Tennessee counties told to use new mail voting info, per court order

FILE - In this May 17, 2016, file photo, ballots are prepared for counting at Multnomah County election headquarters in Portland, Ore. The coronavirus has knocked presidential primaries back several weeks as officials worry about voters crowding into polling places. If the disease remains a hazard in November, Democrats say there's only one solution to preserve the November election, national voting by mail. (AP Photo/Don Ryan, File)
FILE - In this May 17, 2016, file photo, ballots are prepared for counting at Multnomah County election headquarters in Portland, Ore. The coronavirus has knocked presidential primaries back several weeks as officials worry about voters crowding into polling places. If the disease remains a hazard in November, Democrats say there's only one solution to preserve the November election, national voting by mail. (AP Photo/Don Ryan, File)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Tennessee election officials on Monday distributed guidance required by a judge for counties to update their absentee voting information to reflect a court-ordered voting-by-mail option for all eligible voters during the coronavirus pandemic.

State Elections Coordinator Mark Goins sent the instructions after plaintiffs attorneys last week named 20 counties with absentee request forms or other website information that didn't correctly reference COVID-19 as a reason to vote absentee. The 20 counties now appear to have edited their websites with the COVID-19 information.

Goins' message tells local officials to update their websites and other materials and link to the correct absentee application. If they can't, they must include a bold heading on their websites that links to the secretary of state's website on absentee voting.

Davidson County Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle ordered the expansion during the pandemic earlier this month.

The following week, she told state officials "shame on you" for not following her order when the state decided to reword its absentee applications on its own and hold off on sending absentee applications related to COVID-19 for hours after the initial ruling.

The state, which is appealing the expansion, reworked the form and sent local officials updated guidance based on the judge's new orders.

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