Dallas County Commissioners on Tuesday voted unanimously during their regular meeting to allot $50,000 for the review. There was no debate.
Early voting begins in less than two months in races to choose Texas governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, and control of Congress.
鈥淲ith high concerns and fear regarding security both physical and cyber, the Dallas County Elections Department (DCED) is preparing for the upcoming elections to include safety before and during the voting process,鈥 according to an of the Dallas County Commissioners Court.
The $50,000 is for an assessment that 鈥渋dentifies, assesses and implements key security controls for protection of voters, as well as election workers.鈥
The assessment would also focus on 鈥減reventing security vulnerabilities.鈥 The request said the county鈥檚 emergency management department recently did a review of the elections campus and found 鈥渃oncerns,鈥 prompting the request to bring in a vendor.
Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins, who runs emergency management for the county, declined an interview request ahead of the vote.
鈥淒ue to the sensitive nature of the topic, and as standard with security assessments and emergency plans, we won鈥檛 be providing any comments at this time,鈥 a Jenkins spokesperson said in an email.
The physical safety of election workers in Texas and the rest of the country has taken on new urgency since the 2020 vote.
Last month, all three members of the elections staff in Gillespie County in Central Texas resigned from activists.
In her Gillespie County Elections Administrator Annisa Herrera said 鈥渢hreats against election officials and my election staff, dangerous misinformation, lack of full-time personnel for the elections office, unpaid compensation, and absurd legislation have completely changed the job I initially accepted.鈥
Earlier this year, an by Democrats on a U.S. House committee described threats to election officials, including a Texas official who was repeatedly harassed and even told in a Facebook message, 鈥淚 think we should end your bloodline.鈥
That official, Tarrant County Elections Administrator Heider Garcia, to pass legislation protecting elections officials鈥 addresses, make doxing an offense, and requiring organizations to disclose their finances if they raise money to prove election fraud.
He also urged them to consider allowing law enforcement to treat violent online threats as real threats.
鈥淭here is a difference between saying 鈥楬eider should be fired鈥 and someone telling me 鈥業 think we should end your bloodline,鈥欌 he wrote.
Got a tip? Email Bret Jaspers at bjaspers@kera.org. You can follow Bret on Twitter .
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