Grijalva, Fontes Respond to Polling Confusion in Dallas County and Implications for Voting
WASHINGTON, D.C. On Tuesday, March 3, 2026, hundreds of voters in Dallas County were turned away from their usual polling places and directed to new precinct-specific locations after changes to the countys election procedures disrupted expectations and created confusion for voters arriving to cast ballots. This shift from a more flexible voting model to strict precinct-assigned voting locations contributed to long lines, frustration, and barriers to participation for some residents trying to exercise their right to vote.
These problems in Dallas echo debates happening in Arizona, where state legislators are advancing measures to eliminate countywide voting centers in favor of strict precinct voting. Proposed referrals in the Arizona Legislature (HCR2001/SCR1001) would bar counties from using voting centers and require election precincts with rigid size limits, significantly restricting where voters can cast in-person ballots and eliminating many of the flexible voting options that counties have used in recent years. Secretary Fontes has long argued that eliminating voting centers would create logistical challenges, increase requirements for tens of thousands of additional polling sites and workers, and make voting less accessible, especially for working voters and rural communities. The chaos caused by this change is Texas is proof that these fears are well founded.
full statement here
https://grijalva.house.gov/media/press-releases/grijalva-fontes-respond-to-polling-confusion-in-dallas-county-and-implications-for-voting