A settlement has been reached in one of the largest lawsuits filed under the 1965 Voting Rights Act over providing Spanish-language ballots and assistance to Puerto Rican voters in 32 Florida counties.
The settlement provides for Spanish language ballots, election material, hotlines, options on websites, assistance at polls, and signs at election supervisors’ offices.
“We’re very pleased with what the settlement provides and it’s in line with the Voting Rights Act,” said Kira Romero-Craft, an attorney with Latino Justice PRLDF, that was involved in the suit.
The Rivera v. Barton lawsuit filed in 2018 by racial and voter justice organizations argued that election officials had not complied with the Voting Rights Act when they didn’t provide ballots and information in Spanish to Spanish-speaking voters who had recently moved to Florida from Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory and Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens, so they can register and vote in stateside elections when they move from the island to the mainland. Many of those raised on the island primarily speak Spanish. Over one million Puerto Ricans now live in Florida and an estimated 859,000 were eligible to vote in 2018.
Marta Rivera Madera, 73, was the plaintiff in the lawsuit. “I feel good and I am very pleased with the decisions they took,” she said in a telephone press briefing on Monday.
Rivera Madera, 73, settled in Gainesville, in Alachua County in 2017 to be near her daughter after Hurricane Maria devastated the island of Puerto Rico in September of that year. When she went to vote in 2018, all the election material was in English.
“It was confusing and no one spoke Spanish,” said Rivera Madera. “I didn’t know who to vote for and had to ask my daughter for help.”
The counties that settled the lawsuit are Alachua, Bay, Brevard, Citrus, Clay, Columbia, Duval, Escambia, Flagler, Hernando, Highlands, Indian River, Jackson, Lake, Leon, Levy, Manatee, Marion, Martin, Monroe, Okaloosa, Okeechobee, Pasco, Putnam, St. Johns, St. Lucie, Santa Rosa, Sarasota, Sumter, Taylor, and Wakulla.
Only one of the 32 counties, Charlotte County, opted not to be part of the settlement, which means they can be subject to further litigation.
In 2019 a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction requiring the 32 counties to take steps toward providing Spanish language ballots and assistance in time for the March 2020 presidential primary election.
“Most, if not, all the supervisors of elections were taking steps toward reaching compliance,” said Romero-Craft. “We can say that the counties we did monitor had Spanish-language signs and ballots available for the voters to use in case they needed them.”
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Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com