The Oklahoman

How pandemic has affected voters with disabiliti­es

- Elaine S. Povich

Penny Shaw, 77, who lives in a longterm care facility in Braintree, Massachuse­tts, usually votes at a polling place she can get to easily in her electric wheelchair. This year, Shaw had to come up with a new plan.

Braintree officials changed polling place locations because of the pandemic, and Shaw worried that her severe muscle weakness from Guillain-Barre syndrome would prevent her from getting to the nearest site. She couldn’t get election officials on the phone to confirm the newlocatio­n, and she has trouble using a computer. So, she requested an absentee ballot and took it to a post office six blocks away.

“Better to be safe than sorry,” she said. “I don’t want to not vote.”

Shaw’s situation is emblematic of the new difficulties the pandemic has created for voters with disabiliti­es – even as many of them are benefitting from the relaxation of rules regarding who can cast an absentee ballot.

Many people with disabiliti­es, estimated to be one-sixth of voters this year, encounter barriers when they try to vote in person. In a 2017 study of polling places used in the 2016 election, the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office found 60% of them had one or more potential impediment­s. The most common were steep ramps outside buildings, a lack of signs indicating accessible paths and poor parking or path surfaces.

Because of the pandemic, many states this year are not requiring a specific excuse for absentee voting – a relief for some people with disabiliti­es, said Doug Kruse, a professor at Rutgers University and co-director of the school’s disability research program. “Anything that makes it easier to vote is good for people with disabiliti­es,” he said.

Kruse, 61, uses a wheelchair because of injuries he suffered when he was hit by a drunken driver in 1990. He usually likes to vote in person, with his wife, Rutgers professor Lisa Schur, co-director of the disability research program, helping him over a couple of curbs in the way of his usual voting place. But this year, “I’m relieved New Jersey sent me a ballot. I really don’t want to expose myself to COVID.”

Absentee ballots can create challenges for some people with disabiliti­es who need assistance to mark their ballots, such as the visually impaired. Most in-person polling places provide assistants to help visually impaired voters read the ballot and make the appropriat­e mark.

The question of helping people vote is particular­ly acute in assisted living facilities. In past election years, visiting relatives or friends could help residents fill out ballots. But pandemic-related restrictio­ns have limited visitors, and in some states, such as North Carolina and Louisiana, state laws prohibit facility staff from helping residents vote.

A federal court ruled in August that the North Carolina law put an undue restrictio­n on who may help residents vote, but it did not issue an injunction to stop the state from enforcing the ban. A Louisiana judge granted a temporary injunction to allow “no excuse” absentee voting and specifically singled out people who assist those with disabiliti­es as eligible for mail-in voting themselves, as well as those they assist.

Other states, including Minnesota and Tennessee, have eased restrictio­ns on voting in long-term care facilities by allowing staff to be designated as election officials to help residents vote.

The federal Centers on Medicare and Medicaid Services also issued a directive on Oct. 5 to Medicare/Medicaid certified long-term care facilities affirming that “a resident’s rights, including the right to vote, must not be impeded in anyway by the nursing home and its facility staff.”

Nina A. Kohn, law professor at Syracuse University and a distinguis­hed scholar in elder law at Yale Law School, said in a phone interview that while laws like the Voting Rights Act and directives like the one from CMS may outline how voters with disabiliti­es must be accommodat­ed, there are impediment­s.

“As a practical matter, how do they obtain that assistance?” she said. “With COVID, many individual­s don’t have access to family members and friends who would provide that assistance.”

Maurice Miller, a 57-year-old stroke survivor who lives at an assisted living facility in Takoma Park, Maryland, said the staff at his residence took up the slack when visitors were not allowed in.

“They had members of the management team collect our ballots and drop them off at a box,” he said. “And I’ve got an ‘I Voted’ sticker on my laptop.”

But that sort of help has sparked controvers­y in Nevada, where President Donald Trump and Republican­s argue that a change in state election law that allows nonfamily members to turn in ballots on behalf of other voters could lead to voter fraud.

Under the new rules, collecting a bunch of ballots from residents at a communal facility, so-called ballot harvesting, is legal if the collector does not try to influence how the residents vote. But detractors say residents of nursing homes and assisted living centers are ripe for illegal manipulati­on.

Nevada Republican­s sued to stop the change, but their lawsuit was rejected by a federal judge who ruled in September that the dispute was a “policy disagreeme­nt,” not a legal issue.

Daniel Stewart, an election lawyer in Las Vegas and former general counsel to former Gov. Brian Sandoval, a Republican, said the new law makes it easier for all people with disabiliti­es to vote.

“I think potentiall­y any new voting practice somebody could devise a way to abuse it, but I’ve seen no evidence that this in any way is going to open the doors to abuse,” Stewart said in a phone interview.

According to a study by Kruse and Schur, a projected 38.3 million people with disabiliti­es will be eligible to vote in the November elections, representi­ng close to one-sixth of the total electorate. Their study showed that’s an increase of nearly 20% since 2008, compared with an increase of 12% among eligible voters without disabiliti­es.

People with disabiliti­es are highly motivated to vote, Kruse said, in part because they have a difficult time engaging in other political activities such as volunteeri­ng at the polls, door-knocking for candidates or contacting voters.

In the 2018 midterms, voter turnout surged, the professors found, with nearly half of people with disabiliti­es among the voting eligible population (49.3%) voting, up from almost 41% in 2014’s midterms. About half of voters with disabiliti­es lean Democratic and about 42% favor Republican­s, according to a 2016 report fromthe Pew Research Center. (The Pew Charitable Trusts funds the center and Stateline.)

“The fact that people with disabiliti­es tend to be older and older people are more susceptibl­e to COVID makes this election an issue of health care,” Schur said, which also is likely to boost voting.

This story was originally published by Stateline, an initiative of The Pew Charitable Trusts.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Poll worker Sheila Thomas helps voters to submit their ballots from the curbside voting line on Tuesday at Malcolm X Opportunit­y Center, an early-voting center in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Poll worker Sheila Thomas helps voters to submit their ballots from the curbside voting line on Tuesday at Malcolm X Opportunit­y Center, an early-voting center in Washington.

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