COLUMBUS, Ohio – The four states that vote Tuesday will not delay their primary elections, as Louisiana decided Friday amid the COVID-19 global pandemic.
Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose joined his counterparts in Arizona, Florida and Illinois on Friday in a joint statement affirming that their states’ primary elections would go on as planned Tuesday.
Louisiana announced Friday that it was postponing its primary election scheduled for April 4.
“Americans have participated in elections during challenging times in the past, and based on the best information we have from public health officials, we are confident that voters in our states can safely and securely cast their ballots in this election, and that otherwise healthy poll workers can and should carry out their patriotic duties on Tuesday,” the four state officials wrote in the prepared statement.
Elections officials around Ohio reported that they are losing poll workers scheduled to work Election Day because of fear about the spread of the coronavirus.
LaRose earlier this week ordered local elections officials to move voting locations at about 125 senior living facilities to new polling places to insulate residents of those facilities from the spread of the virus. That includes 16 in Franklin County.
Ohio has five confirmed cases of COVID-19, and about 50 others were under investigation as of Thursday afternoon. Gov. Mike DeWine signed an order Thursday banning most gatherings of 100 or more people.
The order, though, does not apply to voters casting their ballots in the election.
Polling places are different from other large gatherings, the secretaries wrote, because they draw people from smaller communities together for a short period of time. Concerts, sporting events and other large gatherings, though, draw from a broader area and for extended time.
Voting machine manufacturers also have provided information about how to sanitize machines, and local boards of elections have received information from health officials about hand-washing, they wrote.
LaRose’s office told county boards this week that they will be reimbursed for buying sanitizers, disinfectants, disinfecting or antibacterial wipes, disposable gloves, rubbing alcohol or isopropyl alcohol, and other sanitizing materials.