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Tag: Paul Lopez

  • How Denver pioneered voting access programs for incarcerated Coloradans

    How Denver pioneered voting access programs for incarcerated Coloradans

    Jerome Whitfield fills out his ballot at the in-prison voting station set up at the Denver Detention Center, Oct. 30, 2024.

    Kiara DeMare/CPR News

    Jerome Whitfield didn’t know he could vote. 

    “I thought my background may prevent me from that, but by the grace of God and everything else, I’m able to,” he said this week.

    Whitfield registered to vote, filled out his ballot and dropped it off all within the same hallway — not too far from his pod at the Denver County Detention Center, where he’s awaiting his sentencing. 

    “I’ve been here for a couple months now,” Whitfield said. “[Voting] makes me feel like I’m still involved in the community out there.”

    Jerome Whitfield, an inmate at the Denver Detention Center, after registering to vote and receiving his ballot, Oct. 30, 2024.
    Kiara DeMare/CPR News

    Many people, both those inside the system and out, don’t know who exactly is eligible to vote.

    But people in custody who aren’t serving felony sentences, people in pre-trial detention and people deemed eligible by the clerk and recorder’s office can all vote. 

    Denver’s Clerk and County Recorder Paul López said he often hears that people with felonies don’t vote because they believe they can’t. 

    “That’s false. We want to make sure that folks can confidently be able to say, ‘Yes, I’m registering to vote, even as somebody who has been convicted of a felony in the past,’” López said. 

    The Denver County Detention Center is the leading force behind making in-person voting more accessible in jails throughout the state. 

    López and Elias Diggins, the Denver sheriff, worked together with the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition and the League of Women Voters during the previous presidential election to ensure that incarcerated people who were eligible to vote could do so.

    Expanding voter access statewide

    Their efforts in 2020 caught the attention of the rest of the state, and SB24-072 was passed this legislative session. 

    The bill requires clerks to make their best efforts to work with their county’s sheriff to facilitate voting for eligible incarcerated people. 

    “We had no idea that what started in Denver would now be something that’s done in jails across Colorado,” Sheriff Diggins said. “So today, we’re happy to continue to be a leader in this field.” 

    Since Denver is a pioneer in jail voting, CCJRC, the sheriff’s office and election officials have been training other counties leading up to election day.

    “We’re all working together to make sure this goes smoothly and well. So we’ve paired together to do trainings for other clerk’s offices who have never done this before,” Giddings said. “(We) would just run mock in-person voting events for their jails and kind of run ’em through all the different scenarios that could happen.”

    Raul Vidaurri (left) filling out his ballot at the Denver Detention Center, Oct. 30, 2024. The in-person voting program at Denver’s jail is the first time the 36-year-old has cast a ballot.
    Kiara DeMare/CPR News

    What voting in a jail looks like, and means to those there.

    The Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition (CCJRC) was inside the Denver County Detention Center on Wednesday helping people register to receive their ballots. 

    The group set up two stations across the hallway from each other, both with people completing the registration process, and one with the ballot drop box. 

    At 36 years old, Raul Vidaurri voted for the first time,  something he feels is pushing him in the right direction. 

    “It’s enlightening. Very enlightening,” Vidaurri said. “I got into a bit of a situation, but I’m glad to be in here, get my head right. [This is] like a new start, a new beginning.” 

    CCJRC has been working with the Denver Clerk’s office and the detention center to not only streamline the in-prison voting process, but also to make sure the people participating are properly informed. 

    “This year’s ballot has multiple criminal justice reform issues on it,” said Kyle Giddings with CCJRC. “And so the people who will be directly impacted by that should be able to have their voices heard and their ballots cast.”

    During previous elections, the first day CCJRC set up the voting stations in jails and detention centers was always the busiest. And this year is no different. 

    “It’s been crazy busy- the turnout. Every pod has a large group of people that want to make sure their voices are heard in their communities and heard in the presidential race. So we’re having huge turnout rates here in Denver so far,” Giddings said. 

    The detention center averages about 1,200 inmates at a time. While not all of them are eligible to vote, most of the ones who are, do. 

    “These are folks who want to have a voice in the election. And as long as that’s the case, we are going to make sure that they receive a ballot,” López said. 

    The people voting from inside the Denver detention center aren’t always voting for races in Denver County. Like everyone else, they are voting to their registered address. For example, Whitfield is voting in El Paso County.

