
A week after the March primary, more than half of the city’s potential vote-by-mail ballots are now in, but Chicago Election officials could not say Tuesday when the official results will be known.
“By state law we need to wait at least two weeks to give voters a chance to reply to any questions or supply any documents, if they had a provisional ballot,” said Jim Allen, a spokesman for the Chicago Board or Election Commissioners.
Of the 117,120 vote-by-mail applications sent out before last week’s primary, 60,812 have been returned as of Tuesday morning, according to figures from the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners.
Of that, 1,339 ballots were rejected for either being postmarked too late or for having an invalid or missing signature. Some may have chosen to vote in person instead of submitting their mail ballot, Allen said.
“Our job is to make sure we count every legal ballot,” Allen said.
Staff at the city’s Board of Election Commissioners got back to work Tuesday after a few days off and have resumed their four main post-election tasks: vote-by-mail ballot processing, a review of provisional ballots, a precinct canvass — which means a review of all documents and tapes from the various precinct voting locations — and a 5% retabulation of ballots.
That process entails the Illinois State Board of Elections randomly selecting five ballot scanners used on Election Day or during early voting and running all ballots cast at those locations through the scanners again to verify that they were counted correctly, Allen said.
But there’s no word yet on when last week’s primary results will be certified.
“We also have to wait for any late arriving, but on-time postmarked, vote-by-mail ballots, so by law we cannot conclude anything by at least March 31 and also by law we’re allowed to wait at least 21 days after the Election Day to issue the proclamation.”
That would be April 7.
Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough released unofficial results for suburban areas on Saturday. There are still some mail ballots that the county can receive so long as they arrive by March 31, James Scalzitti, a spokesman for the clerk, said in an email. The county’s results will likely be certified in early April. Scalzitti did not immediately respond to a request for comment.