Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cities get $6.3 million in voting safety grants

Goal is to patch budget gaps in election system

- Mary Spicuzza

Wisconsin’s five largest cities are being awarded more than $6 million to help administer this year’s elections during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The cities of Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, Racine and Kenosha are set to receive a combined $6.3 million in grants from the nonprofit Center for Tech and Civic Life.

The funding for the “Wisconsin Safe Voting Plan” comes as the state is expected to play a key role in this year’s presidenti­al election. It also comes after some people in Milwaukee and Green Bay waited in line for hours to vote in the state’s April election, and delayed or missing mail-in ballots frustrated people around the state.

The grant aims to help election officials administer safe elections despite budget gaps that have worsened during the ongoing pandemic, and will be used to help the cities open voting sites, set up drive-thru and drop box locations, provide personal protective equipment for poll workers, and recruit and train poll workers.

The grants have been approved by the nonprofit and will soon be awarded to the municipali­ties. Some of the cities require the Common Council to accept the grants. In Milwaukee, that vote could come as soon as tomorrow.

“We have seen what can happen to elections in the midst of a dangerous pandemic — long lines, limited locations, threatened exposure to a deadly disease, and voters concerned about going to the polls due to serious health fears,” Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett said in a statement. “These resources will help us address these problems, and I thank the Center for Tech and Civic Life for making these important and wise investment­s.”

Rev. Greg Lewis, the executive director of Souls to the Polls who contracted COVID-19 this year, said the effort to provide safer voting was crucial to city residents, especially Black voters.

“The Black community has been hard hit by the COVID 19, I myself was hospitaliz­ed and we have lost hundreds of Black lives to this virus,” Lewis said. “It is literally a matter of life and death that our people can vote without risking our health.”

Racine Mayor Cory Mason said the money would also help municipali­ties hold elections in the face of coronaviru­s and budget shortfalls.

“The deadly COVID-19 pandemic has triggered a global public health crisis, and seriously impaired the ability of local government­s to administer safe and smooth elections,” Mason said. “These grants will help each municipali­ty make investment­s that will ensure smooth, safe and healthy elections in a time of a national health pandemic — which each municipali­ty otherwise would struggle to do while facing an intense budget shortfall.”

In an interview, Mason said the grant will help election officials plan out PPE that will help protect poll workers and in-person voters.

“In April we didn’t have as much supplies as we would have liked in those areas because it was coming so quickly, so the hope is now that we’ve got a little bit more time to plan that we’ll be able to adequately answer those questions in terms of how we clean surfaces, the masks people will need, the gloves that people will need as ballots are being handed back and forth,” Mason said.

Green Bay voters waited in some of the longest lines in the state on Election Day in April.

“The coronaviru­s pandemic has provided a stress test for our democratic institutio­ns, including our elections, and we know we must do better,” Green Bay Mayor Eric Genrich said. “The support of the Center for Tech and Civic Life will enable us to ensure that all Green Bay citizens can exercise their right to vote safely and securely in August and November.”

The lines were far shorter in Madison,

but Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway said the city “spent hundreds of thousands of dollars we hadn’t budgeted doing so.”

“As we have seen in Wisconsin and across the nation, COVID-19 is not gone; in fact it’s getting worse in some places,” she said. “If we are going to meet our obligation­s as elected leaders to ensure the safe administra­tion of elections during this pandemic, we have to think differently and bring in help where we can.”

Milwaukee is set to receive $2,154,500, Madison $1,271,788, Green Bay $1,093,400, Kenosha $862,779 and Racine $942,100.

The private donation comes less than two months after the state Elections Commission approved giving more than $4 million in federal aid to communitie­s around the state.

“From ensuring that polling places are open and following the latest public health guidelines, to providing options for voters to easily and securely return absentee ballots, to making certain that the incredible people who step up to serve as poll workers are protected and well compensate­d for their service, we’re proud to partner with the five largest cities in Wisconsin to the deliver a smooth voting process that inspires confidence,” said Tiana Epps-Johnson, the nonprofit’s executive director. Patrick Marley of the Journal Sentinel staff contribute­d to this report.

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