

On Election Day voters will go to the polls in their assigned location. If you’re unsure of your precinct, you can check by clicking here.

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Georgia Secretary of State launches online absentee ballot portal

Cobb Absentee Ballot Envelope

Earlier this week we told you about an online process that’s underway for requesting an absentee ballot for the Nov. 3 general election from the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration.

On Friday, the Georgia Secretary of State’s office launched an online portal for voters to request an absentee ballot.

Similar to the Cobb online portal, this one asks voters to fill out their name and date of birth, and they must also provide a driver’s license or state identification number, as well as their county of residence.

That information will be sent to a voter’s county elections office for processing and for mailing an absentee ballot.

More from the Georgia Recorder.

Also this week, the Secretary of State’s Office announced it was delivering personal protective equipment to election workers in Cobb County.

Through the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency, Cobb workers will be getting 1,600 masks, 850 face shields, 217 pairs of gloves, and 100 boxes of disinfectant wipes.

Here’s more from what the Secretary of State’s office sent out:

The PPE request comes on top of an order for 11,000 gallons of hand sanitizer that the Office of the Secretary of State placed earlier this year. The hand sanitizer will be distributed to the counties ahead of the November elections.

Earlier this year, GEMA/HS provided 84,000 masks, 290,000 gloves, and hand sanitizer for county elections officials ahead of the June 9 election. The Office of the Secretary of State coordinated the order and distributed it to county elections officials.

In addition, before the June 9 elections, the Secretary of State’s office purchased and distributed 35,000 masks, hundreds of thousands of gloves, 27,500 bottles of hand-sanitizer, and 60,000 stylus pens for voters to use when they voted. The Secretary of State’s office also provided $3,000 dollar grants to Georgia’s counties to purchase additional PPE on their own.

Despite the COVID-19 pandemic and record absentee ballot votes cast by mail, significant numbers of Georgia voters turned out in-person to vote. On June 9, 810,000 Georgia voters went to the polls to cast their ballot. An additional 325,000 cast their ballots early and in-person during the state’s three weeks of early voting.

Voter turnout in November is expected to be three times as high.

Cobb Elections is seeking poll workers for election day. More information can be found here.

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East Cobb Democratic Roundup: Candidates to hold trivia event

Two Democratic candidates for State House seats in East Cobb will be holding a virtual trivia event Thursday night.East Cobb Democratic candidates

It’s along a “Guns and Roses” theme on the final day of the Republican National Convention.

Connie DiCicco is challenging State Rep. Don Parsons of the 44th District, and Luisa Wakeman is taking on State Rep. Sharon Cooper of the 43rd District. Here’s more that was sent to our inbox:

“The theme honors the White House’s newly renovated rose garden and the party’s admiration of firearms. Prizes will be awarded to trivia winners.”

The event gets underway at 8 p.m., and you’re asked to register by visiting www.bit.ly/connieandluisa.

(Before we get any complaints from the other side, sit tight: We’ll do a Republican roundup after the convention.)

Candidate virtual town halls continue

The Cobb Community Alliance, a consortium of African-American organizations in the county, has been holding virtual candidate forums ahead of the general elections.

The invited candidates have come from the State House races above, as well as another contested East Cobb seat, District 45, where Democrat Sara Tindall Ghazal is challenging Republican incumbent. Not all of the invited candidates have appeared.

You can watch previous events at the CCA’s Facebook Live page, and that’s where you can tune in for future town halls.

Coming up on Aug. 31 is State House District 46, also in East Cobb, where Democrat Caroline Holko is challenging Republican incumbent John Carson.

A town hall is scheduled for Sept. 14 for Cobb Commission Chairman, in which Democratic commissioner Lisa Cupid is facing Republican incumbent Mike Boyce.

On Sept, 21 a town hall is scheduled for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners. Democrat Jerica Richardson and Republican Fitz Johnson will be vying to succeed retiring Republican commissioner Bob Ott, who has endorsed Johnson.

You can learn more about the CCA by clicking here.

On Monday a supporter of Julia Hurtado, a Democrat running for the Cobb Board of Education, is having a virtual meet-and-greet. It starts at 7 p.m and the signup information is here.

Hurtado is challenging Republican incumbent David Banks in Post 5, which includes the Pope and Lassiter and part of the Wheeler cluster.

Send Us Your News!

We’re accepting information about political events, fundraisers and campaign activities surrounding the Nov. 3 elections.

Feel free to let us know what you’ve got going on (that’s open to the public) by contacting us: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

What we’re not publishing—and we’re getting some of this already—are letters to the editor, op-eds and other commentaries endorsing a candidate, or denouncing another one. Some of these have come from candidates and those with partisan affiliations.

Feel free to send us your boilerplate as we dive into more substantial coverage this fall, but bear with us as we navigate what figures to be a very unusual election year—hotly contested races during a pandemic.

Just a quick reminder that East Cobb News does not endorse candidates, and we don’t run guest editorials on any subject, especially politics.

We know passions and tempers are running high about the elections, even at the local level, and we will be incorporating some of that in our regular coverage.

With every seat for public office in East Cobb having both Democratic and Republican candidates, we know there’s going to be a lot of interest, and it’s bound to get ugly before it’s all over.

For more information about how East Cobb News is covering the elections, click our Election Guide link below.

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Cobb absentee ballot applications available; dropboxes open Sept. 16

Cobb tag offices reopening

The East Cobb Government Service Center will continue to serve as a drop-off spot for the return of absentee ballots for the November general election.

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration has announced that it intends to have 16 drop boxes available by the Nov. 3 election day.

All of those additional locations haven’t been announced, but the East Cobb center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) was used as a drop box spot for the primaries and runoffs.

The vast majority of Cobb primary and runoff voters cast their votes via absentee ballot.

Cobb Elections is continuing to encourage absentee voting for the general election, given a shortage of poll workers and social-distancing guidelines. Primary voting also was hampered at some precincts, including at Sope Creek Elementary School, by new voting machines not working properly.

