Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Recount Requested Of Mullica Election

 
MULLICA TOWNSHIP — Democratic incumbent Committeewoman Barbara Rheault will file Tuesday for a recount, after losing her seat by one vote in this month’s election, she said Monday.

The election was certified by the Atlantic County Clerk’s Office on Friday, at which point the vote tallies were 614 for Rheault and 615 for Republican challenger John Walther.
“I owe it to the people who voted for me and helped in my campaign,” said Rheault, a fifth-grade teacher in Mullica and president of the Mullica Township Education Association.


She said there was a possibility of mistakes with vote-by-mail and provisional ballots, since Mullica doesn’t have its own postal ZIP code. Its residents use mailing addresses that say Egg Harbor City or Hammonton, or post office boxes in the Elwood section of the township.
Some legitimate ballots may have been mistakenly rejected because of the address issue, or mistakenly sent to other municipalities, she said.
Her attorney Bard Shober, of Pleasantville, said he will file paperwork with state Superior Court seeking a recount of machine, mail-in and provisional ballots. He also is seeking to look at paper ballots in Hammonton and Egg Harbor City, he said.


The deadline is Wednesday for requesting a recount, said Shober, and he expects the issues to be resolved in two weeks or so.
“The time frame depends on the judge,” he said.
There was also an issue with provisional ballots not being available in some polling places for a time, after the Atlantic County Clerk’s Office failed to properly deliver the paper ballots to municipalities.
Provisional ballots are used in specific circumstances, such as when a poll book says a voter applied for a vote-by-mail ballot but wants to vote in person. The paper ballot allows the person to vote, while giving the county time to make sure the person didn’t also send in a mail-in ballot.
Superior Court Judge Mark H. Sandson is overseeing a court process to determine how the mistake happened, and to make sure it can’t happen again. Last week, he ordered the creation of a bipartisan committee to report to him 9 a.m. Feb. 1.


In Mullica, the tally was 579 for businessman Walther and 563 for Rheault after machine voting. But after Walther received 34 votes by mail and Rheault received 49, the total tightened to 613 for Walther and 612 for Rheault. Each received two provisional votes, leading to the final 615-614 total, according to the county.
The first time she ran in 2012, she won easily, she said.
“Granted, it was a presidential election year,” she said, so turnout was higher and she was the highest vote-getter with 1,416 votes.
Rheault also made an unsuccessful bid for Atlantic County freeholder last year.
This year “just shows every vote counts,” she said.
Contact: 609-272-7219

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Do the tax payers have to pay for this recount?

Unknown said...

No, as the candidate requesting the recount, it was up to me to pay the filing fees associated with the cost of a recount.

Unknown said...

The party filing the request for recount is responsible for paying the filing fees and costs associated with the request - and I have done so.