You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You From Mr. And PTom And Tyr In a Isn't it Our believe It administrator wolf has this meeting been properly noticed yesterday's meeting was noticed in accordance with wisconsin's open meeting laws thank you i asked that this meeting be put on our calendar primarily to address the recent information that came to light regarding the discovery by madison officials city of madison officials of 200 ballots that were not tallied were not accounted for and it started it i believe december 20th or so or december 19th when the commission first discovered that this was even an issue and as is set forth in our materials you'll see sort of the timeline of what our staff discovered and what they tried to figure out um we then as is also in the materials as some of the appendices received statements from the madison city attorney and the madison clerk i asked our staff to answer the question of whether and what authority we had as a commission to instigate our own investigation into this matter um we are the final canvas we are the final arbiters of the votes in the state of wisconsin and we needed to know why those ballots weren't accounted for and weren't included in our canvas um the integrity of the election process is important and we needed to know and understand this so i asked staff what authority do we have to investigate and what does that look like um and what you have in front of you is a memo from staff summarizing the answer to that question and also summarizing the things that we can do as a commission and i want to be clear that this was at my instigation and request that there is no position of staff one way or another on what we should do or whether we should do it but rather this is an answer to my very specific question um the sum total of the information we have as to the matter of these missing ballots is contained in this memo um this is literally everything we know if you include those appendices we have no additional information and that's why i think an investigation is important i also thought it was very important that this commission convened as a group to address this important issue and i also thought it was important that we do so formally and that we do so following our powers and the available statutes um sometimes we address things that are more um just a matter of exchanging a few documents or a few calls um we we've certainly done it that way in the past but given the seriousness of what happened here our lack of knowledge information that was not given to us in a timely fashion i think we need to do something more um formal and and the like um so i asked council for the wc to tell us the answer to what can we do and how do we do it um and i'm going to ask attorney sharp to give us that introduction and again procedurally today's meeting is simply do we want to investigate um and my suggestion obviously is i think we should my other suggestion was that we do a two-member bipartisan drafting of what those questions and document requests look like um and um i would suggest that don and i simply draft those drafted more discovery um that are our esteemed staff council um and we have templates for these sort of things and can probably get that out very quickly um and also that we make public what it is we're asking for in other words that this process be transparent so that the public knows that we are working on this what we're asking for and so that we can make sure that folks understand how seriously we're taking this so i'm going to begin by asking attorney sharp to summarize what we are allowed to do and what that process looks like thank you chair jacups and good morning commissioners um the memo for this agenda item begins on page three of your materials and is accompanied by attachments a through f um so as the chair said this discussion does pertain to the 193 absentee ballots that the city of Madison did not count during the November 5th 2024 general election and i do want to reiterate at the outset that the commission staff have verified independently that these uncounted absentee ballots did not impact any federal state or local race or referenda on the ballots in question um so if it's okay with you chair jacups i'd first like to start by providing an overview of how the situation first came to commission staff's attention and then i can provide a summary of the statutes that govern the commission's investigation authority please do so okay um so on the afternoon of December 18th 2024 the city of Madison clerk's office staff contacted commission staff to request assistance with entering their reconciliation data from ballots cast during the November 5th general election the city of Madison explained that they had realized that two of their awards had absentee ballots that were not processed on election day this meant that their total ballots issued number did not match their voter participation numbers meaning they had more ballots recorded as received than ballots counted the city of Madison staff sought the commission staff's assistance with entering and recording the uncounted ballots in the statewide voter registration system and it appeared that the primary purpose of the initial outreach from the city clerk's office was data entry system assistance not solely to notify the commission of the uncounted ballots during this election the next day on December 19th commission staff requested a call with the city of Madison clerk the Madison city attorney and irrelevant members of their staff in order to gather additional information on December 20th that call took place and commission staff requested that