The locations listed at the link above will be available for drop box returns starting Sept. 16. Absentee ballot applications can be requested from Cobb Elections by clicking here, and you can also get a prompt to a customized application that will be mailed to you.

The mail-outs won’t start until Sept. 15, and the county and state have not sent out unsolicited ballot applications, as was done for the primaries.

The county sent out a message Tuesday saying there has been some confusion about this, since some private groups and organizations have been mailing out absentee ballot applications.

That’s fine for them to do, but they’re not from official elections agencies. One is the Center for Voter Information, which has been doing this in other states as well.

Keep in mind that these forms aren’t the actual absentee ballots, but an application to have one mailed once it’s filled out and returned.

Cobb Elections had sought federal CARES Act funding to mail absentee ballot applications for all 518,000 registered voters in the county, but earlier this month commissioners rejected taking up that request.

For more information on absentee voting in Cobb County, click here.

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Johnson certified as Cobb commission GOP runoff winner

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration has certified Fitz Johnson as the winner of the Republican runoff for District 2 of the Cobb Board of Commissioners.Fitz Johnson, Cobb commission candidate

Johnson is a Vinings resident who got 4,925 votes, while former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith of East Cobb had 4,839 votes.

In a note to supporters after the certification, Johnson said he spoke with Smith and Kevin Nicholas, who finished third in the June 9 GOP primary, and “I look forward to working together with them to win in November.”

Johnson will face Democrat Jerica Richardson in the Nov. 3 general election, with the winner succeeding retiring Commissioner Bob Ott.

The November ballot for East Cobb voters is now set. Here’s a quick look ahead at other contested local, state and federal races, most of which were settled before the runoff.

Cobb Commission Chairman

  • Mike Boyce, (R), incumbent, vs. Lisa Cupid (D), current Commissioner from South Cobb

Cobb Board of Education, Post 5

  • David Banks, (R), incumbent, vs. Julia Hurtado (D)

Cobb District Attorney

  • Joyette Holmes (R), appointed incumbent, vs. Flynn Broady Jr. (D), special election

Cobb Sheriff

  • Neil Warren (R), incumbent, vs. Craig Owens (D)

Georgia State Senate, District 32

  • Kay Kirkpatrick (R), incumbent, vs. Christine Triebsch (D), a rematch from 2018

Georgia State House, District 37

  • Mary Frances Williams (D), incumbent, vs. Rose Wing (R)

Georgia State House, District 43

  • Sharon Cooper (R), incumbent, vs. Luisa Wakeman (D), a rematch from 2018

Georgia State House, District 44

  • Don Parsons (R), incumbent, vs. Connie DiCicco (D)

Georgia State House, District 45

  • Matt Dollar (R), incumbent, vs. Sara Tindall Ghazal (D)

Georgia State House, District 45

  • John Carson (R), incumbent, vs. Caroline Holko (D)

U.S. House of Representatives, Georgia 6th District

  • Lucy McBath (D), incumbent, vs. Karen Handel (R), a rematch from 2018

U.S. Senate

  • David Perdue (R), incumbent, vs. Jon Ossoff (D)

U.S. Senate Special Election

Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a Republican appointed in January, will compete in  “jungle” primary will take place with candidates from both major parties. If the leading vote-getter fails to win a majority, the top two finishers will meet in a runoff of Jan. 5, 2021. The winner will fill out the final two years of the term of former Sen. Johnny Isakson.

There are eight Democratic candidates and Loeffler is one of six Republican candidates. The primary field also includes candidates from the Green Party and the Libertarian Party, and four independents.

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Johnson unofficial winner of Cobb Commission GOP runoff

With corrected provisional and most absentee ballots having been counted, Vinings resident Fitz Johnson is the unofficial winner of the Republican runoff for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission candidate

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration updated its totals late Friday afternoon for that and several other runoffs, but will not certify the results until Aug. 20.

Johnson ended up with 4,925 votes, while former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith of East Cobb had 4,839 votes.

Johnson captured 50.4 percent of the vote, compared to 49.6 for Smith. A recount can be called if a margin is within one-half of one percentage point.

After Tuesday’s totals, Johnson held an 83-vote lead that inched up to 90 on Wednesday, after most absentee ballots had been counted. The margin of victory—at least for now—is 86 votes for Johnson.

If those results stand, he’ll face Democrat Jerica Richardson in November in the general election, with the winner to succeed retiring commissioner Bob Ott.

District 2 includes most of East Cobb and the Smyrna-Vinings-Cumberland area.

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East Cobb Election Update: Johnson hanging on, Marbutt wins

Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission candidate
Fitz Johnson

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration is still counting some outstanding absentee and privisional ballots, but it looks as though Vinings resident Fitz Johnson has won the Republican Cobb Board of Commissioners District 2 runoff.

UPDATED Friday, 7:20 p.m.: Johnson is the unofficial winner after corrected provisional and most absentee ballots were counted, with an 86-vote margin.

The results will be certified Aug. 20.

Johnson led East Cobb resident Andy Smith by 83 votes after Tuesday’s in-person voting, and additional absentee ballots that have been counted show Johnson has increased his lead by 90 votes.

According to unofficial results from the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office, Johnson has 4,913 votes and Smith 4,823 votes.

Smith, a former member of the Cobb Planning Commission, said in a message to his supporters Thursday morning that “while it looks like we came up short, I have loved this process and enjoyed meeting so many great people who I can now call friends. It was time well spent.

Smith led most of Tuesday evening and won more absentee ballots. Johnson, a retired Army officer and business executive who’s a trustee of the Wellstar Health System, picked up support late, especially in the northernmost East Cobb precincts.

Jason Marbutt, Cobb senior assistant DA
Jason Marbutt

Johnson would face Jerica Richardson, unopposed in the Democratic primary, in the November general election.

Cobb Elections said earlier Wednesday that around 600 absentee ballots were to be counted, and around 50 or so provisional ballots and some out-of-town absentee ballots remained outstanding.

