New Orleans Mayor: Some Polling Places Face Power Outages
New Orleans Mayor: Some Polling Places Face Power Outages
The mayor of New Orleans said Sunday that it's unclear whether electrical service that was knocked out during Hurricane Zeta will be restored to all polling places by Election Day.

NEW ORLEANS: New Orleans’ Democratic mayor and Louisiana’s Republican secretary of state are arguing over who’s responsible for providing generators if some polling places don’t have electricity on Election Day.

Mayor LaToya Cantrell said Sunday that up to 11 precincts in the city could still be without power Tuesday, nearly a week after Hurricane Zeta took down power lines. She said Secretary of State Kyle Ardoin and his commissioner of elections, Sherri Wharton Hadskey, are refusing to provide support for generators for those precincts.

In failing to fulfill its duty, the Secretary of States office risks disenfranchising Orleans residents and threatens to suppress the vote, Cantrell said in a news release.

Ardoin responded in his own news release Sunday: It is unfortunate that politicians like Mayor Cantrell … have responded to Hurricane Zeta by trying to score cheap political points instead of being part of any solution.”

Cantrell said the Secretary of State’s office has taken the unprecedented position that the city of New Orleans must use its employees and money to provide generators for polling places.

Ardoin issued a statement Saturday saying that Louisiana polling places without power would receive generators for Election Day, but it did not specify whether providing the generators would be a state or local responsibility. A spokesman for Ardoin’s office did not immediately provide a response to questions about it from The Associated Press on Sunday.

Ardoin has publicly supported President Donald Trump’s reelection bid, declaring at a November 2019 rally that Louisiana will win with Donald Trump. Cantrell endorsed the Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, in August.

Zeta hit southeastern Louisiana as a Category 2 hurricane Wednesday before sweeping through parts of Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia. The storm initially knocked out power for about 2.5 million customers. More than 343,500 outages were still reported in those states Sunday, according to poweroutage.us, though it was unclear whether all were because of Zeta.

Mississippi Secretary of State Michael Watson said Friday that the state emergency management agency is on standby to provide support to any county that needs it before or on Election Day.

Gabriel Sterling, voting system implementation manager for the Georgia Secretary of State, said Friday that hes been in contact with Georgia Power and with the electric membership cooperatives and expects power to be restored to the states 2,419 polling places by Tuesday. Sterling also said the Secretary of States office was talking to the state emergency management agency about backup generators.

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