clerk witzelbell provide a detailed statement regarding the uncounted absentee ballots including how many ballots were uncounted and when the clerk's office first discovered these errors clerk witzelbell provided a statement to commission staff on Monday December 23rd and I will note even though the memo that was provided with the clerk's office press release was dated December 20th it was received by commission staff on December 23rd. On December 26th clerk witzelbell's office issued a press release disclosing the uncounted ballot situation to the public and the mayor also issued her statement and then also on December 26th as chair Jacob said she directed commission staff to prepare a memorandum outlining the legal process for the commission so it could consider opening an investigation pursuant to Wisconsin statute 5.06 subsection 4. So the purpose of the investigation would be to create a complete record of what transpired so that the city of Madison can implement improved policies and so that all Wisconsin clerks can benefit from understanding how to avoid similar issues in the future. So Wisconsin law does expressly permit the commission on its own motion to investigate and determine whether any election official with respect to any matter concerning election administration or conduct of elections whether that official has failed to comply with the law or has abused the discretion vested in him or her or intends to do so. After such an investigation the commission is authorized to summarily decide the matter and may by order require any election official to conform his or her conduct to the law to restrain them from taking any action inconsistent with the law or to require the official to correct any action or decision that is inconsistent with the law and if that language sounds familiar your note that the order that would be issued for after an investigation is the same type of order and decision that the commission would issue to resolve a 5.06 complaint. So if the commission does choose to authorize an investigation there are a remainder of the memo and your materials outlines the areas of inquiry that staff compiled as likely to result in pertinent information given the subject matter. So given all of that I'm happy to answer any questions but I will turn the remainder of this discussion back over to Chair Jacob's for this agenda item. Are there questions for attorney sharp regarding what the process would look like for an investigation or authority anything like that? Commissioner Spindell. Yes I was just wondering in terms of why we want to do an investigation as opposed to taking a complaint on this and what the difference could be in terms of doing the investigation versus doing the the staff work on the complaint. So that that's a fair question and that was part of the discussion I had late December with staff. And my inclination was that this was such a serious oversight and I didn't want to wait for a complaint. I felt it was important that the commission act promptly and also that we use the powers that we have to get out the information we want because remember in a complaint process we get a complaint we send it to the respondent to give us some reply or response to it. That response may not have the answer to the questions we want and I have real questions about what all happened here that would probably be broader than what would be raised in a complaint and I would want to know those answers sooner rather than later. Some of it is just speed. I thought this was so egregious that it was important we we move immediately. Commissioner Thompson and then Boston. Now I think this is a good idea and in response to Commissioner Spindell doesn't preclude a complaint being filed at all. It just gives us you know a better ability to go gather all the information. We haven't done that before. This is a good time to do it. And the other thing I noted that we got a comment I think from the City of Madison clerk just I saw that in saying that they would fully cooperate and that we didn't even have to send formal. So I mean I think finding out you know how 193 ballots didn't get counted because there are a lot of hands on these ballots. And so I'm curious how it happened. So I thought it was a good idea and I think we should go forward. Commissioner Bosselman. Well when I first started looking at this I think I was looking at it from the perspective of the clerk and I'm thinking to myself if if there was some type of a misstep that happened it could happen in a different municipality a smaller municipality or bigger municipality. And I just think it's important to understand you know what happened how it happened. What needs to be done to make sure it doesn't happen again. Because I look at it as we that eventually the Commission would be able to give guidance making sure that don't don't miss this step in the future. And that's how I looked at it. I didn't look at it as a as a a complaint of a complaint is filed that's fine. But I looked at it as the position that the that our Commission is in is to make sure that we do whatever we can to provide guidance that it doesn't happen anymore. And unless we find out how it happened I don't know that we can give that guidance. So I look at it as a as a positive in a sense that how do how do we move forward from this and how do we make sure this does not happen again in the future. So that's how I look at it. Mr. Miller I saw your hand up. Yeah I agree the legislature was certainly concerned about the investigative power of the government accountability board when it eliminated that agency and created this agency in the ethics commission. But the