The results will not be certified until next Thursday, Aug. 20.

Tuesday’s runoffs also decided another Cobb commission seat, in District 4 in South Cobb, where Monique Sheffield, a member of the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals, defeated Shelia Edwards in the Democratic primary.

Sheffield has no Republican opposition in November and will succeed commissioner Lisa Cupid, who is challenging GOP incumbent Mike Boyce for Cobb Commission Chairman.

East Cobb resident Jason Marbutt has been elected to the Cobb Superior Court in a non-partisan runoff. Marbutt, who is is senior assistant Cobb district attorney, defeated attorney Greg Shenton with 55.8 percent of the vote in the race to succeed retiring judge Stephen Schuster.

Marbutt, who serves on the Cobb Elder Abuse Task Force, told supporters that “I will work hard to honor the trust placed in me by the citizens of Cobb County. Judge Schuster leaves an enduring legacy after many years of fine service. I will honor him by continuing his good work as a servant to the public.”

In another non-partisan judicial runoff, Diana Simmons edged Tricia Griffiths with 51.3 percent of the vote for a post on State Court vacating by retiring Toby Prodgers.

Connie Taylor won 62 percent of the vote in a Democratic runoff for Cobb Superior Court Clerk. She will face Republican incumbent Rebecca Keaton in November.

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Cobb Commission District 2 GOP runoff: Smith-Johnson cliffhanger

Cobb Commission District 2 race

UPDATED Wednesday, 10:58 pm: The final absentee ballots are still to be counted, with Johnson increasing his lead on Wednesday   from late Tuesday by seven votes to hold a 90-vote lead, 4,913 to 4,823 for Smith.

We will update with a new post by the end of the week. The election will not be certified until Aug. 20.

Check real-time results by clicking here.

UPDATED, 11:59 P.M.:

The Cobb Board of Commissioners District 2 Republican runoff election was separated by fewer than 100 votes late Tuesday.

Candidates Andy Smith (right) and Fitz Johnson both expected this race to go down to the wire, as did the June 9 primary.

According to unofficial results from the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, Johnson had 4,853 votes, or 50.4 percent, to 4,770 votes for Smith, or 49.6 percent, with all 39 precincts reporting.

Still to be counted are absentee mail-in ballots. Both candidates said in interviews with East Cobb News late Tuesday it may be a few days before the results are certified.

Smith was ahead most of the night on the strength of absentee votes and was surprised so many had already come in—those were drop-off ballots that he led, 2,751 to 2,296.

Johnson trimmed Smith’s lead and finally overtook him late with in-person votes in Tuesday’s balloting at precincts, 2,003 to 1,551 at the last count.

Smith, a former member of the Cobb Planning Commission who lives in East Cobb, said he made an effort to reach more potential voters in door-to-door campaigning during the runoff campaign.

“I was just focusing on getting out and meeting more people,” he said. “I’ve been out every day for the last three weeks.”

Johnson, a retired Army officer and business executive from Vinings, said he was emphasizing voters in East Cobb.

“It’s a tough vote,” he said, especially in motivating voters to participate in the runoffs.

As he took the lead, Johnson was closing in on Smith in some East Cobb precincts with heavy turnouts, and had gone ahead in Mt. Bethel 1, Roswell 1, Shallowford Falls 1 and Willeo 1.

Johnson, who was diagnosed with COVID-19 before the primary, said for safety concerns—his own and those of voters—he didn’t knock on doors during the runoff.

“I didn’t feel that was the right thing to do,” he said. “We just did a lot of talking to people on the phone, sent out mailers.”

According to state law, losing candidates can ask for a recount if they come within a half-percentage point of the winner.

Here’s how the precinct map looked at the end of Tuesday’s counting. Smith led in precincts in turquoise, and Johnson was ahead in precincts shaded in blue. For real-time updates and precinct-by-precinct voting, click here:

Cobb BOC D2 GOP runoff map final 8.11.20

UPDATED, 10:45 P.M.:

Partial results in 27 of 39 precincts have been reported, and Smith’s lead has dwindled to 50.6 percent.

He has 4,224 votes to 4,118 for Johnson, with 49.4 percent. Smith led in mail-in absentee balloting, but Johnson has closed the gap in today’s voting at precincts, with 1,268 votes, compared to 1,005 for Smith.

Smith still leads most East Cobb precincts, but Johnson has gone ahead slightly in Sewell Mill 1, Murdock 1, Chestnut Ridge 1 and Hightower 1.

Johnson also holds leads for now in Roswell 1, Shallowford Falls 1 and Willeo 1.

UPDATED, 10:15 P.M.:

Some more in-person voting from today is being added to the totals, with partial results being reported in 12 of 39 precincts.

Smith has 3,535 votes (52.6 percent) and Johnson has 3,184 votes (47.4 percent). Johnson leads in counting from today’s in-person voting 450-440.

While Smith continues to lead most East Cobb precincts, he is enjoying his best margins in Mt. Bethel 3 and 4, Fullers Park 1, Eastside 1 and 2 and Sope Creek 2 and 3, in some cases with between 55 and 60 percent of the vote.

UPDATED, 9:54 P.M.:

Absentee ballots and early voting results have given Andy Smith a slight lead over Fitz Johnson, with today’s in-person tabulations just starting to come in.

As of around 9:30 p.m., Smith had 3,097 votes, or 53 percent, to 2,797 for Johnson, for 47 percent.

Smith led the mail-in absentee ballots 2,751 to 2,296, while Johnson led advance voting 438-344.

The absentee ballots are likely not complete, as voters had until 7 p.m. Tuesday to have them mailed dropped off at various drop-off locations set up by Cobb Elections.

The early precinct map shows Smith ahead in most of the East Cobb precincts, in his home base, and Johnson, who lives in Vinings, is ahead in most of the Vinings-Cumberland-Smyrna polling stations.

