Current:Home > InvestVoting company makes ‘coercive’ demand of Texas counties: Pay up or lose service before election -Secure Growth Solutions
Voting company makes ‘coercive’ demand of Texas counties: Pay up or lose service before election
View
Date:2025-04-17 07:26:50
A voting company owner on Friday acknowledged making a “coercive” demand of 32 Texas counties: Pay an additional surcharge for the software that runs their voting registration system, or lose it just before November’s elections.
John Medcalf of San Diego-based VOTEC said he had to request the counties pay a 35% surcharge because several agencies in multiple states, including some of the Texas counties, have been late to pay in the past and his company had trouble meeting payroll.
He characterized the charges as a cry for help to get enough money to avoid losing key employees just before November.
“It is coercive, and I regret that,” Medcalf said. “We’ve been able to get by 44 of 45 years without doing that.”
The surcharges have sent Texas’ largest counties scrambling to approve payments or look at other ways they can avoid losing the software at a critical time.
Medcalf said that VOTEC would continue to honor counties’ contracts for the remainder of their terms, which run past Texas’ May primary runoffs, but that most expire shortly before November.
“It’s either pay now and dislike it or pay with election difficulty,” Medcalf said, adding that he didn’t expect any contracts to actually be canceled.
The bills are for 35% of two major line items in the existing contracts, Medcalf said.
Texas’ Secretary of State’s office said Thursday that it was consulting with counties about their options.
The biggest county in Texas, Harris, has already said it will pay its surcharge of about $120,000 because the system is so crucial.
veryGood! (2393)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Benny Safdie on 'The Curse' — and performing goodness
- Pilot dies after small plane crashes at Clinton National Airport in Little Rock, Arkansas
- Oscar nominations 2024: Justine Triet becomes 8th woman ever nominated for best director
- Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
- The Best Rotating Curling Irons of 2024 That Are Fool-Proof and Easy to Use
- 3 people arrested in the Netherlands on suspicion of violating EU sanctions with exports to Russia
- Powerball jackpot at $145 million after January 22 drawing; See winning numbers
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- ‘Gone Mom’ prosecutors show shirt, bra, zip ties they say link defendant to woman’s disappearance
Ranking
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- Chanel’s spring couture show is a button-inspired ballet on the Paris runway
- Niecy Nash Reveals How She's Related to Oscar Nominees Danielle Brooks and Sterling K. Brown
- America Ferrera earns Oscar nomination for Barbie after Golden Globes snub
- 51-year-old Andy Macdonald puts on Tony Hawk-approved Olympic skateboard showing
- Man sentenced to life in prison for the fatal shooting of a deputy U.S. marshal in Arizona in 2018
- Dwayne The Rock Johnson gets ownership rights to his nickname, joins TKO's board
- New York man convicted of murdering woman who wound up in his backcountry driveway after wrong turn
Recommendation
Olympic disqualification of gold medal hopeful exposes 'dark side' of women's wrestling
Michigan woman sentenced to life in prison in starvation death of son
New member of Mormon church leadership says it must do better to help sex abuse victims heal
Ed O'Neill says feud with 'Married… With Children' co-star Amanda Bearse was over a TV Guide cover
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Police say a former Haitian vice-consul has been slain near an airport in Haiti
20 people stranded on Lake Erie ice floe back on land after rescue operation
Biden, Harris team up to campaign for abortion rights in Virginia