legislature also explicitly said that the Commission in very limited circumstances and this is one of them may on its own motion investigate an election official. There are the the powers as I read the stats powers of the Commission are a little bit more limited when it's done its own motion than when there's complaint. And I think that's fine. My concern here is not with the magnitude or the magnitude is significant. The issue is why was this not determined or caught by the time of the either the local canvas of the county campus. And you know these errors can happen and it seems to me knowing what little we do know is my assumption is either there was a failure to follow procedures or our procedures aren't good enough and we have the correct and so I think one of those two things has occurred and I think it's incumbent upon us to determine that. And I'm glad to see that the city of Madison is now saying that they will cooperate. I'm a little my biggest I saw my biggest concern here is why it took a month and a half for this to come out. And that's very very disturbing and I'm hoping we can determine why that happened as well. Commissioner Spindall. Yeah. I just I understand what we're talking about in terms of the complaint process and so forth. And this is brand new for us. I guess we've had a couple opportunities to do an investigation before which did not go through. And I guess we need to take a look at is this something that we want to get into. Are we opening Pandora's box by starting to you know to to do this. And I think that the points have been very well laid out in terms of what's happened here in Madison and what's happened here in Madison and in terms of what we need to do going forward. And it is taking a quite a step and as Don mentioned one of the reasons for the GAB being dissolved in the Wisconsin-Lesh commission starting was that the investigation by the GAB really got out of hand. But I think we're sort of limited in this and that we're talking only about that we're able to investigate the actions of the in terms of the you know election officials. And it seems to me that if we're going to investigate Madison which in my opinion the sins basically were the discrepancies not being caught by the canvassing either the city or county canvassing boards or in the 36th state of LA in terms of getting this this information to WAC which should have been coming to us immediately. Then I call on the commission to investigate the same sort of thing at the what happened at the central count on November 5th and the many problems and discrepancies which here you know brought major international media concerns as well as the Trump campaign Republican Party concerns in terms of what took place there with the results not being reported until 4.35 a.m. so I think if we do if we do one then we need to you know to do both. I'm commissioner Thompson then bustleman the you know I think commissioner spindell the you imply that Milwaukee because the count came in or the at four something in the morning had something to do with something inappropriate when we all know there was legislation pending that wasn't signed that would allow people to start that process early. There there is no similarity between what had happened in Milwaukee and in Madison. I think that what we have on the table is a proposal to investigate Madison. I think we should do it if there's a complaint that comes in on Milwaukee it's there but I don't think we should muck up the process we should get at I mean Don is really right that when we when I first heard about I go like you know I didn't know how could happen that you know 193 days I mean 193 ballots and it was like I mean that should have been picked up at the canvas and so as Mark said we got to find out what happened so if we we need better guidance we need to do it or as Don said you know figure it out and I don't think it serves our the bigger picture Bob to throw Milwaukee in and start 2025 and that kind of partisan manner anyway so that's my comment I'm not sure boss woman well I still look at this probably is maybe is a bigger picture maybe from a clerk's perspective but I see this is being procedural and I see this is something that can happen somewhere else even though it's never happened before and I think it's just important that if there's a safeguard if there's a guidance that we need to give to make sure that that this doesn't happen again I think it's important that we find out how how it happened and what we need to do to give that guidance I don't look at this as a as a blame anybody I'm looking at this from the perspective of how do we make sure this doesn't happen again and how do we make sure that all the polling places in the state all the municipalities in the state are following a procedure to make sure this doesn't happen again I'm and like I say I'm not looking at this as a punishment or something we need to investigate we need it because of the wrongdoing we need to investigate it to make sure it it goes smooth in the future and that we don't have any other problems and that's how I look at it I look at it as a solution not an investigation to find wrongdoing I look at it as an investigation to find a solution that it doesn't happen again thank you and I think that following up on what you just said March we have an election in February so we we need to know what went wrong sooner rather than later and Bob that's also an answer to your question of why aren't we waiting for a complaint we have about six weeks until our next election so the more information we can learn about what went wrong even if we're only able to send out a quickie clerks memo