KEY POINTS
  • The coronavirus pandemic has already disrupted voting in 2020, forcing state officials across the country to institute new procedures and policies meant to maintain turnout while keeping voters safe. 
  • But for those who will vote in person this November, states have been planning for months to deliver personal protective equipment like hand sanitizer and masks to individual polling sites. 
  • How much PPE each polling site gets is dependent in part on the amount of funding available.
  • In March, Congress allocated $400 million to the Election Assistance Commission to provide states with grants, but state and local officials have been urging Congress to appropriate more money, contending funds are being rapidly depleted. 
An election worker opens envelopes containing vote-by-mail ballots for the August 4 Washington state primary at King County Elections in Renton, Washington on August 3, 2020.

Election officials in states across the nation are wrestling with a critical issue for the upcoming presidential contest: how much hand sanitizer will be enough for each polling place on Nov. 3. 

The coronavirus pandemic has already disrupted voting in 2020, forcing state officials across the country to institute new procedures and policies meant to maintain turnout while keeping voters safe.