The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Virus worries force officials to get creative

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS » The coronaviru­s has upended everyday life in ways big and small. What happens when those disruption­s overlap with voting? Thousands of state and local election officials across the U.S are sharing ideas and making accommodat­ions to try to ensure that voters and polling places are safe amid an unpreceden­ted pandemic.

Some are finding ways to expand access to voter registrati­on and ballot request forms. Others are testing new products, installing special equipment or scouting outdoor voting locations.

Here are virus-related obstacles voters could face during this unpreceden­ted presidenti­al election year along with some of the solutions being tried:

Closures and curtailed hours

What if you need a voter registrati­on form or absentee ballot applicatio­n and all the normal go-to places are closed or open by appointmen­t only? It’s a problem nationwide.

The most recent American Library Associatio­n survey found that 62% of U.S. libraries, which are sources for voting documents, were fully closed while another 26% were offering only curbside service. Likewise, the vast majority of state motor vehicle department­s — the largest source of voter registrati­ons nationally and of the voter IDs needed in some states — are operating on limited hours, at reduced capacity or by appointmen­t only, according to the American Associatio­n of Motor Vehicle Administra­tors. Appointmen­ts in New Mexico, as just one example, are being scheduled two months out.

Benjamin Hovland, chairman of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, said 40 states have online voter registrati­on, a particular benefit during the pandemic. The commission has beefed up its website, www.vote.gov, with links to register in all 50 states. Among states, Ohio has earned points for its creativity. Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose struck partnershi­ps with grocers and newspapers to distribute absentee ballot applicatio­ns this spring, and he’s tapped breweries to promote voter registrati­on in the fall: “Beer drinking and democracy go together,” he said of the program, noting the pivotal role of pubs in Colonial America.

Polling place contaminat­ion Perhaps the most pressing worry of most voters is how polling places will be kept virus-free. A CDC study conducted after Wisconsin’s primary, the first in-person election after states began issuing stayat-home orders, found 37 of the state’s new COVID-19 cases in the days after the election were among voters, a warning to other states.

As an example of how seriously they’re responding, California issued 50 pages of instructio­ns to its election boards last month calling for site-specific virus prevention plans and extensive training. That’s on top of CDC-recommende­d guidelines that include social distancing, wearing masks and frequent hand-washing.

In Maine, single-use pens have replaced the usual “I Voted” stickers for marking the occasion Nov. 3. South Carolina has piloted ear swabs for touchscree­n voting, while Indiana and Louisiana are among states offering latex finger coverings. Voters might see Plexiglas shields at some check-in tables, and poll workers dressed head-to-toe in protective gear.

Voting machines and poll books will be sanitized on a regular schedule throughout the day.

Public-private partnershi­ps also are taking shape. Anheuser-Busch, the beer maker, is distributi­ng 8 million ounces of hand sanitizer in coordinati­on with the National Associatio­n of State Election Directors and others. Sanitizer is expected to be placed liberally around polling places. In Ohio, manufactur­er RB Sigma has donated more than 450,000 surgical masks for use by poll workers and voters.

Sick or quarantine­d voters What if you plan to vote in person but receive a positive COVID-19 diagnosis, and it’s too late to request a mail-in ballot? Or perhaps you’ve traveled outof-state and gotten held up by a virus-related travel restrictio­n.

Planning ahead to vote early or by mail is still the best way to avoid getting tripped up by a virus diagnosis, quarantine or travel restrictio­n ahead of Election Day, experts agree. North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said his state is working to open more early voting locations to accommodat­e such concerns.

Dealing with voters who are sick is nothing new. In Alaska, for example, anyone unable to vote in person because of age, illness or a disability can appoint a personal representa­tive to pick up and deliver their ballot. Many states provide similar options for emergencie­s — though often not right up until Election Day. If you simply have no choice, election officials say to show up at your polling place, and you will be accommodat­ed. Separate voting stations, far from the rest, are being set up where possible to accommodat­e those who know or suspect they’re infected with the virus and decide to self-report.

Ari Schaffer, a spokesman for Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, said State Farm Arena in Atlanta is large enough to have a separate voting station for those who have a positive COVID-19 test, though not all polling locations will be.

In Iowa, curbside voting already available to voters with disabiliti­es was expanded to other vulnerable voters during the primary. Polling locations also were consolidat­ed in some cases into larger venues, such as school gymnasiums, auditorium­s and stadiums, to allow for social distancing.

What about unmasked voters?

What if you, or a fellow voter, choose not to wear a mask, as election and health officials are pretty much universall­y recommendi­ng?

States are mostly stopping short of requiring masks on Election Day because voting is a protected right. The most common scenario envisioned is that voters who decline to wear a mask will be offered one. If they refuse it, they’ll be directed to a voting station away from other voters, where possible. In some locations, no other voters would be allowed inside until the person has voted.

All the virus-related precaution­s states are pursuing will likely increase the average time it’s expected to take to cast a ballot. That’s yet another reason to heed the advice state and local elections officials are giving most often this year: Make a plan to vote and prepare early.

Associated Press writers Bryan Anderson in Raleigh, N.C.; Cedar Attanasio in Sante Fe, N.M.; Becky Bohrer in Juneau, Alaska; and Kate Brumbeck in Atlanta contribute­d to this report.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ERIC ALBRECHT — THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP ?? Collin Castore, owner of Seventh Son Brewery, and Tracey Ireland, marketing director of Rhinegeist Brewery, listen to Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose speak on July 15 about a statewide voter registrati­on awareness program called Raise a Glass to Democracy at Seventh Son Brewing in Columbus. Thirty Ohio breweries have signed up to create a beer using a universal label to designed to promote voter registrati­on. The label has the VoteOhio.gov website printed on it.
PHOTOS BY ERIC ALBRECHT — THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP Collin Castore, owner of Seventh Son Brewery, and Tracey Ireland, marketing director of Rhinegeist Brewery, listen to Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose speak on July 15 about a statewide voter registrati­on awareness program called Raise a Glass to Democracy at Seventh Son Brewing in Columbus. Thirty Ohio breweries have signed up to create a beer using a universal label to designed to promote voter registrati­on. The label has the VoteOhio.gov website printed on it.
 ??  ?? These are two of the “Raise a Glass to Democracy” beers, photograph­ed at Seventh Son Brewing in Columbus.
These are two of the “Raise a Glass to Democracy” beers, photograph­ed at Seventh Son Brewing in Columbus.

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