NJ Globe’s Nikita Biryukov reports
The Senate State Government Committee pulled a bill that would have allowed county election boards to decide the placement of all ballot drop boxes after an advocate voiced concerns that the bill did nothing to prevent unequal placements.
The measure, sponsored by Senate State Government Committee Chairman James Beach (D-Voorhees), would eliminate provisions requiring drop boxes be installed at certain locations, like county clerk offices and colleges campuses, instead allowing election boards to decide drop box placement through a majority vote.
But Henal Patel, director of the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice’s Democracy and Justice Program, warned the committee unequal distribution would continue because the bill did not peg drop boxes to population.
“These decisions made by county officials have downsides, and with this, as with so many other issues, the brunt of those decisions are felt by black and other voters of color,” she said. “Notably, the current law does not prevent disparate placement from occurring either.”
She pointed to Newark, the state’s most populous city which last year received just two drop boxes. West Orange, an Essex County town with a little more than one-sixth of Newark’s population, also had two drop boxes.