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Pinal County Recorder Warns of Election Manual Issues at Board Meeting

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2025 Election Procedure Manual Cover [Secretary of State]

Recorder Raises Concerns Over Draft Rules

Pinal County Recorder Dana Lewis warned the Board of Supervisors on August 27 about problematic provisions in the state’s draft 2025 Elections Procedures Manual that could force changes to how the county conducts elections. “Under ARS 16-452, the elections procedure manual has the rule of law,” Lewis told the board during their regular meeting. The recorder sought board approval to submit public comments opposing certain provisions she believes exceed state authority.

History of Legal Disputes

Lewis referenced litigation between Pinal County and the Secretary of State’s office over similar issues in the previous election manual, which was ultimately invalidated by the Arizona Court of Appeals in March 2025 due to an inadequate public comment period. The county fought provisions requiring the loading of all ballot styles onto Accessible Voting Devices (AVDs) in ways that would fundamentally alter Pinal County’s election structure. The recorder specifically criticized what she called “overreach with it being then utilized as a piece of equipment that could take us from a precinct-based voting setup in Pinal County to turning us into vote centers.”

Current Manual Contains Same Disputed Language

Lewis informed the board that the current draft Elections Procedures Manual includes the same AVD provisions that sparked the previous litigation. The public comment period for the 2025 manual closed at 5:00 p.m. on August 31, ahead of the October 1 deadline for submitting the final version to the Attorney General and Governor. “The current EPM is out for public comment. That provision is back in the EPM, and after coming out of the litigation with that, it was advised to us that if we saw it again, we needed to bring it forward again,” Lewis explained to the supervisors.

Legal Counsel Engaged Again

The recorder’s office has re-engaged Snell & Wilmer, the law firm that represented Pinal County in the previous litigation against the Secretary of State’s office. Lewis expressed concerns about multiple provisions in the draft manual. “There’s additional provisions in the EPM that we feel are not aligned with the Arizona revised statutes, and if we don’t bring it forth now, it will implicate issues with the AVDs, precinct-based voting, just even how we do ballot layout,” Lewis stated.

Board Approves Action

Vice-Chairman Jeff McClure motioned to approve the recorder’s request, with Supervisor Rich Vitiello providing the second. Lewis emphasized the importance of acting now: “wanting to make sure that even though comments have been submitted to the Arizona Secretary of State’s office from our team, in the event that they don’t make it to the final provision that is presented by October 1st to the Attorney General’s office and the Governor’s office, that our piece was heard.”

The board’s approval allows Lewis to formalize Pinal County’s opposition to the disputed provisions before the Secretary of State finalizes the 2025 Elections Procedures Manual. With the October 1 deadline approaching for transmittal to the Attorney General and Governor, the county is positioning itself to challenge rules it believes could fundamentally alter its election operations.


The disputes Lewis referenced stem from a complex legal battle that began in 2023 and continues today. The following timeline and definitions provide context for understanding how Pinal County’s current concerns about the 2025 Elections Procedures Manual connect to previous litigation over similar provisions.

Definitions for the Timeline

  • EPM (Elections Procedures Manual): Arizona’s statewide rulebook for running elections, drafted by the Secretary of State and sent by Oct. 1 to the Attorney General and Governor under A.R.S. § 16-452; once approved, it has the force of law. The 2023 EPM’s draft was posted for only 15 days of public comment (instead of the required 30), which later led a court to invalidate it in 2025.
  • APA (Arizona Administrative Procedure Act): Arizona’s rulemaking law that, among other things, requires at least 30 days of public comment for proposed rules/manuals.
  • AVD (Accessible Voting Device): An ADA-compliant touchscreen/ballot-marking machine available at polling places.
  • “All ballot styles” (on an AVD): Configuring the AVD to contain every precinct’s ballot, so a voter who arrives at the wrong precinct can still receive the correct ballot on that machine.
  • Vote center vs. precinct-based:
    • Vote center: Any county voter can vote at any vote-center location.
    • Precinct-based: Each voter is assigned one polling place based on their address.
  • Voter record error (Richer case): A database issue made it appear some voters had provided proof of citizenship, so systems treated them as eligible to vote in all races, even though the supporting records were unclear.
  • Purcell principle: Courts generally avoid changing election rules close to an election because late changes can confuse voters and disrupt election administration; it’s a presumption, not an absolute rule, and comes from the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2006 decision in Purcell v. Gonzalez.

