A poll worker checks in a voter at a Rhode Island voting station in Providence during the state's primary in June. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
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Note to readers: As you’ll notice with this edition, we’ve made some changes to the format of our weekly newsletter to bring you more timely original reporting and analysis from Public Integrity journalists on topics in which  they’ve developed expertise through their investigations. As always, we’d love your feedback and your ideas about coverage.

— Matt DeRienzo, editor in chief, mderienzo@publicintegrity.org 


LeBron James wants people to score points by working the polls. He’s not the only one. 

More Than a Vote, a collective of athletes, including James, formed to oppose voter suppression, is launching a high-profile effort to recruit poll workers in Black communities in swing states. More Than a Vote’s initiative is a high-profile example of the many programs that have sprung up in recent weeks to recruit election workers for November as local officials reckon with a shortage accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“You could see it play out in the primary elections where many polling places had to be closed because there was a shortage of poll workers,” said Janell Byrd-Chichester, director of the Thurgood Marshall Institute of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, which is partnering with More Than a Vote. 

More than half the country’s poll workers for the 2016 presidential election were 61 or older, according to data tracked by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. In some states, that number was far higher, a Center for Public Integrity analysis of U.S. EAC data for a story in May found

Seniors are at higher risk of severe illness or death if they contract COVID-19, which led many stalwarts to decline to work elections this year. The shortage of election workers prompted reductions in in-person polling places during the primaries and contributed to obstacles for voters, including long lines and confusion. Election officials are hoping to avert similar problems during November’s high-stakes presidential election. The U.S. EAC declared Sept. 1 “National Poll Worker Recruitment Day.” 

(Darin Kamnetz/Drag Out the Vote)

California Secretary of State Alex Padilla announced a partnershipwith Drag Out The Vote, a nonpartisan nonprofit that works with drag performers and advocates for increased voter access and engagement. The Poll Hero Project is seeking to recruit high school and college students to work the polls. “The Daily Show” has promotedPower the Polls. Many big companies, including Starbucks, are encouraging employees to work the polls, with employers such as sports teams and Old Navy offering paid time off to do so. Kentucky craft brewers are putting out the call for workers on beer labels

Recruiting enough poll workers is always a struggle, said Sherry Poland, Hamilton County, Ohio’s, elections director, during a recent call about elections sponsored by the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington, D.C. think tank, and especially this year. Poland is assessing how many regular poll workers might be unavailable in November, and is recruiting 17-year-old high school students and working with companies willing to give employees a paid day off to work the polls. 

The Ohio Supreme Court has agreed to allow lawyers to obtain needed continuing legal education credits in exchange for poll worker training, something other states are also doing. Accountants can get similar credit. The National Association of Secretaries of State and the National Association of State Election Directors are working with the American Bar Association on a national effort they’ve titled “Poll Worker, Esq.” 

Despite the efforts, many places are still struggling to find enough people. In Maryland, for example, counties are consolidating neighborhood polling places into smaller numbers of vote centers, but are still struggling to find enough workers. In Macoupin County, Illinois, the clerk recently said he hopes to open all the county’s usual polling places, but it depends on the number of election workers. In Mississippi, one of just a few states that still requires an excuse to vote absentee, county supervisors can authorize extra hazard pay for poll workers, and several have done so. And in Los Angeles County, the nation’s largest voting jurisdiction, the county will invoke emergency powers to use county employees to staff the election. 

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Carrie Levine joined the Center for Public Integrity in October 2014 as a federal politics reporter investigating...