ORIGINAL REPORT, 7:02 P.M.:

The polls have closed for the Georgia runoff elections, which include a Republican race for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

Those candidates are Fitz Johnson of Vinings, left, and Andy Smith of East Cobb. While turnout at the polls and during early voting was expected to be light, most of the votes will be coming via absentee ballots, which will be counted last.

You can track results as they come in at this link from the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, and East Cobb News will be updating results from that and other local races here.

When Johnson edged Smith in the June 9 primary, the results were not certified for several days due to a heavy number of absentee ballots.

According to Cobb Elections, nearly 6,000 people voted in-person over the last two weeks, while more than 18,000 absentee ballots were returned for the runoff.

The winner of Tuesday’s District 2 runoff will face Democrat Jerica Richardson in November. A first-time candidate, she was unopposed in the primary.

The winner in the general election will succeed retiring commissioner Bob Ott, a three-term Republican. He appointed Smith to the Cobb Planning Commission but has not made an endorsement.

Also on the countywide ballot Tuesday are two non-partisan judicial runoffs.

One is for Cobb Superior Court Judge between Jason Marbutt of East Cobb, a Cobb senior assistant district attorney, and attorney Greg Shenton.

The other is for Cobb State Court Judge between Trina Griffiths and Diana Simmons.

Another open seat on the commission will be determined Tuesday in a Democratic runoff for District 4, in South Cobb. Incumbent commissioner Lisa Cupid, who is challenging current Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce in November, is endorsing Monique Sheffield, her appointee to the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals, in a runoff against Shelia Edwards.

There is not a Republican candidate on the ballot in November for that seat.

Other runoffs Tuesday will determine a Democratic nominee for Cobb Superior Court Clerk and a Democratic candidate for State House District 35 in North Cobb,

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Cobb commissioners won’t take up absentee ballot funding request

After being accused of deciding in secret not to consider a funding request to mail absentee ballot applications to all county registered voters for the November general election, Cobb commissioners did discuss the matter in public at their meeting on Tuesday.Cobb absentee ballot funding request

Then the Republican majority voted against putting the matter on the meeting agenda.

The vote was strictly partisan—4-1—and came after the head of the Cobb Democratic Party blasted what she said was a behind-the-scenes process.

(In order for an item not on a meeting agenda to be added, it must obtain a “super majority” vote of four commissioners.)

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration had voted unanimously last month to ask commissioners for $222,000 in CARES Act funding to mail absentee ballot applications to all 518,000 registered county voters.

But in discussing whether to put the request on the commissioners’ agenda for consideration, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said he declined to do so because he didn’t have the support of the majority of his colleagues.

Commissioner Lisa Cupid, the only Democrat on the board and who is facing Boyce in the chairman’s race in November, said she wasn’t asked about the funding request during the agenda prep process.

She said there was “a lot of concern” that an item that received unanimous approval from the elections board didn’t make it onto the agenda, even for discussion.

She made a motion to discuss placing the item on the agenda at Tuesday’s meeting, and Boyce seconded that motion.

That the elections board request didn’t make it to the agenda, Cupid said, “is a troubling path to take. I do not understand why we’re taking it now.”

In his first public comments on the matter in his role as chairman, Boyce said “there is nothing secret” about the process, and that there was no vote taken.

“My job is to take the pulse of the board,” he added, saying that this is the first time since he took office “where there was generally no support for something.”

Boyce said the elections board never approached him about a funding request, and had opportunities to do so during the recently-completed Cobb fiscal year 2021 budget process.

In remarks at the start of the meeting, Cobb Democratic chairwoman Jackie Bettadapur cited issues with voting during the June 9 primaries, especially in Democratic strongholds in South Cobb, due to staffing shortages, problems with new voting machines and long lines due to social-distancing measures.

Absentee voting, she said. “is the safest way to vote in a pandemic,” and called issues around the primary a “debacle.”

A vast majority of those voting in the primary in Cobb voted via absentee ballot, causing days of delays in certifying those elections. Many more absentee ballots have been returned for runoff elections that conclude Tuesday with in-person voting.

She also reminded Boyce of critical remarks he made about Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger in the wake of some of those problems.

Republicans, Bettadapur said, “don’t want people to vote.”

Commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb said he opposed the funding request because he’s heard from citizens who were confused upon getting primary absentee ballot applications from both the county and the state.

Cupid said in response to Boyce that CARES Act funding was appropriate for absentee balloting because of issues prompted by COVID-19, and thought it was unfair for the elections board request to be singled out when other entities had their requests considered.

(The elections board appointees include one from the commission chairman, two from the county’s legislative delegation and one each from the county Democratic and Republican parties.)

Commissioner Keli Gambrill of North Cobb said that nowhere in the potential agenda item she saw was CARES Act funding ever mentioned, and wondered why absentee ballot applications weren’t asked for Tuesday’s runoff election.

“This runoff election is just as important as November,” she said.

Boyce insisted that “there were other ways to approach this,” and said that there are more requests for what’s left of Cobb’s allotment of CARES Act funding (an original $132 million) than there was money left to distribute.

While voting is important, he said, so are food, rent, public health, schools and other needs that have arisen due to the COVID-19 crisis.

Near the end of the meeting, Cupid thanked Bettadapur for speaking out.

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Cobb Commission GOP nominee to be decided in Tuesday runoff

Cobb Commission District 2 race
Republican voters will choose between Fitz Johnson, left, and Andy Johnson for the District 2 nomination to the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

Tuesday is the last day to cast a ballot in primary runoff campaigns that include the Republican nominee for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

All voting will take place Tuesday at regular voting precincts, but voters who have obtained absentee ballots can deliver them to designated dropoff spots (including the East Cobb Government Center, 4400 Lower Roswell Road), by 7 p.m. Tuesday.

The polling stations will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

You can check your voting status and view sample ballots by clicking here. The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration is observing social distancing guidelines at the polls and is asking voters to wear masks.

After advance voting ended on Friday, Cobb Elections said 5,835 people voted early in-person, 3,801 in the Democratic primary and only 794 in the Republican primary.

