Ohio
Secretary of State Jon Husted...
Be
a Good
Citizen, Be a Poll Worker on Election Day
May 13, 2012
As the
state’s chief elections officer, I am responsible for administering a
fair
election where eligible voters can freely exercise their right to vote
and have
confidence in the accuracy of the results.
This is no
simple job.
As Ohio’s
elections officials are working to prepare for the 2012 Presidential
Election,
the political rhetoric on both sides is heating up. One side believes
the law is
too restrictive and that voters are being suppressed. The other side
says the
system is open to fraud because there aren’t enough safeguards in
place. I
continue to believe that we can modernize our elections system and
strike the
right balance between maintaining convenience for voters and guarding
against
fraud. That balance is critical and increasingly hard to achieve when
the two
sides are so far apart.
The place
for critics is not on the sidelines, but on the field and there is one
way we
can put all this energy to a better, more productive use – become a
poll
worker.
It takes a
team of more than 40,000 to staff polling places around the state, and
each
year all 88 county boards of elections struggle to find enough people
who are
willing to take time out of their busy schedules to serve. We can
debate the
law and voting procedures until we are blue in the face, but the truth
is that
those 40,000 individuals can have more of an impact on the ultimate
success of
our elections than the Secretary of State, lawmakers and judges
combined.
To that
end, I am encouraging those who truly want a fair, well-run 2012
Presidential
Election to join me on the front lines this November by signing up to
be poll
workers and to encourage like-minded friends to do the same.
Serving as
a poll worker, otherwise known as a precinct elections official (PEO),
is both
easy and rewarding. To be eligible to become a PEO a person must be at
least 17
years of age and registered to vote in the county in which they plan to
work;
have not been convicted of a felony; and cannot be running as a
candidate for
the election in which they are working.
In addition
to having a rewarding experience by honoring a civic duty, those who
sign up to
become PEOs will also be compensated for their time. Poll workers must
undergo
training and work at polls on Election Day. For their time, PEOs are
paid more
than $100.
The
Secretary of State’s office is working to help boards of elections in
their
recruitment efforts by raising awareness and providing print materials
to
boards and civic organizations. The office has also launched an online
signup
at PEOinOhio.com to collect information from potential PEOs, which is
then
forwarded to county boards of elections. To date, more than 245 people
have signed
up at PEOinOhio.com to become a poll worker.
Ohio’s
elections process would best be
served if each of us put aside their philosophical differences and do
our part
to give each Ohio voter the best experience they can have at the polls
this
November 6, 2012.
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