Churches don’t have to be accessible. That’s a voting rights problem.
Churches don’t have to be accessible. That’s a voting rights problem.
You should be able to walk to a polling place, so we should use any available site.
That being said, you should also be able to walk in, so we need accessible sites
I think the main reason churches have been used is that they have big rooms which aren’t in use during the weekday, whereas with schools and government buildings you’re displacing the people who would normally be in that place.
There’s also a bunch of old ladies, who know where everything is and are available to help, in most churches. At least that’s true of the (accessible and progressive) UCC church I grew up in, which is still a polling place. With cookies and percolator coffee.
That said, I’ve voted by mail for decades because it’s just easier, especially since I’m filling out both my ballot and that of my quadriplegic spouse. Under their guidance of course.
Proximity.
You don’t always have a government building in close proximity. I once lived in an area where the polling place was someone’s garage because there was no better option.
So many problems are just solved by universal vote by mail.
No long lines, no time off needed, no accessability issues, all paper ballots. You just vote and drop off your ballot.
But then all the home skooled Republicans would complain that it’s against their parental rights to have to deal with public edukation and their children’s might end up hearing about those evil "A-B-3"s.
“It’s ‘always’ been this way and I don’t think we should change” (even if it hasn’t always been this way)