A total of 18,855 absentee ballots were returned, with 9,548 Democratic ballots and 3,356 Republican ballots.

Former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith of East Cobb and business man and civic leader Fitz Johnson of Vinings are vying for the GOP nomination in District 2, with the winner facing Democrat Jerica Richardson in November.

Also on the countywide ballot Tuesday are two non-partisan judicial runoffs.

One is for Cobb Superior Court Judge between Jason Marbutt of East Cobb, a Cobb senior assistant district attorney, and attorney Greg Shenton.

The other is for Cobb State Court Judge between Trina Griffiths and Diana Simmons.

Voters in South Cobb also will be deciding a new county commissioner. Current District 4 commissioner Lisa Cupid is the Democratic nominee for Cobb Commission Chairman, and she’s endorsed Monique Sheffield, her appointee to the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals, in a runoff against Shelia Edwards.

In the District 2 race, incumbent commissioner Bob Ott, who is retiring after three terms, has not made an endorsement.

Smith was his appointment to the Cobb Planning Commission and they attended high school together in New Jersey. In recent campaign disclosure reports, Johnson has outraised and outspent Smith, and enjoys the support of donors among the county’s business and health care leadership.

Johnson is a trustee of the Wellstar Health System. Smith, the owner of a construction design company, has been active in civic and community projects through his membership at Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church.

Their campaigns have focused on development, traffic and public safety. Johnson said during the primary campaign that he was adamantly opposed to a proposed City of East Cobb; Smith said he wanted to keep an open mind about the issue.

Cityhood leaders said last fall they would not be pursuing a bill sponsored by Rep. Matt Dollar of East Cobb in the Georgia legislature last year. It would have to be reintroduced in a future session to be reconsidered.

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Advance runoff voting expands to East Cobb Government Center

Cobb tag offices reopening

You can cast a ballot close to home this week before next Tuesday’s runoff elections as advance voting continues.

The East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) is open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. through Friday. Other locations will have the same days and hours:

Lines are expected to be long due to social-distancing guidance and you’ll be asked to wear a face covering.

On the ballot for East Cobb voters is a Republican runoff for Cobb Board of Commissioners District 2 between Andy Smith and Fitz Johnson. There also are two judicial runoffs that will be determined county wide.

There won’t be and advance voting Saturday or next Monday. If you vote on Tuesday, you’ll go to your assigned precinct. Those hours are also 7-7 and social distancing and masks will be requested.

Here’s more from the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration:

To download and print the full advance voting schedule, click here

There is NO VOTING on Sundays, Saturday, Aug. 8, or Monday, Aug. 10. On Election Day, Tuesday, Aug. 11, voters must go to their assigned polling locations, open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. To confirm your eligibility to vote for this election, please visit the Secretary of State’s “My Voter Page.”

Georgia law allows for absentee by mail ballots to be requested up to 180 days before an election. No excuse is required to vote before election day. Voters are encouraged to vote by-mail using the absentee application found on the absentee voting page

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Cobb commission District 2 candidates post finance reports

Cobb Commission District 2 race
Fitz Johnson, left, edged out Andy Smith, his runoff opponent, in a 3-way GOP primary in June.

Fitz Johnson was one of three primary candidates seeking the Republican nomination in the District 2 Cobb Board of Commissioners race, and the only one who didn’t take out personal loans to finance his campaign.

Johnson, a retired Army officer and businessman from Vinings, finished first with 6,656 votes, or 36.2 percent, in the June primary.

In the Aug. 11 runoff, he’ll be facing East Cobb resident Andy Smith, a former Cobb Planning Commissioner and owner of a design and construction firm, who got 5,946 votes, or 32.2 percent.

Johnson has raised $83,700 to date in 2020, including $20,475 in the second quarter. Smith has raised $66,205 overall and $23,210 in the second quarter, with $18,960 coming in the form of two loans he made to his campaign.

That’s according to second-quarter campaign finance reports filed with the Cobb Board of Registrations and Elections.

In November, the winner of the Johnson-Smith runoff will face Democrat Jerica Richardson in the general election to determine the successor to retiring Commissioner Bob Ott.

Smith previously loaned himself $31,000 in three other loans he’s reported in earlier reports.

(You can look through those and other local candidates by clicking here.)

In the second quarter, Johnson spent $42,000 and has campaign expenses of $67,151 for the year.

Smith spent $21,491 in the second quarter and $46,664 overall, according to campaign finance reports.

Smith reported more cash-on-hand as the runoff campaign began, with $19,540, compared to $16,548 for Johnson.

Johnson has received funding from prominent members of the Cobb business and civic community.

They include $2,800 from William Cooper, director of cardiovascular surgery at WellStar Health System, where Johnson serves on the board of trustees.

Other WellStar executives and physicians contributing to Johnson’s runoff campaign include John Brennan ($1,000), Rob Schreiner ($1,000), Leo Reichert ($500) and David Jones ($500).

Another $2,800 contribution is from Todd Thrasher, a managing partner at the East Cobb-based Brooks Chadwick, a development firm.

Contributions of $1,500 each include Joseph Astrachan, professor emeritus at Kennesaw State University and former head of its Cox Family Enterprise Center at the Coles College of Business; and Fuqua Development.

Other contributors include James Rhoden, founder of East Cobb-based Futren Corp., which operates Indian Hills County Club ($1,000); former Cobb Chamber of Commerce president Gary Bottoms ($500); and former Cobb Commission Chairman Sam Olens, with two donations of $100 each.

In Johnson’s second-quarter report, he lists expenses totaling $33,374 to Arena Mail and Digital of Salt Lake City for the production and mailing of campaign fliers, $3,500 to Strategic Partners & Media LLC, for campaign consulting services, and $2,000 for Google, Facebook and other digital ads.

Smith has received smaller individual contributions in his second-quarter report. In a filing in April, he reported several $2,700 contributions from businesses and corporate executives, including Nicholas Telesca, president of Branch Properties, an Atlanta real estate investment firm.

