Chicago Sun-Times

Coronaviru­s forces an ‘entirely unpreceden­ted’ election day scramble

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Scrambling to deal with an election for the city’s history books, officials are now trying to relocate 94 election day polling places in Chicago and “more than 32” in the Cook County suburbs as concerns over the coronaviru­s hit warp speed.

And growing numbers of election judges are pulling out of their assignment­s for Tuesday’s primary election — 746 in suburban Cook County alone.

“It is entirely unpreceden­ted in the history of Chicago elections, going back to 1837,” said Jim Allen, a spokesman for the Chicago Board of Election Commission­ers.

The number of election day switches has steadily ticked upward. Chicago precincts without polling places rose from 24 Thursday morning to 94 by evening.

“We are working with the city’s Office of Emergency Management in an attempt to resolve those issues so that we may deliver supplies to new locations by Sunday and Monday,” Allen said.

In the Cook County suburbs, more than 32 election day polling locations will need to be relocated, said James Scalzitti, a spokesman for Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough. Scalzitti said the number of polling locations needing to be moved had increased since Thursday morning, though he couldn’t provide an exact number by afternoon.

In Chicago, the latest relocation­s are largely happening at privately owned apartment buildings, churches and a variety of facilities that the city uses, Allen said. Nursing homes had been pulling out on Wednesday.

And unlike the day before, election judges are now opting to forgo their duties, Allen said.

“The number of election judges who have resigned is increasing,” Allen said. “Sometimes they’ll just call and say casually ‘I’ve got something else I need to do,’ but we suspect it’s all about the same thing. The concerns are real and valid.”

To help head off an election day crunch, city election officials announced that early voting hours were being extended an hour over the weekend at Chicago sites. That’s now 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. And vote-by-mail applicatio­ns were being accepted past the 5 p.m. Thursday deadline right up until midnight.

State officials did not immediatel­y return requests for comment.

As chaotic as the situation is, the coronaviru­s certainly does not mark the first time Chicago has held an election amid a natural disaster.

The mayoral election of 1871 came just a month after the Great Chicago Fire, which killed an estimated 300 people and left behind 100,000 homeless and damage estimated at $200 million, according to The History Channel’s website. The city was under martial law for weeks.

Running on the “Fireproof” ticket, Joseph Medill won the November mayoral election on a promise of tougher building and fire codes.

“His victory might also be attributab­le to the fact that most of the city’s voting records were destroyed in the fire, so it was next to impossible to keep people from voting more than once,” according to history.com.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Amid fears of coronaviru­s, jugs of hand sanitizer and cans of Lysol await voters for the March 17 Illinois primary at the Loop voting supersite at 191 N. Clark St. on Thursday afternoon.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Amid fears of coronaviru­s, jugs of hand sanitizer and cans of Lysol await voters for the March 17 Illinois primary at the Loop voting supersite at 191 N. Clark St. on Thursday afternoon.

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