Florida’s top elections official said Friday the state has no plans to measure where polling place lines are longest, despite the eight-hour wait times that some voters endured last fall.
During testimony before the commission on voting set up by President Obama, Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner was asked by Nate Persily, the panel’s director, how the state would know in the future which polling places had experienced the longest wait times.
“I think it’s fair to say the greatest problem was in urban areas,” Detzner responded, before going on to discuss ways to fix the problem.
Persily tried again: How would the state know where the problem was most acute, other than by relying on anecdotal reports from the media and local election supervisors?
“Would you be doing surveys?” Persily asked.
In response, Detzner said there was no need for the state to gather such information, because it was the job of each local supervisor to keep tabs on the issue in his or her county.
“Supervisors know very well where their long lines were, and I anticipate they’ll be making adjustments,” Detzner said. “They are the front lines and it’s their responsibility to know how to meet the demand.”
That hands-off approach appears to be at odds with the commission’s goals, which include bringing the data-driven, customer-service-oriented techniques of the private sector to the task of election administration. Without a comprehensive effort to measure where lines are longest, it may be difficult for the state to effectively address the issue.