Smith’s major expenses include $13,594 to Data Productions of Suwanee for campaign mailers. Another $5,000 was paid to The Lowry Group of Austell, a political consulting firm run by Riley Lowry, a longtime advisor to Ott, who has not endorsed a candidate.

Kevin Nicholas, a member of the Development Authority of Cobb County who finished third in the primary, received 5,770 votes, or 31.4 percent.

His last campaign finance report was filed on April 30, showing $24,750 in overall contributions and $17,134 in expenses. He loaned himself $20,000 during that period, and his contributors included former U.S. Rep. Bob Barr ($500).

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Cobb early runoff voting starts next week; poll workers needed

Runoffs will be taking place in several primary elections in Cobb County, next month, including the Cobb Board of Commissioners District 2 Republican race.

The runoff elections are on Aug. 11, and early voting starts next week.East Cobb advance voting

From next Monday, July 20, through Aug. 7, voters can go to the Cobb Elections and Registration Office (736 Whitlock Ave., Marietta) from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. and cast their ballots.

Early voting also will take place at additional locations, including the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road), from Aug. 3-7 between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.

There will be no early voting on Sundays, Saturday, Aug. 8, or Monday, Aug. 10.

On Election Day, Tuesday, Aug. 11, voters must go to their assigned polling locations, open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. You can check your voting status and view a customized sample ballot at the Secretary of State’s My Voter Page.

Cobb Elections officials are saying that lines are expected at all locations, long lines will be expected and that social distancing measures will be followed.

As in the July primary, they’re encouraging voters to vote by-mail using the absentee application found on the absentee voting page.

The District 2 commission GOP race is down to East Cobb resident Andy Smith and Vinings resident Fitz Johnson in what was a close three-way race in the July 19 primary.

The winner will face Democrat Jerica Richardson in the November general election.

That’s the only Republican runoff election in Cobb. There’s a Democratic runoff for Cobb Superior Court Clerk between Nancy Syrop and Connie Taylor.

Two non-partisan judicial runoffs also will be taking place. For Superior Court Judge, Jason Marbutt will be facing Greg Shenton. A State Court Judge seat will be decided between Tricia Griffiths and Diana Simmons.

Cobb Elections is seeking poll workers for the runoffs. They must be at least 16 years of age and be U.S. citizens who can read, write and speak English. They also must be Cobb residents with no prior felony convictions for at least 10 years.

All new workers will be trained and will be paid. An online application can be found here.

For more information, visit cobbelections.org.

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Cobb Commission District 2 Republican primary goes to runoff

Fitz Johnson, Cobb Commission candidate
Fitz Johnson

More than a week after the primary elections, the two candidates who’ll be moving on in the Aug. 11 Republican runoff for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners have been certified.

The Cobb Board of Registration and Elections on Friday certified that Fitz Johnson of Vinings and Andy Smith of East Cobb emerged as the top two finishers in a three-candidate race that was separated by fewer than 1,000 votes.

The board certified all of Cobb’s primary results on Friday, after a delayed process that included counting a record 107,000 absentee ballots.

According to the certified tabulations, Johnson received 6,656 votes, or 36.2 percent of the ballots cast.

Smith got 5,946 votes, or 32.2 percent. Kevin Nicholas, also of East Cobb, received 5,770 votes, or 31.4 percent. They were running to succeed retiring commissioner Bob Ott, with the GOP winner facing Jerica Richardson, the only Democratic candidate, in November.

Voting figures reported on the June 9 primary election day were very close, and remained that way as the absentee voting updates were added.

Andy Smith, Cobb commission candidate
Andy Smith

“Yes, it was very close, and maybe that’s the way it should be,” said Smith, a former member of the Cobb Planning Commission. “There were three very good candidates and I think District 2 would be well represented by any of them.”

Johnson, a first-time candidate for county office who previously ran for state school superintendent, won 24 of the 39 precincts in District 2, which includes most of East Cobb and some of the Smyrna-Vinings-Cumberland area.

He won 11 precincts in East Cobb, mostly by very slender margins (click here for a hover map with precinct totals).

“I’m not from East Cobb, and so we had to make sure we really got out in East Cobb a lot,” Johnson said.

Cobb BOC District 2 GOP primary precinct map
To view individual precinct results click here. Johnson won precincts in blue, Smith in light green and Nicholas in turquoise. There was a tie in the Dickerson 1 precinct, shaded in beige.

Nicholas, a member of the Development Authority of Cobb County and a candidate for the Cobb County Board of Education in 2014, also was running for the commission for the first time.

After East Cobb News requested comment from Nicholas, he e-mailed a statement saying that “I am proud of the grass roots campaign we ran, representing our neighbors—not special interests, and a huge thank you to the thousands of voters who supported me.”

Johnson and Smith said they will keep stressing issues they heard a lot from voters, especially public safety, during the runoff campaign.

They both said they’re eager to do more in-person campaigning, as more restrictions on public gatherings in Georgia have been lifted.

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Cobb Commission District 2 Republican race still razor-thin

Cobb Commission District 2 race
From left, Fitz Johnson, Andy Smith, Kevin Nicholas

According to Cobb Elections on Tuesday morning, 9,500 absentee ballots still have to be counted from last week’s primary elections.

The process may have to be fully completed before it’s known who will be moving on to an Aug. 11 Republican runoff in the District 2 race for the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

The three GOP primary candidates are currently separated by 636 votes, and the top two finishers will continue to campaign.

As of 10 a.m. Tuesday, Vinings resident Fitz Johnson leads with 6,468 votes, or 36 percent. Former Cobb Planning Commission member Andy Smith has received 5,832 votes, or 32.5 percent, and Cobb Development Authority member Kevin Nicholas has 5,640 votes, or 31.4 percent.

They are vying to succeed Bob Ott, a Republican who is retiring after three terms.

(Track real-time updates here.)

Since we last tracked the results on Friday, Johnson had opened up a slightly bigger lead, and Smith separated himself a little bit more from Nicholas.