saying hey there's a step here don't forget about it as we work on more formal guidance I think we want to do that because certainly our February and April elections for a judge and the like we we have elections that are separated by 200 votes in April and in February that's that's not uncommon so I definitely think that our duty to figure out what happened and help our clerks so that it doesn't happen again is important the other thing too is when we've had other mistakes made by municipalities when now I forget the name of the town up north gave the wrong ballot to 100 people we knew about it within minutes of it happening of them figuring out what happened we were in the loop we were able to work with them to figure out the solution we figured out what the problem was we put it in our canvas so that when we canvassed at the state level we were able to incorporate that and and that sort of transparency is just sort of missing here so we can't be a part of the solution until we know what went wrong and and unfortunately we just don't right now there is a recommended motion commissioner we pull head or hand up oh I'm sorry commissioner Rabel please go ahead no that's okay I was going to completely agree with Marge and poll worker and clerk error happen this is about making sure it doesn't happen going forward um and I completely understand how they wouldn't find out about it in the canvas if it wasn't until they started to reconcile that they discovered it so I think there's there's some process or procedure that just it needs to be corrected Mr. Miller so I would make the recommended motion with option number one I'm sorry you're making the recommended motion with option one option one to summarize and return it to the commission yes okay that's the motion is there a second a second commissioner bustleman I saw your hand up first commissioner bustleman said seconds is there further discussion regarding this motion commissioner spindel go ahead yeah I'd like to make a friendly amendment to this motion that the Wisconsin Lex Commission authorized an investigation pursuant to Wisconsin's statute 5.064 to determine whether or not the city of Milwaukee election commission executive director Paula gaziras and the deputy director Bonnie Chang has failed to apply the law and abusive discretion regarding the problems resulting in the central count and vote not being received to the public at approximately 4.25 a.m. on November 6. Since I think that's not likely to be agreed by one I will second the motion for purposes of discussion okay so second the motion sorry but so that's just a ridiculous and bizarre conspiracy theory since we literally knew that's what was going to happen we put out press releases that that was what was going to happen we issued statements that that was going to happen we talked to national media explaining that was going to happen and we have not I would point out received a single complaint about it so this supposed concern by partisan people about this apparently was not so concerning that in the two months giver takes since that election nobody made a complaint nor is there a plausible explanation of how that what could possibly be the abusive discretion other than just reiterating a word that's a foundation for it so I'm not going to support that that's a waste of our time and energy if someone wants to file a complaint and allege something specific that they think was a violation they're allowed to do it but nobody's done it so can't be that important to folks right now and this isn't a tip for tap this is that that's not how this works we don't punish one person because we're dealing with someone else that's just not how this works I can't imagine that's how we want it to work commissioner boston and I see your hand right and having seconded that motion I would I wouldn't accept that as friendly emotion and I would just make the recommendation if if commissioner spindell would like that that he make a motion after this one and that we deal with it as a separate motion okay well isn't there a time wise moving to amend the motion he asked for a friendly amendment you don't know she's correct she's seconded so it can't be accepted as a friendly amendment because she is the seconded person if he wishes to move he can move to amend the motion to include that and then we vote on the amendment and then we return to the original motion if he wishes to amend the motion to whatever he just read he can do that but that wasn't what he amended so I think marjor's point of order is accepted and there is no friendly amendment so I think okay what I understood he's saying is that he wants to amend the motion is that right commissioner spindell that's correct no he has to make a new motion because this motion was not procedurally correct if he wants to make a new motion he can make a new motion okay if you'd like me to do that I'll be happy to do that again would you like me to repeat that you have to put it in proper form okay my motion would amendment to this motion is at the wisconsin election commission which is a commission authorizes an investigation pursuant to wisconsin statute 5.064 to determine whether or not the city of moiaki election commission executive director pala gazarus and the deputy director bani chain has failed to apply the law and abused their discretion regarding the the identified problems in the pursuing the central count and vote not being released to the public until approximately 4.25 a.m. on november 6 and is that your motion after that motion no no nope nope nope we're going to follow procedure is that your motion don't tell me about after the motion that