http://www.nbc4i.com/news/4292057/detail.html
QUOTE
Congressional Committee To Hold Election Hearing In Columbus
Blackwell Plans On Attending Hearing
POSTED: 6:05 pm EST March 16, 2005
WASHINGTON -- A congressional committee that blasted the secretaries of state from Ohio and Florida for missing its hearing about the presidential election will hold another session in Ohio.
Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell plans to attend the House Administration Committee hearing, scheduled for Monday in Columbus, spokesman Carlo LoParo said.
Lawmakers were frustrated with Blackwell when he did not attend a Feb. 9 hearing in Washington, especially when they discovered that he was in the area that day. He led a meeting of the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute, a session he said he previously had agreed to attend.
"I am disappointed that they are not here," Chairman Bob Ney, R-Ohio, said at the time. "We can have disagreements, but you can't run and you can't hide."
Florida's Glenda Hood had a previously scheduled speech before the British-American Chamber of Commerce of Central Florida that day, which the committee was told about.
The committee is investigating complaints of voting irregularities, such as long lines, computer malfunctions and confusion about provisional ballots, in November's election in Ohio, Florida and other states.
State lawmakers and representatives from the boards of elections in Franklin, Cuyahoga, Mahoning and Allen counties also are to testify at Monday's hearing.
Blackwell Plans On Attending Hearing
POSTED: 6:05 pm EST March 16, 2005
WASHINGTON -- A congressional committee that blasted the secretaries of state from Ohio and Florida for missing its hearing about the presidential election will hold another session in Ohio.
Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell plans to attend the House Administration Committee hearing, scheduled for Monday in Columbus, spokesman Carlo LoParo said.
Lawmakers were frustrated with Blackwell when he did not attend a Feb. 9 hearing in Washington, especially when they discovered that he was in the area that day. He led a meeting of the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute, a session he said he previously had agreed to attend.
"I am disappointed that they are not here," Chairman Bob Ney, R-Ohio, said at the time. "We can have disagreements, but you can't run and you can't hide."
Florida's Glenda Hood had a previously scheduled speech before the British-American Chamber of Commerce of Central Florida that day, which the committee was told about.
The committee is investigating complaints of voting irregularities, such as long lines, computer malfunctions and confusion about provisional ballots, in November's election in Ohio, Florida and other states.
State lawmakers and representatives from the boards of elections in Franklin, Cuyahoga, Mahoning and Allen counties also are to testify at Monday's hearing.