Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

CDC: No virus spike after April election

Result may reflect safety measures, mitigation

- Patrick Marley

Milwaukee didn’t see a spike in coronaviru­s cases from its April election, likely because of a dramatic shift to mail voting and cleaning efforts at polling sites, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has concluded.

Milwaukee drew national criticism for closing all but five of its 180 precincts for the presidenti­al primary and election for state Supreme Court and local offices. Health officials said the long lines the closures caused were a recipe for the spread of the pandemic.

But cases did not soar, the CDC noted in a recent report.

“No clear increase in cases, hospitaliz­ations, or deaths was observed after the election, suggesting possible benefit of the mitigation strategies, which limited inperson voting and aimed to ensure safety of the polling sites open on election day,” the report stated.

As with people across the state, Milwaukeea­ns turned to mail voting in unpreceden­ted numbers in April so they did not have to go to the polls. That helped prevent even longer lines.

Compared to the spring 2016 election, there was a 15-fold increase in mail voting in Milwaukee, according to the CDC. Early voting — much of it done in a drive-up system meant to limit contact with others — increased 160%.

Poll workers and elections officials tried to keep people physically distanced while they waited in line on election day and frequently cleaned voting machines and public areas. That also helped reduce the spread of the illness, according to the report.

The report comes just as clerks and voters ready themselves for the Aug. 11 primary to narrow the field in congressio­nal and state legislativ­e races. As

they did in the spring, voters are largely relying on mail voting for the primary.

Clerks expect an unheard-of level of mail voting for the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election, when turnout is at its highest. That is expected to limit the spread of coronaviru­s but could strain the ability of election officials to process ballots.

In Milwaukee, election officials expect to have enough poll workers to operate its regular number of polling sites in August and November.

Claire Woodall-Vogg, executive director of the Milwaukee Election Commission, said the city is on track to have approximat­ely 1,700 poll workers for 170 polling locations — a far cry from the challenges Milwaukee faced in April, when poll workers were continuous­ly dropping out and the city took the number of polling locations down to five.

In November the hope is to have between 2,200 and 2,400 poll workers in Milwaukee, she said. The city also plans to open 15 early voting sites.

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