is that your motion your motion to amend yes my motion to amend oh second there's a second to make mr millis I have a point of order I want to ask attorney with tecca are we noticed to deal with that issue that was obviously why I had my hand raised on the document I think the commission doesn't need to examine whether we would be um we did essentially notice this meeting for almost verbatim what commissioner spindell read with regard to the second municipality but our agenda only contemplates the city of madison and so I think it would more likely be appropriate under the open meetings laws to perhaps note that that should carry forward to the next agenda if the commission's vote we can put that for another meeting okay so i'm looking at our open session agenda item c reads discussion and possible action on authorization of wistat 5.06 sub 4 investigation of city of madison clerk regarding 193 uncounted absentee ballots for november 5 2024 general election so it does not appear we are noticed to address this as to the city of milwaukee at all um so I don't believe the commission can hear it at this meeting i just spindell you want to be heard on i think you should tell me why we would have the right to that's why i am i think the whole purpose of this meeting from what i could read here was to determine whether or not we were going to do an investigation and the investigation that's listed here happens to be in the city of madison but the the main purpose of this meeting as you outlined when you first spoke was whether or not the commission should do an investigation so this is the important part point here in my opinion in terms of whether or not the the commission is going to move forward with a new program basically of doing investigations such as this and the so i think that's a wrong reading of the uh of the thing i think this is certainly open uh the the fact that the commission is going to decide whether or not to do an investigation is the main purpose here and therefore that bringing in the city of milwaukee and and there are several problems i i know uh commissioner topson uh said that there's no real problems there well uh you know i don't want to go through a list um the workers showing up an hour late the door to the high speed counters closed at nine but then open uh no urgency through it but yet a highly experienced staffs of supervisors uh uh it's supervising the whole process so i i think uh that the investigation the word investigation opens us up for additional uh talk in memos and so forth and so on on uh investigations additional investigations as well i believe as chair i have to rule that the motion is out of order because we are not properly noticed for that motion i just have one question and then we move on is that all right the question uh go ahead and ask your question this question is to you are you willing to put on a future agenda uh maybe the next one that calling for an investigation of the city milwaukee election commission central count situation on November 5th 2025 only if i am provided with some reason why that investigation is needed in other words if you and you you and i can talk to each other two people can talk if you want to send me specifically what it is that you believe warrants an investigation in other words information that is not known or has not been provided to this commission or the press or elsewhere such that our work on this is required in other words that there's a mystery out there that you want solve um then we can put it in front of the commission to address but if it's just i don't like how they handle things and i want them to be uh brought up in front of the commission for some reason to embarrass or to yell at them or something that's not an effective use of commission time so if you want to provide to me some sort of statement of what it is specifically that happened that requires investigation that's not otherwise available um i am willing to consider that so just plan ahead on doing that don't give it to anyone else just a reminder we can't happen yeah could i ask that maybe that i present the information or that the information presented to both you and uh into don and basically no you can't do that bob you can't have three commissioners talking about something unless you do it in a public meeting otherwise that's a walkie that the city and walkie election commission is not incompetent it has been uh as has been alleged they're very competent and there are major problems that occurred during this time in my opinion uh being election commissioner for 18 years in the city of walkie i'm gonna cut you off notice we're not noticed on this we're not noticed on it we're not you you offer to comments are also uh we'll get the information to you you can get me specifically what your questions are it's on the record here of what i'm telling you sure um but i'm ruling that the motion is out of order which leaves us with the original motion which was set forth on page seven of our material having chosen option one commissioner tomsen yes i've moved the question okay the question having been moved is there any objection hearing none we're going to call the vote commissioner bostleman aye commissioner millis aye commissioner beeple aye commissioner spindell aye commissioner tomsen aye chair votes aye the motion is passed commissioner millis and i will be working today to try to get those questions in proper form and hopefully out by the end of business today is my goal the next item on our agenda is put there because we do have an election coming up in february and we do want to address the um just the deadline so anyone who is challenging