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BY THE PEOPLE
The Poll Worker Crisis in America
Facts:
From the Associated Press
There is currently a shortage of at least 500,000 poll workers
nationwide. The Election Assistance Commission estimates that
the average age of a poll worker is 72 years old.
The New York Times
For every three poll workers trained, two do not show up on election
day. Roughly 1.4 million people have been trained to serve as
poll workers [on Election Day 2004], the same as four years ago. But
nearly 2 million were expected to be needed…
Whittier Daily News
The Los Angeles County Registrar of Voters is currently looking for
an additional 25,000 poll workers for the 5,065 polling places
participating in the June 6, 2006 primary election.
CBS 5 San Francisco, CA
The Contra Costa County Election Department is reporting a shortage
of close to 2,500 poll workers for the June 6, 2006 primary.
What the Experts Are Saying:
“If the criminal justice
system didn’t have access to jurors, the criminal justice system
wouldn’t exist. Poll workers are just as important as jurors.”
--DeForest Soaries, chairman of the Election
Assistance Commission, quoted by the Associated Press
“Where’s the next generation
of poll workers? We need passion about this whole process and civic
participation.”
-- Kay J. Maxwell, president of the U.S. League of Women Voters,
quoted in a 2004 Associated Press article
“[Poll workers are] the
foundation upon which democracy rests…the cornerstone of democracy
is the right to vote, but to be able to exercise that right there
must be polling places and poll workers.”
-- Victor Salazar, Fresno County Clerk, quoted in the Fresno Bee,
April 21, 2006
“As long as they’re breathing
and they can walk in, we have to take them. The people we hire for
the most part are elderly, uneducated, and frequently unemployed.”
-- Barbara Jackson, Baltimore’s director of elections, quoted in USA
Today
“There isn’t a county in our
state that doesn’t have this as an ongoing issue. It’s just the way
it is.”
--Jill Kelly, Director of Elections, Lucas County, OH, quoted in the
Toledo Blade
The Poll Worker Shortage in the Media:
“It’s mind boggling how much
we ask these people to do,” says Connie McCormack, clerk of Los
Angeles County, the nation’s most populous voting jurisdiction with
4,602 precincts. “On any other job, if you make a mistake the first
day, you correct it the next day. With this job, you don’t get a
second day. That’s a huge expectation of perfection.”
--USA Today, SCARCITY OF POLL WORKERS PERSISTS
A shortage of at least 500,000
poll workers nationwide has voters bracing for long lines, cranky
volunteers, problems opening and closing the polling places, and the
chance that results won’t be known until long after the polls are
closed.
--Associated Press, POLL WORKER SHORTAGE: PROBLEMS LIKELY
Although the county has 1,870
poll workers signed up, the board of elections announced recently
that it still needs 110 works—68 republicans and 42 democrats—to
work on election day.
--Toledo Blade, POLL WORKERS GET READY FOR ELECTION, April 22, 2006,
At 4 p.m. Monday, only 14
hours before the polls open this morning, Sadler still was looking
for 33 people to be inspectors. Without them, 33 polling places will
be dark and locked when voters begin showing up at 6a.m. today.
-- Indianapolis Star, Late push needed to staff polls in county
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