The Elkhart County Election Board voted on March 27 to table a proposal that would allow poll workers to initial early-voting ballots in advance, deciding to seek legal guidance and more training before changing current practice.
Board members said the change could speed processing but raised concerns about chain-of-custody, vote accounting and recount risk. Jenny, who led roll call and administrative duties at the meeting, said she worried that ballots initialed in advance could become invalid or require spoiling if workers changed the next day. "If Tom's sick and now Jennifer's got someone else working with her, those ballots are live and they're no longer—then we have to spoil those ballots," she said.
John Treiberg, who works early voting and spoke as a meeting participant, acknowledged the trade-off between throughput and security. "The only advantage I can see to signing them ahead of time is you don't have to do it during the day," he said, but he added that Indiana law appears to allow correction of some poll-worker defects while flagging that absentee-ballot rules may differ. "It also says that this doesn't apply to absentee ballots, and early voting is a form of absentee ballot," Treiberg said.
Committee members recalled close local recounts since 2019 and said clerical errors can change outcomes in tight races. Because of those concerns and unresolved legal questions, Jenny moved to table the proposal until later in the year after the primary; the motion was seconded and carried unanimously (3–0).
The board said it will contact the Indiana Election Division for a definitive legal interpretation and emphasized poll-worker training as a precondition for any future change. The issue may return for discussion in a June or July meeting, or after the primary elections when the board expects to have more data on early-voting operations.