the uh nomination papers of someone has the appropriate deadlines who's presenting on this one that would be me madam chair all right turnie would tuck please go ahead absolutely um just uh quick uh procedural statutory background so for the spring of 2025 election we know that circulation nomination papers is happening from december 1st through in january 7th and the commission has already scheduled and agreed upon a time and date of january 14th 11 a.m. the hearings is a nomination paper challenges and ultimately grant ballot access to qualifying candidates so following administrative code both after two as well as some of the timeline statutes such as wistat chapter 990 we have made a series of i don't want to call them recommendations but essentially determinations here that are laid out at what we believe the timeline to be based on all of those qualifications the primary before the commission other than reviewing and uh considering both additional times would whether or not at a rebuttal uh final rebuttal uh filing process to come from the calendar it has been granted for the last two election cycles uh for the grand fall processes in 2024 so the consideration of whether or not allowed would essentially shoehorn that one additional filing uh in the morning of january 14th before the commission meet so would likely look much like it has in the last couple of polls where the commission has been provided with all relevant materials they are filed in real time and then if there is a rebuttal filed on that morning we will get to those documents immediately and add that to any materials that we have compiled to advise the commission on at 11 a.m. for that ballot access meeting and so i would be happy to field any additional questions you might have on this process but that being kind of the primary consideration outside of what have been done in the same cycles prior to that okay commissioner millis i guess i reluctantly agree with the idea of having rebuttals reluctance is just the frustration with the tight statutory schedule that we're obligated to comply with my only uh comment on this or my primary comment is i think that we and i thought we did this in the past but make it clear that the content of any rebuttal has to be limited to factual or legal arguments made by the challenger's response i don't i don't think we should consider any new evidence right new legal arguments it's a rebuttal is a rebuttal you're rebutting only those items that were raised by the challenger in the challenger's response i think that's a good point because it also minimizes the nature and type of the response and makes it more accessible and i also agree with that i think rebuttals are really helpful because then we can go into reading knowing what we're actually arguing about because otherwise we have this happened no that happened and the nice thing about rebuttals is sometimes we get them saying well yeah they're right about these but we're going to continue our complaints about these others and i think that's been um very helpful in focusing the work we need to do um it has helped focus i think staff presentation where they can be like well we're not dealing with these so we're not even going to worry about those that's been conceded we're just going to focus on that and i i think that's been very helpful um can i share spindle yes just a question um we talked about this before that the challenger must notify the candidate or whatever of the complaint and then they have to show to us that they really tried and we all know with computers having problems and they forget to put the dot in between George and Smith uh that it's very possible that the candidate does not get notified and so all of a sudden the candidate hears about it during our particular discussion and also i think we talked at one time about the uh staff of the commission making sure that they also notified uh the candidate to try and uh make sure that that was actually received and it seems to me that because of this new process and i guess we haven't had to have for 150 years that the candidates any candidates who are challenged uh should certainly notify you the uh the chair uh at the appropriate time that they want to speak and that way that in case there is a rebuttal to the challenge the candidate gets an opportunity uh to talk about that rebuttal as well and i think those are very important um aspects of it i i do not think that this is a good idea our our major objective should be to try and get people on the ballots and not try and find reasons to um keep them off and again uh why do we need to do this now we haven't done it for you know i guess since this process started um just so you know Bob in the materials is a specific deadline by which people are required to tell us what time they want us that they want to speak so that we can prepare that's actually in that memo so we do that so that everyone knows that and they and they know the deadline for doing it um so that's one part of that and i think you're misunderstanding it's this is designed to figure out what we're actually arguing about that's what rebuttals solve for us they answer the question of what's actually an issue in this uh challenge and i it has been my experience more often than not that the rebuttals we've gotten have conceded that the candidate was correct in a certain number of them or that they have rehabilitated signatures in a certain number of them and has allowed us to focus only on those things that are not in dispute and i i think that's been a real help in understanding these challenges you know some of these challenges are you know 300 pages it's really