    He said he’s planning to keep voting for the future. 

    “Not even for just my future, for my kids’s future and my family’s future,” Whitfield said. “If you can vote, vote. It may not be making much change, but go ahead and do it.”

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  • “It’s a hard no:” Denver clerk and recorder responds to mayor’s request to cut budget in major election year

    “It’s a hard no:” Denver clerk and recorder responds to mayor’s request to cut budget in major election year

    DENVER — “We absolutely can’t do it.”

    That was Paul Lopez’s response to Mayor Mike Johnston’s office requesting the Clerk and Recorder for the City and County of Denver cut a million dollars from its budget.

    This is all part of a citywide effort the mayor is spearheading to deal with the influx of migrants after the failure of a bipartisan immigration bill in Congress.

    Budget cuts impact “our ability to ensure a secure election, to ensure a transparent election and to ensure access… You cannot run an election without the proper resources to be able to do so. The good thing is that I’m also an independent elected official. I don’t work for the mayor. I don’t answer to the mayor. The people of the City and County of Denver elected me to to oversee the elections processes, to administer the elections processes and make sure that we have the resources to do so,” Lopez said.

    Lopez is in charge of the department that’s responsible for elections, as well as marriage licenses, land transactions and foreclosure processes.

    “We need personnel. We have to have equipment that is maintained, that is secure. Our voting centers have to be secure, our equipment has to be operational, we have to have cameras on all of our boxes. It is a one heck of an operation,” Lopez said of the upcoming elections his office will oversee.

    In November, Lopez and the clerk and recorder’s office will be tasked with overseeing four elections, according to Lopez – most notably the 2024 presidential election.

    “There’s no possible way. And no scenario in which we can run an election in 2024 – four elections, including a presidential election, and be able to maintain the same level of service, the same level of excellence,” Lopez said.

    Moreover, the office of the clerk and recorder was already asked to trim their budget for the year, according to Lopez.

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    He sent a letter to Denver Mayor Mike Johnston and all 13 city council members last year expressing his frustration over a cut to his budget proposal that would expand the elections office and enhance security.

    Lopez originally submitted a one-time $942,000 request in the budget for these improvements. He said those improvements were instead allocated $175,000 — a decrease of more than 80%.

    During that discussion last year, Mayor Johnston’s team sent a statement that read: “The Mayor’s Office is committed to supporting and prioritizing the Clerk and Recorder’s work to ensure secure elections in Denver, which is why the 2024 proposed budget increases the budget for the Elections division by 25%, significantly greater than the 3.7% increase in the overall general fund budget. 

    Lopez’s office responded to that statement, noting the elections budget fluctuates based on the number and type of elections held each year.

    “It’s a very slippery slope in terms of, you know, what that says across the country for folks who are trying to maintain their elections budget, and are seeing folks trying to encroach on that and try to defund elections,” Lopez said.

    And he also explained his issues with the mayor office’s reasoning for asking his department to take another hit.

    “I also think it’s kind of a false narrative, to say that the city budget shortfall is because of the migrant crisis, I think it’s scapegoating. I think it’s, frankly, irresponsible and dangerous,” Lopez said.

    He believes it stems from something more internal.

    “There are contracts and there are, you know, movements that the mayor’s office has made in a rush to advance political goals and campaign promises that have contributed to the dip in the city budget,” Lopez said.

    The office of the clerk and recorder is not the only one being asked to trim down their department across the City of Denver.

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    “Every city agency has been asked to identify budget savings, including DDPHE. We don’t have specifics yet and don’t expect to have those for a few more months,” the Denver Department of Public Health and Environment said.

    But the office of the clerk and recorder was one of the first to get specifics on cuts.

    “The Mayor has asked every city agency, including the Department of Public Safety, to begin to identify budget savings proposals for 2024. It is too early right now to say what specific savings will be within our department until we have had the time to assess and identify options. We expect to have more to share on this in April,” the Department of Public Safety for the City and County of Denver said.

    Among the DMV, Denver Parks & Recreation and office of the clerk and recorder asked to find wiggle room in their budgets is the Office of the Denver District Attorney.

    “Our total budget from which we have to cut 5% is $44,164,752,” the Office of the Denver District Attorney said.

    We have reached out to the mayor’s office for comment on Lopez’s response to this most recent budget cut and are waiting to hear back. We will update this story when we do.

    Denver Mayor Mike Johnston announces cuts to city services to deal with migrant crisis


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