Albuquerque Journal

Young people may be answer to ’20 poll worker shortage

- BY MAYA PATEL

In the 2018 midterm elections, about six out of 10 U.S. poll workers were over the age of 60, and more than 80% were over 40. That presents a major problem for the 2020 presidenti­al contest.

The age group from which most poll workers are drawn is particular­ly at risk for COVID-19, and primaries held after the global pandemic made clear that finding enough poll workers to staff the November election is likely to be difficult. In Wisconsin’s April primary, for instance, a lack of available poll workers caused the city of Milwaukee to drasticall­y pare down the number of polling locations, from its typical 180 to a mere five.

Luckily, this is a problem with a relatively simple solution: Young people should step up and be poll workers. It’s what I did for the Texas primary in March. It was relatively easy, I was paid for my work, and it was wildly rewarding to help hundreds of people vote, many of them college students voting for the first time.

In the days leading up to the March election, I heard rumblings about a severe shortage of poll workers in Travis County due to fears of COVID-19. One of the few polling locations that serves the University of Texas at Austin’s student community was struggling to find a full contingent of poll workers to staff it. As a former student, I knew that polling locations near the university already face hourslong lines of voters. If we couldn’t staff this polling location for the primaries, it might shut down by November, making it even harder for students to vote. So I volunteere­d to pitch in as a poll worker, struggling out of bed at 5 a.m. on Election Day to help my community cast ballots until 10 p.m. that night.

Of course, not all young people are able to serve as poll workers. Election Day is always on a Tuesday, when many of us have work or school. The pandemic has exacerbate­d challenges around financial stability, physical and mental health and family responsibi­lities for young people, as for everyone else. But for those who have the time and ability to volunteer, the process is relatively easy and has few requiremen­ts. In addition, almost all poll workers are compensate­d for their work, although the amount depends on your state and local jurisdicti­on.

While the process to become a poll worker varies by state, workelecti­ons.com offers a one-stop location for informatio­n about staffing your local polling place. Initiative­s such as Power the Polls, which hopes to recruit 250,000 Americans to serve as poll workers this year, also help guide people through the process.

The number of polling locations across the country has been rapidly falling in recent years even before the coronaviru­s, and many fear the closures have disproport­ionately harmed impoverish­ed areas and communitie­s of color. During the 2018 midterms, Latinx and Black voters were more likely to report longer wait times at polling locations than white voters . ...

Fully staffed polling places aren’t a panacea to the much larger issue of voter suppressio­n and the availabili­ty of places to vote. But over the past four years, as I’ve fought to place polling locations on college campuses across the country, a common pushback I’ve heard from election officials is they don’t have the capacity to staff additional polling locations. Having adequate numbers of poll workers is a crucial prerequisi­te to advocating for additional polling locations and a powerful way to fight back against the potential closure of locations in marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

As the number of potential poll workers continues to dwindle, we shouldn’t just be concerned about the polling locations that we will lose — we also should be advocating for more locations in communitie­s that have been historical­ly discrimina­ted against. Without poll workers, that becomes difficult, if not impossible.

While the need for younger poll workers is greater during a pandemic, it is also a need that will exist long-term. After all, representa­tion matters. Poll workers are the gatekeeper­s standing between a person and the ballot box. When we have poll workers who are representa­tive of the community they serve, they are more likely to understand the unique situations and barriers that voters from that community face . ...

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