nice to know that we're only focusing on 50 um and i think that's what rebuttal does for us and um and i do think it's really been a net positive for our meetings on this because otherwise we wound up with people talking and they're essentially doing a rebuttal in the talking and that's much less helpful and i think can be and then it's just sprung on all of us like oh we just learned something as you're speaking to us and i think that's um a less than ideal well i think that we just had this for one election the first election we did not have that because it was too close to to the election however i i think the the thing i'm concerned about is the challenge the candidate after the challenge may not know about it um and in that situation they need to have an opportunity to know about it and to respond and there's just not enough time the the deadline is nine o'clock in the morning we start to work at at 11 and it just seems to me that if we pass this then i would recommend all candidates that they they they put into um they put into uh their request to talk at the meeting the the uh next morning okay have you read the motion Bob because it really says that they have to serve the candidate yeah but they may yeah at nine o'clock in the morning eight fifty in the morning and then there's no provision as i understand for the uh let's say the candidate does not say they want to speak the day before uh there's no provision for the candidate to come back and say hey this is uh i don't agree with this thing or this is not true or whatever well smart candidates are clearly going to tell us ahead of time just in case and if they choose not to they need to they need to uh say that they're going to speak once there's a challenge whether or not uh oftentimes uh in the past they have not they have not done that but i think if there's smart little planning that you need to do it yeah mr. Thompson i'd make the recommended motion at page 65 of our materials with the clarification point made by commissioner millis the rebuttals are clearly limited to items in the response and no new facts and no new arguments so that's the motion i motion having been made is there a second to that motion commissioner repel seconds is there further discussion on that motion mr. mr. speaker offer a friendly uh amendment that the staff also once the complaint is received makes every effort to contact the candidate that is not a friendly amendment okay um for what it's worth if i may provide some today because there are some things better older processes and then there are some things that commissioner spadell would not be aware has been done since we last met so um yes the code does require that they serve that on the other party but we also do provide a templated letter with all of the information on the procedure as well as serving the documents to those individuals as part of that process we also warn them um when we do have a rebuttal period on the front end of this process when they're initially noticed that there is a short deadline for rebuttal and if they wish to buy all they're going to want to keep that in mind also we serve that electronically and obviously staff work quite a bit of extra hours during these procedures but we don't leave that for a day until we have reached someone with the you know whether it be the candidates representative the candidate themselves whoever that is we are calling and searching for information to make sure we have physically spoken to them if we don't get a response in writing and then ask them to do so um we've also trained and this is some of the newer processes that we've done um we've worked with the election administration team to ensure that we try to better solicit um verifiable and and quickly responsive contact information from these individuals so that we don't get into this position where we don't have that on record as of yet because in the past not everyone submitted those and it made things harder so all of those are certainly part of that process and we did have some information in that notice letter that said they may not address new points of law in a rebuttal but we can certainly emphasize that in accordance with the commission with us yeah so basically you're saying you do that anyway you do notify the candidate of this challenge we do realize solely on the services that that is required in the code um and there are even some provisions in the code that are built in effect doesn't happen whereby if we don't get that second copy we can charge to copy and send that out the code's a little antiquated it's it's contemplating deeper than anything else but yes we we absolutely do not leave that first day because time is of the essence until we have spoken with someone in that to our time frame correct to get within that initial time frame of that first day when it's filed so further discussion on the motion hearing none i'll call the vote commissioner millis commissioner reeeple hi mr spindell commissioner i'm sorry you voted no commissioner spindell yes correct okay commissioner tomsen hi mr bossleman hi chair votes i motion carries 5-1 um so all those persons out there who are candidates are working with candidates you now know the drill um any other there are no other matters we are noticed for is that correct administrator wolf all right then i will entertain a motion to adjourn so moved moved by commissioner tomsen seconded by commissioner spindell i'll call the roll commissioner reeeple hi mr spindell mr tomsen hi mr bossleman hi mr millis hey chair votes i thank you all we are adjourned see you in uh 12 days you You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You