July 31, 2023

Draft EPM posted with too-short comment window

Secretary of State Fontes posted a 259-page draft EPM with 15 days for public comment (30 days are required by the APA). That short window later led the Court of Appeals (Mar 6, 2025) to invalidate the 2023 EPM, which then made later lawsuits that depended on it moot. (Justia)

December 29, 2023

EPM approved by Governor and Attorney General

Governor Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes approved the 2023 Elections Procedures Manual, giving it the force of law as Arizona’s elections rulebook. (AZSOS)

February 13, 2024

Pinal County flags its AVD setup

During Logic & Accuracy testing, Pinal County told the Secretary it would not load all ballot styles onto AVDs. A court order on Oct 4, 2024 from Fontes v. Pinal County later said the Secretary “knew or should have known” Pinal County’s position by this date.
Why Pinal County objected: They argued “all ballot styles” effectively turns precinct polling places into vote centers (which state law treats differently) and was too burdensome to redo close to the election. (democracydocket)

September 17, 2024

Richer v. Fontes filed

Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer asked the Arizona Supreme Court whether the county could limit about 100,000 voters affected by a voter record error to federal-only ballots in 2024 unless they provided proof of citizenship for state/local races. (AZCourts)

September 18, 2024

Secretary’s “don’t change the rules now” argument

In the Richer case, Secretary Adrian Fontes warned that changing voter status so close to the election would cause confusion and disruption (the basic idea behind the Purcell principle which was used against Fontes in Fontes v. Pinal a week and a half later). (AZCourts)

September 20, 2024

Supreme Court keeps 2024 rules as-is

The Court took the case but did not order changes for November: recorders could not mass-downgrade those voters right before the election, and the affected voters could vote in all races in 2024. (democracydocket)

September 27, 2024

Fontes v. Pinal County filed

The Secretary sued Pinal County to force the all-ballot-styles on AVDs rule for out-of-precinct voters. (democracydocket)

October 4, 2024

Trial court: not in compliance, but no last-minute changes

A Pinal County judge said Pinal County wasn’t following the EPM but denied an injunction, reasoning that forcing a change this late risked confusion and disruption for voters and poll workers. (the basic idea behind the Purcell principle). (democracydocket)

October 9–22, 2024

Appeal skirmishes and tech status

The Secretary’s request to speed up the appeal was denied. Around Oct 11–12, Pinal County finished programming AVDs with precinct-specific ballots. On Oct 22, Pinal County filed a response opposing the Secretary’s request to move the case directly to the Arizona Supreme Court. (AZCourts)

October 25, 2024

Supreme Court leaves Pinal County setup in place for 2024

The Arizona Supreme Court agreed with denying the injunction, so no last-minute AVD reprogramming was required for the 2024 election. (AZCourts)

March 6, 2025

RNC v. Fontes: 2023 EPM invalid under the APA

The Arizona Court of Appeals ruled the 2023 EPM invalid because the public-comment period was 15 days instead of the required 30. (democracydocket)

June 11, 2025

Pinal County appeal dismissed as moot

With the 2023 EPM invalidated, the Court of Appeals dismissed Pinal County’s appeal—there was nothing left to decide that would affect future elections. (Justia)

August 1, 2025

2025 EPM public comment period opens

The Secretary of State opened the online portal for public feedback on the draft 2025 Elections Procedures Manual; the portal closed Aug. 31 at 5:00 p.m. ahead of the Oct. 1 transmittal deadline. (AZSOS)

August 27, 2025

Recorder raises EPM concerns to the Board

Recorder Dana Lewis said the draft EPM again includes the “all ballot styles” AVD rule, which she warned would effectively convert Pinal County’s precinct-based voting into vote centers. She said her office has submitted comments, re-engaged Snell & Wilmer, and urged action before the Oct. 1 transmittal deadline under A.R.S. § 16-452.


The timeline illustrates a recurring pattern: election rule disputes that begin with technical disagreements over voting equipment often escalate into broader questions about county autonomy and state authority. With the 2025 Elections Procedures Manual now heading toward final approval, Pinal County finds itself once again challenging provisions it believes exceed the Secretary of State’s regulatory authority

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Pinal County Recorder Warns of Election Manual Issues at Board Meeting - Pinal Post