Cobb Elections staff worked into the weekend counting absentee ballots, and after Saturday still had 16,000 ballots to go. It’s not known how many of the uncounted ballots are Republican ballots cast by voters in District 2.

More than 106,000 absentee ballots were cast in the primary, a record in Cobb, and Democratic turnout has been higher overall.

Despite the close race in District 2, which is heavily Republican and includes most of East Cobb, a total of 17,940 votes have been cast for the three GOP candidates combined.

By contrast, Jerica Richardson, the only Democrat who qualified in the District 2 race, has 23,173 votes. She will face the Republican runoff winner in November.

Commissioner Lisa Cupid, the only Democrat running for Cobb Commission Chairman, got 87,555 votes. She will meet Republican incumbent Mike Boyce, who won the GOP primary wit 68 percent of the vote but received only 44,443 votes.

A total of 65,419 votes have been cast for the three GOP chairman candidates.

In Cobb Board of Education Post 5 results, Republican incumbent David Banks won a three-way primary with 6,943 votes. But his November Democratic opponent, first-time candidate Julia Hurtado, prevailed against one other foe and got 6,391 votes in a post that has been heavily GOP for years.

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration, which certifies elections results, has postponed its scheduled meeting from Wednesday to Friday at 12 p.m. That meeting will be held online, and the public can watch by signing up here.

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East Cobb Election Update: 2020 primary results breakdown

Georgia runoff elections

While all results from Tuesday’s primary elections remain unofficial—and a few, like the District 2 Cobb Board of Commissioners Republican race—are still too close to call—we’re serving up here a breakdown how voters in the county, and in particular East Cobb, voted the way they did in a variety of local, state and federal elections.

Absentee ballot-counting is going on this weekend, and a controversy that’s sure to linger into the November general election centers on who’s to blame for the problems many voters had on Tuesday.

If you want to look through Cobb-specific results on one link, click here. Otherwise, what follows are the latest vote tallies, as of late Saturday morning, listing the top finishers in selected contested primaries.

Keep in mind that results won’t be certified until next Friday, and that runoffs will take place on Aug. 11 in races in which the leading vote-getter did not receive 50 percent plus one vote in the primary.

You can track updates in real-time by clicking the link for each race that includes precinct-by-precinct totals:

Cobb Commission Chairman (GOP)

  • Mike Boyce (incumbent): 40,671 (68.4%)

    Mike Boyce, Cobb Commission Chairman
    Mike Boyce
  • Larry Savage: 14,274 (24%)
  • Ricci Mason 4,515 (7.6%)
  • View full results

Cobb Commission District 2 (GOP)

  • Fitz Johnson: 5,715 (35.6%)
  • Andy Smith: 5,238 (32.6%)
  • Kevin Nicholas: 5,074 (3.166)
  • View full results

Cobb Board of Education Post 5 (GOP)

  • David Banks (incumbent): 6,383 (55%)
  • Shelley O’Malley: 2,802 (24%)
  • Matt Harper: 2,405 (20%)
  • View full results

Cobb Board of Education Post 5 (Democrat)

  • Julia Hurtado: 5,581 (58%)

    Julia Hurtado, Cobb school board candidate
    Julia Hurtado
  • Tammy Andress: 4,043 (42%)
  • View full results

U.S. Senate (Democrat)

6th District U.S. House (GOP)

Cobb Superior Court Judge (non-partisan)

  • Jason Marbutt: 51,682 (38.8%)
  • Greg Shenton: 43,696 (32.8%)
  • John Robert Greco: 37,856 (28.4%)
  • View full results

Cobb Superior Court Judge (non-partisan)

  • Kellie Hill: 87,246 (63%)

    Kellie Hill
    Kellie Hill
  • Daniele Johnson: 50.281 (36.8%)
  • View full results

Cobb Superior Court Judge (non-partisan)

  • Angela Brown: 83,335 (57%)
  • Reuben Green (incumbent): 62,396 (42.8%)

46th District Georgia House (Democrat)

Cobb Sheriff (Democrat)

  • Craig Owens: 41,350 (49%)
  • Greg Gilstrap: 22,554 (26.8%)
  • Jimmy Herndon: 20,185 (24%)
  • View full results

Cobb State Court Judge Post 6 (non-partisan)

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Boyce defends Cobb Elections, blasts Ga. Secretary of State

Cobb budget town hall, Mike Boyce, Cobb public safety bonus, Cobb millage rate

Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce had some harsh words this week for the Georgia Secretary of State and strongly defended the county’s elections chief as absentee ballot counting from Tuesday’s primary elections continues into the weekend.

In his weekly newsletter issued Friday, Boyce modified comments he made earlier this week that Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger should resign over his handling of the elections, a subject that’s drawn national attention.

Voting issues included new machines that didn’t work properly in some precincts, including several in Cobb County, and that caused long voter lines that lasted for hours in certain areas, especially in Fulton and DeKalb counties.

Raffensperger blamed county elections offices for a lack of staffing and training, which caused a furor at the local level.

He’s a Republican, as is Boyce, who won 67 percent of the in-person vote during Tuesday’s GOP primary. In November, Boyce will face Democratic commissioner Lisa Cupid.

“I have since sent the Secretary of State an email stating if he would own up to his office’s responsibility for the problems, and work toward a solution to prevent them from happening again, I would reassess my position,” Boyce said in his newsletter.

He especially defended the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration and director Janine Eveler. Shifting blame to her and her staff, Boyce, said, “is not warranted. They have all been true public servants and are continuing to do so. This endorsement comes from watching all that they have been doing over many months to prepare for this election. We should be optimistic that a record number of people voted in this primary and did so by absentee balloting. Every one of these absentee ballots has to be validated and scanned. It takes time.”

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt said by midday Friday 73,000 absentee ballots had been counted, and another 33,000 to 36,000 are still left to be counted. On Thursday, the uncounted number was more than 61,000.

