Ford County taxpayer total nearing $100k to defend clerk in voting case

The total price to defend Ford County Clerk Debbie Cox in a voting rights lawsuit is nearing $100,000. That bill goes to taxpayers in the county.

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Lauren Bonds: She should stop paying her lawyer and start doing her job.

It is becoming increasingly clear that Ford County is more concerned with trying to save face than protecting its residents’ right to vote.

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Ford County pays more than $70,000 to firm hired in Kansas voting rights case

“Cox has repeatedly argued that Ford County couldn’t afford to open additional polling locations but it seems to us that $70,000 could easily cover the costs associated with additional poll workers and materials.”

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Barry Grissom: Let’s find better way to vote

Shouldn’t we have a system that treats all Kansans the same? Why should our right to vote depend on the county where we reside? Is this really the best Kansas can do?

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Acknowledge the realities of discrimination

That’s why positions such as the diversity officer are so important. They provide important arbiters and mediators for people who feel they have nowhere else to turn.

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EDITORIAL: ‘Something is not right in Kansas.’ Why is it still so hard to vote in the state?

These officials must do far more than merely count votes at election time. It’s also their duty to “foster a culture where democracy thrives,” the ACLU said in the report titled “All Democracy Is Local: The Impact of County Election Officials on Citizen Participation in Elections.”

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Incoming Gov. Kelly, Koch Industries agree on need for reform as Kansas prisons fill up

The ACLU of Kansas is a member of the coalition. Its interim director, Lauren Bonds, said Kelly deserves kudos for her attention to criminal justice reform.

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ACLU analysis says Kansas voters have different access depending on where they live

Convenience plays as important a role in voter participation as political passion or apathy, according to an analysis of recent state elections published today by the ACLU of Kansas.

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Report: Kansas election officials reject voter fraud claims

Election officials in Kansas counties don’t believe voter fraud is a problem in the state, according to a survey of local election officials released Friday that counters Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s unsupported claims that voter fraud is widespread.

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