Lodi News-Sentinel

Ministry is making sure people can vote — even if they have no address

- By Samantha Melamed

PHILADELPH­IA — When she got to the spot on the voter-registrati­on form that asked for her Social Security number, Yvonne Stratton shook her head emphatical­ly.

“I’m not putting my Social on there!” said Stratton, 58, lamenting a recent battle with identity theft. “I guess I’m not voting!”

Then, Brian Hughes approached. In calm tones, the voter-registrati­on worker for Broad Street Ministries assured her that her state ID number would suffice. Stratton, who normally doesn’t vote, said she’d go ahead and give it a try‚ even though she’s been disgusted by the campaigns’ political mud-slinging. (“I thought only street people did stuff like that,” she said.)

Stratton can’t say much for the candidates. “All I can say is, Broad Street Ministry has been there for me for 15 years. They helped me out more than my own family.”

The organizati­on, which doubles as the mailing address for 3,000 people who are homeless or housing insecure, this year faces a monumental logistical and civic challenge in ensuring that all of those visitors have a voice in the election. The introducti­on of mail-in voting has made that prospect more complicate­d than ever, since thousands of applicatio­ns and ballots could be filtering through the bustling mail room.

So, Broad Street is running a pilot civic engagement project, aiming to ensure each guest has the opportunit­y to make their vote count.

Every step of the process requires attention and care, said LeBrian Brown, Broad Street’s re-entry and civic-engagement coordinato­r.

For one thing, people have to feel comfortabl­e: “A lot of them have told me that they haven’t registered because they weren’t comfortabl­e with how people approached them: They just come up to them on the street, and ask them for their registrati­on, and leave,” he said.

For another, when life is chaotic, voting can feel like a monumental endeavor. Clients tell him they may not remember to vote. Or, they’re open to voting by mail — but might forget to put their ballot in the mailbox.

With a $25,000 grant from the Independen­ce Foundation, Brown hired voter registrati­on temps to staff the nonprofit five days a week during the daily lunchtime crush, when 300 or more visitors crowd in to grab meals, pick up mail, or inquire about other services. He looked for workers he thought visitors could relate to, like Hughes, who is also a regular guest at Broad Street.

One worker staffs a voter informatio­n table near the mail hub, ushering those who want to register upstairs to the peaceful, stained-glass-lit sanctuary, where Hughes and another temp, Zhane DeShields, walk them through the registrati­on form.

It’s a time-intensive process: People start with many questions and misconcept­ions. They think they’re not eligible to vote because of past conviction­s. Or, they think voter registrati­on is voting, not the first step in a process.

“You have to have patience with people,” Hughes said. “It’s being able to sit with them and give them some time. Let them talk about their day. A lot of people we’re dealing with have mental illness, so just to sit down and talk to them about anything makes them feel comfortabl­e.”

He asks clients questions unlike anything you’d expect to hear at a voter registrati­on drive. Things like: “If you could go back to any age, what age would you go back to?”

Lang Blanding, 60, with a halo of gray hair and shopping bags clustered at his ankles, knew the answer right away: He’d be 8 again. He’d do it all over, this time with focus. “White folks, if a kid says I want to be a baseball player or a ballet person, they push the issue,” he said. “They didn’t push the issue with me.”

Blanding, who’s staying at a shelter in West Philadelph­ia, was not sure where he was registered, or even whether inperson voting was taking place this year.

“I used to always think that my vote didn’t count,” Blanding said. But maybe this year his vote would be a tie-breaker.

He doesn’t mind traveling back to Center City to get his mail-in ballot applicatio­n.

“Coming here is like the highlight of my day,” he said.

So far, there are 1,444 people registered to vote at Broad Street Ministries.

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