Disabled, elderly voters face new hurdles at polls
From
News21:
Sami McGinnis remembers walking into a polling place and casting her vote for the first time.
“It was a wonderful feeling to have that freedom,” she said.
McGinnis, 67, whose vision is impaired, gave up that freedom eight
years ago after her husband died. That’s when she first voted by
absentee ballot. Having no family near her Mesa, Ariz., residence, she
found it difficult arranging transportation — especially on Election
Day.
She wishes it were possible for her to physically vote inside a
polling place because she questions whether her absentee ballot is
counted.
“It’s better than nothing,” she said, “but live my experience and tell me it’s better than nothing. It’s not the same.”
One in nine voting-age Americans is disabled, according to Census
data. Of the 17 percent of voting-age Americans who are 65 years or
older, at least 36 percent are disabled.
At a time when 37 states have considered photo ID legislation, some
disabled and elderly Americans may face difficulty voting this November
because they often don’t have a valid driver’s license. The result is
that voter turnout among these groups likely will decrease, according to
Rutgers University research.
“Voting is a big deal. It’s a big highlight of their years,” said Daniel Kohrman, a senior attorney for AARP in Washington, D.C.
“It’s really unfortunate, and indeed tragic, that this emphasis on
restricting participation is presented in so many states,” Kohrman
added.
Eighteen percent of Americans over 65 do not have a photo ID,
according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University, a
public policy group that opposed many of the voting rule changes
nationally. The Census estimates at least 7 million seniors don’t have
driver’s licenses.
Many people with disabilities also don’t have a driver’s license.
Beyond physical disabilities, persons can have learning disabilities —
dyslexia for example — or poor hand-eye coordination.
“They’ve stopped driving because of vision or reflex issues. They,
for reasons of various disability issues, have moved in with family who
drive them around, or they’ve moved into an assisted living center,”
said Jim Dickson, leader of the Disability Vote Project. The nonpartisan
project of the Washington, D.C.-based American Association of People
with Disabilities, encourages political participation by those with
disabilities.
AARP has opposed voter ID legislation in Missouri, Michigan, Indiana
and Minnesota because the organization says “states should not impose
unreasonable identification requirements that discourage or prevent
citizens from voting.”
Voter ID requirements aren’t the only problem disabled and elderly
people may face at the polls. People in these groups often have trouble
accessing traditional polling places.
All polls are supposed to comply with the Americans with Disabilities
Act of 1990. Among other things, the sweeping law says that people with
disabilities shall not face discrimination at the polls. But, just
under one-third of polling places are 100 percent barrier free,
according to a 2009 Government Accountability Office study of the 2008
election.
Many states skirt the accessibility to polls by allowing absentee
voting, mail voting or voting from curbsides, where a poll worker comes
to a disabled person’s car with a ballot.
All states allow absentee and mail voting, but not all — Tennessee, for example — allow curbside voting.
“People with disabilities should have the same options as everyone
else has. Voting in a polling places is an important and symbolic
ritual,” said Lisa Schur, a Rutgers University associate professor who
researches disabilities issues in employment and the ADA impact on
public policy.
Leaving the disabled with only alternative voting methods “sends a
clear message that people with disabilities are not fully welcome in the
political sphere,” she said.
The convenience of absentee voting is appealing to Karin Kellas of
Glendale, Ariz. (pictured) She suffered a spinal cord injury as a result of a
rollover car accident in 1966. In the ’90s, her legs were amputated
above the knee.
“I’ve heard a lot of (disabled) people feel their voice doesn’t
count,” she said. “We need to make our opinions known and vote because
that’s how we make any kind of change.”
Kellas votes absentee so she can skip the lines and volunteer to work
the polls. If she wanted to vote in a traditional polling place, she’d
find a way to get there as she did in the past.
She wants voting to be “as easy and accessible for able-bodied people as it is for disabled people.”
“I’m the exception to the rule because I don’t take no for an answer,” Kellas said. “There has to be a way I can vote.”
Inaccessible polling places can have “psychological consequences that say, ‘I don’t really want you here,’” Schur said.
“I see absentee voting and voting by mail as a convenience and it can
help a lot of people with disabilities,” she said, “but I don’t see it
as a substitute as making polling places accessible.”
Voter turnout among disabled people is a clear reflection of that,
according to a Rutgers University study from the 2008 election.
The study showed turnout among voters who have disabilities was about 7 percentage points lower than those without disabilities.
And that’s not because disabled people are less interested in voting,
said Douglas Kruse, a Rutgers University professor and director of the
doctoral program in industrial relations and human resources. He and
Schur co-authored the study.
Kruse, who uses a wheelchair, has a doctorate in economics from
Harvard University. His research has found that disabled persons are
less likely to be recruited to vote or participate in political
activities.
“You’re not expected to participate,” he said, adding that such an
attitude “probably reflects a lot of the polling place difficulties and
the message that is sent by a polling place.”
It’s important for persons with disabilities to vote because political and social issues deeply affect them, McGinnis said.
“We take the time to get to know the issues because we live them,” she said.