At long last, and agreement has been met between the Maricopa county board of supervisors and the Arizona Senate in relation to voting machines during the 2020 election.
AZCentral reported,
The county will answer the Senate’s questions about its routers and will no longer seek Senate repayment for potentially compromised voting machines.
The agreement, approved in a 4-1 vote by the county’s board of supervisors on Friday ends weeks of debate over the county potentially losing a large chunk of money from the state.
former U.S. Rep. John Shadegg will act as a “special master” in order to ensure that questions are answered. Shadegg will have access to the routers and logs that display internet activity.
For months the county and senate have been in a state of quarrel over the issue, even as Joe Biden has been in office for more than half of one year.
The county handed over machines and ballots but refused to allow the debate to have access to routers. Shadegg will be the only one able to review internet logs.
The county claimed that access to routers could pose a risk to their security.
In the previous month Arizona’s state Attorney General threatened to withhold funding from the county if they refused to comply with subpoena’s from the state senate before a September 27th deadline.