The record absentee ballots were the result of COVID-19, and Cavitt estimates that 109,000 absentee ballots will be counted—which represents around a fifth of the 518,000 registered voters in Cobb County. He also said 1,250 provisional ballots also are being counted.

(You can monitor the counting by clicking here.)

Among the local races hanging in the balance of absentee voting is the Republican primary for District 2 on the Cobb Board of Commissioners, which includes some of East Cobb. Fitz Johnson leads with 35.7 percent of the vote, followed by Andy Smith with 32.5 percent and Kevin Nicholas with with 31 percent.

All three candidates are separated by less than 500 votes. An Aug. 11 runoff awaits for the top two finishers, but primary results won’t be certified until next Friday.

Boyce said it wasn’t a surprise that given all the circumstances there would be election-day problems. “But I have learned that once you have to defend a position to the public you generally have lost the argument. So we are going to own up to the problems and fix them.”

Boyce added that November’s elections—which include two U.S. Senate races in Georgia as well as a presidential contest—will attract even more voters “and we can expect similar circumstances.

“As much as I believe the current system is broken, I don’t see it being replaced or repaired in a significant way before November,” he said in his newsletter, which is distributed to Cobb citizens. “What I can assure you is that the elections team is taking the necessary measures to ensure that your vote is protected and counted.”

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More than 61K Cobb absentee ballots still to be counted

We noted Wednesday the long task facing Cobb Elections in counting a record number of absentee ballots, a process that will go into Friday. cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, Walton and Dickerson PTSA candidates forum

Cobb County government sent out word at 3 p.m. Thursday that the number of absentee ballots has exceeded 105,000, with more than 61,000 still to be counted, and the process may not be complete until the weekend:

The number of absentee ballots that were mailed or turned in for the June 9th primary in Cobb is now up to more than 105,000. There are a few more still being checked in that were dropped off by the 7 pm Tuesday deadline. We expect elections teams will be working into the weekend to get these ballots processed and scanned in so they can be added to the results.
As of mid-afternoon, there were in excess of 61,500 absentee ballots that had yet to be included in the results.

Cobb Elections has expanded the locations where they are counting absentee ballots. A record (by far) number of voters used absentee voting in the June 9th primary, with well in excess of 90,000 ballots to count. The majority of those remain to be counted, and the results (found at https://bit.ly/2AkK9YY) will continue to be updated throughout the day. Stay tuned for updates on the counting. Workers are currently counting ballots at:

  • 1) Main Elections Office, 736 Whitlock Ave., Marietta
    Absentee Voting Room – Viewing from outside through the windows
    Elections Reception Lobby – Enter Main entrance, viewing from the hallway through suite door/window
    Upstairs Training Room – Enter Main entrance, follow signs, viewing area inside room

  • 2) Jim Miller Park Event Center, 2245 Callaway Rd SW, Marietta, GA 30008

Cobb government spokesman Ross Cavitt issued an alert at 6 p.m. Thursday that the Cobb Board of Elections and Elections is delaying the certification process. The board was to have met next Wednesday to certify results, but that meeting will now take place on Friday, June 17, start time TBA.

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Cobb absentee ballot counting may last until Friday

Cobb Elections said Wednesday afternoon that an estimated 90,000 absentee ballots are still being counted, leaving a number of close races in East Cobb and around the county still in question.cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, Walton and Dickerson PTSA candidates forum

County spokesman Ross Cavitt said all results for the moment (available by clicking here) reflect in-person early voting and Tuesday’s primary voting figures at precincts.

Here’s what else he said:

“But the majority of the absentee ballots either mailed in or dropped off remain to be tallied. Work on sending in results from 70,000+ of those absentee ballots is ongoing and could continue through Friday.”

So it may not be until later in the week that we know who will be in the Republican runoff for District 2 of the Cobb Board of Commissioners. For the moment, Fitz Johnson leads a three-man field with 36 percent of the vote, while Andy Smith has 32 percent and Kevin Nicholas 31 percent.

A total of 583 votes separates them, and all that is certain is that the top two finishers will meet in a runoff in August.

An early check of the 39 precincts shows that Johnson, a retired Army officer and business owner, won seven precincts in East Cobb, while winning all but one in his home base of Cumberland-Vinings (marked in blue).

Smith and Nicholas, both from East Cobb, won precincts marked in light green and dark green, respectively. Click here to hover over precinct totals.

Another close race in East Cobb awaiting absentee ballot totals is the Democratic primary in State House 46.

Caroline Holko was leading Shirley Ritchie by 278 votes in a district that includes 12 precincts in Northeast Cobb and four in Cherokee County. As of 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, only 50 percent of those precincts have reported, with absentee ballots also to be counted.

That is the only contested legislative race in East Cobb.

As we noted late last night, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce and incumbent Cobb school board member David Banks were leading their GOP primaries without the need for a runoff.

So was Julia Hurtado, a Democrat in a two-way race for Post 5 and who had 58 percent of the vote.

Earlier today it looked as though Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Jon Ossoff may not win that primary without a runoff, as he hovered around 48 percent of the vote.

With 81 percent of the in-person vote counted, Ossoff had 49 percent of the vote late Wednesday afternoon, but absentee ballots statewide have not all been counted.

The Democratic primary for Cobb Sheriff also appears headed for a runoff, with Craig Owens collecting 47 percent over Greg Gilstrap (30 percent) and East Cobb resident Jimmy Herndon (25 percent).

In other Cobb elections of note, Reuben Green, Chief Judge of the Cobb Superior Court, appears to have lost his re-election bid to attorney Angela Brown, who led 55-44 percent.

A runoff for an open seat on the Superior Court bench is shaping up between Jason Marbutt and Greg Shenton, while Cobb Magistrate Judge Kellie Hill was leading in a race for another open seat with 61 percent of the vote against Daniele Johnson.

A State Court judge runoff will take place in August between Trina Griffiths and Diana Simmons, also for an open seat.

All Cobb elections results will be updated at this link.

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