A voter takes advantage of the hand sanitizer to "clean up" after voting in the presidential party primary in Ridgeland, Miss., Tuesday, March 10, 2020. Polling locations are providing hand sanitizers for voters to use as a cautionary measure in light of the coronavirus health concern nationwide.
Emily is a reporter for WITF who’s been covering voting and elections since July 2019 as part of her former role with statehouse accountability news organization PA Post. She was the senior reporter for statewide public media collaboration Keystone Crossroads. Previously, she covered city hall for PennLive/The Patriot-News (Harrisburg, Pa.), was a watchdog and city hall reporter at The Press of Atlantic City and reported for the Northwest Herald. She is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania.
A voter takes advantage of the hand sanitizer to "clean up" after voting in the presidential party primary in Ridgeland, Miss., Tuesday, March 10, 2020. Polling locations are providing hand sanitizers for voters to use as a cautionary measure in light of the coronavirus health concern nationwide.
In light of the continued spread of coronavirus, PA Post and our partners made the tough call to postpone our “Access, Transparency and Your Right-to-Know” conference slated for next Friday in Pittsburgh. We’re disappointed, but made the call after reading the advice coming from an increasing number of public health experts, as our events manager Kate Landis explains here. We’ll reschedule as soon as we can. Stay tuned! —Emily Previti, staff writer
Rogelio V. Solis / AP Photo
A voter takes advantage of the hand sanitizer to “clean up” after voting in the presidential party primary in Ridgeland, Miss., Tuesday, March 10, 2020. Polling locations are providing hand sanitizers for voters to use as a cautionary measure in light of the coronavirus health concern nationwide. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
What are election officials in Pennsylvania doing to prepare to run the April 28 presidential primary at the same time the state and nation are grappling with a public health emergency?
We asked, and about 30 responded. All but a couple of county elections officials reported that plans are already in place or are being developed. A dozen or so didn’t have details on the new measures, aside from stating that their offices will adhere to election guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and coordinate with state and federal health agencies. Several county officials explained that election-specific measures would be included in forthcoming pandemic plans.
The biggest impact on voters could be the relocation of polling places: Lebanon, Lancaster, Berks and other counties are researching alternative locations for precincts that currently can’t accommodate the CDC-recommended “public distancing” range (minimum four feet to six feet, ideally) or would be unusable due to other coronavirus-related concerns. That includes nursing homes that are also voting locations, and many are tightening access to protect residents from the virus, as WHYY’s Nina Feldman reports. Bans on visitors to nursing facilities in other states have already prompted polling places to move.
Relocating polling places is an extreme move. Pa. counties are more likely to stock precincts with hand sanitizer and disinfectant wipes so voters and poll workers can clean surfaces and machines.
The nation’s three largest voting machine vendors — Dominion Voting Systems, Hart InterCivic and Election Systems & Software — issued cleaning guidance for their devices on Wednesday. And the day before, scanners made by now-defunct Diebold/Premier went down temporarily after clogging with hand sanitizer-dampened ballots during the March 10 municipal election in New Hampshire.
Some Pennsylvania counties say supplies are back-ordered, but expected to arrive before the primary. A handful — including Bradford, Allegheny, McKean, Montgomery and Lancaster counties — already have most of the supplies they expect to need because they started distributing those products to polling places years ago.
Centre and Montgomery counties will add non-latex gloves to the mix of sanitizing products at their polls. Same with Bradford, where election workers will have access to N-95 face masks as well. And Lancaster expects to have sanitary covers for headphones available to voters who need audio ballots, according to chief elections clerk Randall Wenger.
Voters will be encouraged to bring their own pens to fill out ballots in Lancaster, Lebanon and York counties.
Crawford County Election Director Gina Chatfield says she’s preparing for the Department of State to order an all vote-by-mail primary (though DoS isn’t even hinting at that prospect at this point).
Lancaster, Lebanon, York and Centre county officials say they’ll push mail-in ballots, particularly for elderly or immuno-compromised voters. Erie County even announced complimentary postage and a ballot drop-box last week (though public health concerns didn’t appear to be a factor there yet, according to this Erie Times-News post.).
Counties are also redoubling poll worker recruitment efforts, a response to the fact that many of these workers are seniors, York County spokesman Mark Walters explained in an email. No county election official reported that their poll workers are expressing concerns at this point, but having enough poll workers already is a struggle in counties throughout the commonwealth.
“It will take a comprehensive approach to address the shortages we are seeing here in general, although clearly the COVID-19 spread has brought that into sharp relief,” said Lisa Schaefer, executive director of the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania.
Centre will train county department heads and other personnel to work the polls in preparation for the same happening in Pa., County Commissioner Mike Pipe said.
But virus fears didn’t seem to create too many problems in the six states that held presidential primaries on Tuesday. Absentee ballot rates, however, surged in all six, ABC notes in this post. Michigan poll workers stuck to a regimen of cleaning machines after every voter.
Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden canceled Tuesday night rallies in Ohio in light of the health crisis. Biden scheduled a press conference in Philadelphia instead, and Katie Meyer was there to cover his remarks for her debut story for WHYY.
Meanwhile, in the nation’s capital, U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) is trying to get more money for states to cover absentee ballot costs that likely would spike in November if COVID’s still spreading, The Washington Post reports. —Emily Previti
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Kimberly Paynter / WHYY
Adamarie Baez and Daniel Ortiz with their ten year-old daughter Kaylee in the lot next to their home they’ve maintained and gardened in for years. (Kimberly Paynter/WHYY)
The Philadelphia Land Bank wants to reclaim nearly 60 vacant lots in a four-block area in northeast Philly as part of a project to create affordable housing in a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood. After a contentious board meeting earlier this week, the land bank’s board tabled its vote on the proposal to lease the land to a nonprofit while a private development coalition finalizes its plans to build mixed-rate housing. But residents say the delay’s not enough. They’re outraged they didn’t know about the project until it got this far and fear it will push them out of their homes — not to mention bulldoze the community gardens they’ve created on some of the vacant parcels. Catalina Jamaraillo has the story for WHYY.
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