Inspectors of Election
Adams Stirling PLC
Menu

INSPECTORS OF ELECTION

Approval Defined Recount & Runoff
Closing the Polls Inspector's Report
Witness Counting Inspect & Challenge
Director Elections Acclamation Other Elections Recall Elections
Annual & Special Mtgs Ballots & Proxies Inspectors of Election  Nominations
Candidate Statements Quorum Voting Rights Election Rules

HOA Inspectors of Election


Below is a list of companies that serve as inspectors of election. ADAMS|STIRLING does not endorse any particular company. Boards of directors must do their due diligence when selecting an inspector of elections. 

Accurate Voting Services
www.accuratevotingservices.com

Advanced Election Services
www.advancedelectionservices.com
Allstate Elections Inspector
www.allstateelectionsinspector.com
Association Professional Services
www.aps-elections.com
Ballot Bliss
www.ballotbliss.com
ElectionBuddy
www.electionbuddy.com
 
HOA Elections
www.hoaelections.net
HOA Election Experts LLC
www.hoaelectionexperts.com 

Liberty HOA Election Services
www.hoaelection.com

Majority Rules
[email protected]
NLB Consulting and Elections
www.nlbconsultingfirm.com
Pro Elections
www.pro-ei.com
The Inspectors of Election
www.theinspectorsofelection.com
The Secret Ballot
www.thesecretballot.com 
Third Party Voting
www.thirdpartyvoting.com
 

Independent Third Party Inspectors


As provided for in Civil Code § 5110(b), inspectors of election must be independent third parties. This includes, but is not limited to, the following:

  • a volunteer poll worker with the county registrar of voters,
  • a licensee of the California Board of Accountancy (a CPA),
  • a notary public, and
  • a member of the association (who is not a member of the board of directors or a candidate for the board of directors or related to a member of the board of directors or a candidate for the board of directors).

Professional Inspectors of Election. There are companies that provide professional inspection services to associations. They can be hired to prepare ballots, mail and collect ballots, and count votes. Putting an Inspector under contract does not violate the Inspector's independent status. Civil Code § 5110 provides that "An independent third party may not be a person . . . who is currently employed or under contract to the association." As long as the Inspector is not currently employed by the association for other services, the board can hire the person to oversee the election.

Prohibited Inspectors. Associations may not appoint or use inspectors who are:

  • members of the board of directors,
  • a candidate for the board of directors,
  • related to a member of the board of directors, or
  • anyone under contract with the association.

Appointing Inspectors of Election


Inspectors should be selected early in the election process. As provided for in Civil Code § 5105(a)(5), associations may use one of the following methods for selecting Inspectors:

  1. Appointment by the board;
  2. Election by the membership. This may be a more democratic approach, but it is unwieldy and costly because it requires (a) the administrative task of recruiting multiple persons or companies willing to compete for the privilege of overseeing the association's election and (b) the cost of holding an extra election, i.e., the election of Inspectors before the election of directors. This creates the conundrum that electing Inspectors requires secret balloting, which in turn requires selecting additional Inspectors to count the ballots for the election of the Inspectors.
  3. Any other method for selecting the inspector or inspectors.

Because the statute mandates that inspectors of election receive and count ballots, either 1 or 3 inspectors (Civ. Code § 5105(a)(5)) must be appointed early enough in the election process so that ballots can be mailed to the inspectors or to a location designated by the inspectors. (Civ. Code § 5115(b)(2))

Assistant Inspectors. The larger the association, the more time-consuming the ballot-counting process becomes. To speed the process, inspectors of election may appoint and oversee additional persons (as noted above) to verify signatures and count and tabulate votes as the inspector deems appropriate, provided the persons are independent third parties. (Civ. Code § 5105(a)(6))

Duties of Inspectors of Election


Inspectors of election must perform their duties impartially, in good faith, to the best of their abilities, and as expeditiously as practicable. (Civ. Code § 5110(d)) Inspectors must perform the duties listed below. To help in the expeditious performance of their duties, inspectors may delegate some tasks to persons who are not inspectors of election. Those duties marked with a double asterisk (**) may be delegated to a third party to assist the inspector, such as the association's management company.

Verifying Information. Inspectors of Election or their designees may verify member information and signatures on the outer envelopes before the meeting at which ballots are tabulated. (Civ. Code § 5120)

Early Ballot Count. Providing members with an early ballot count is not one of the inspector's duties.

ASSISTANCE: Associations needing legal assistance can contact us. To stay current with community association issues, subscribe to the Davis-Stirling Newsletter.

Adams Stirling PLC