Account SUBSCRIBER EDITION Friday, July 8, 2022 Today's eEdition 85°F 97° 77° Coronavirus Obituaries Sports Business Opinion Dining Jobs/Recruiting Personal Finance POLITICS & GOVERNMENT Atchison County official allows city residents to register to vote after lawsuit threat BY JONATHAN SHORMAN UPDATED JULY 08, 2022 1:01 PM Voting booths. ABBY DREY [email protected] Atchison County will again allow residents of the City of Atchison to register to vote following a local outcry and a threatened lawsuit from the American Civil Liberties Union, according to an email from the Kansas secretary of state’s office. County Clerk Michelle Phillips had stopped registering city residents in late June because of an upcoming local sales tax election next week. State law cuts off registrations 21 days before an election. The registration blackout meant city residents who want to register ahead of the Aug. 2 election – which will determine the future of abortion rights in Kansas – had lost their chance to vote. But Clay Barker, deputy assistant Kansas secretary of state, told the ACLU of Kansas on Friday morning he spoke with Phillips and that registration would be reopened. “They will reach out to everyone who tried to register as new voter and ask them to either return to register, if they had been turned away, or that their registration form will be processed,” Barker wrote in an email to ACLU of Kansas legal director Sharon Brett. Brett, who said the ACLU of Kansas had threatened to file a lawsuit at noon Friday, provided a copy of the email to The Star. Phillips didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Barker confirmed he sent the email and said registration was reopening for residents of the city of Atchison. Residents who register between now and the statewide deadline of July 12 can’t vote in the local sales tax election but will be allowed to vote in the August election. Atchison could prove a source of support for a proposed amendment, called Value Them Both by supporters, that would remove the right to an abortion from the Kansas Constitution. The city is home to Benedictine College, a Catholic liberal arts college. The city of roughly 10,800 northwest of Kansas City is set to hold a special election on a sales tax on July 14. State law requires registrations to end 21 days before an election, prompting a halt to registrations for city residents on June 23. Normally, registrations would resume the day after the election. But because July 15 is already within the 21-day window for the Aug. 2 election, Atchison residents appeared to have missed their opportunity to register. Atchison County residents who don’t live in the city of Atchison weren’t affected and could always register. Brett told The Star the decision to close registration violated the National Voter Registration Act, because the August election includes primaries for federal offices, such as U.S. representative and senator. Brett provided The Star with a copy of the email. The federal law requires voter registration to either be open until 30 days before an election or a time set by state law, whichever is shorter. Whitney Tempel, a spokeswoman for Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab, said his office will try to address the conflict between state and federal law during the next legislative session. Some local residents had urged the City of Atchison to cancel or postpone the election, but local officials refused. “There is a group trying to make this a city issue when the city has no authority to govern voter registration,” city manager Amy Finch said in a statement on Thursday. This story was originally published July 8, 2022 10:50 AM. RELATED STORIES FROM WICHITA EAGLE GOVERNMENT & POLITICS Ahead of key Kansas election, city’s decision blocks residents from registering to vote JULY 08, 2022 8:32 AM JONATHAN SHORMAN 816-234-4274 Jonathan Shorman is The Kansas City Star’s lead political reporter, covering Kansas and Missouri politics and government. He previously covered the Kansas Statehouse for The Star and Wichita Eagle. He holds a journalism degree from The University of Kansas. READ NEXT POLITICS & GOVERNMENT Ahead of key Kansas election, city’s decision blocks residents from registering to vote BY JONATHAN SHORMAN UPDATED JULY 08, 2022 11:30 AM The ACLU of Kansas says the early voter registration cutoff violates federal law. KEEP READING TRENDING STORIES The question another school asked that led to Maize QB Avery Johnson picking K-State UPDATED JULY 07, 2022 12:18 PM Building that once held Wichita’s Walt’s Klassics to be auctioned, must be moved off lot UPDATED JULY 08, 2022 12:55 PM Man lights firework on his head and it explodes into his skull, Texas cops say JULY 06, 2022 2:08 PM New south Wichita Angry Elephant restaurant will have expanded menu, sports bar feel UPDATED JULY 07, 2022 11:09 AM Head-on collision leaves man dead, another seriously injured in southwest Wichita JULY 06, 2022 2:47 PM POLITICS & GOVERNMENT ‘Building a lot of relationships’: Davids campaigns for rural votes in redrawn district JULY 08, 2022 5:00 AM NATIONAL POLITICS Wisconsin Supreme Court disallows absentee ballot drop boxes JULY 08, 2022 12:59 PM BUSINESS A robust June jobs report clouds outlook for US economy JULY 08, 2022 12:58 PM NATIONAL POLITICS Trump’s White House counsel Cipollone arrives for Jan. 6 panel questioning JULY 08, 2022 12:55 PM NEWS Louisiana abortion ban allowed to proceed; judge lifts stay JULY 08, 2022 12:47 PM NEWS Impassioned Biden signs order on abortion access JULY 08, 2022 12:47 PM Take Us With You Real-time updates and all local stories you want right in the palm of your hand. THE WICHITA EAGLE APP SUBSCRIPTIONS Start a Subscription Customer Service eEdition Vacation Hold Pay Your Bill LEARN MORE About Us Contact Us Newsletters Archives Personal Finance ADVERTISING Information Digital Advertising Place a Classified COPYRIGHT COMMENTING POLICY PRIVACY POLICY TERMS OF SERVICE

Read more at: https://www.kansas.com/news/politics-government/article263284463.html#storylink=cpy