I’ve never been very involved in the political process. I decided this year that it was time. So I joined the League of Women Voters of Kent County and began by attending every venue where I could learn about our local candidates for the 2022 primary election.
Then I signed up to be an election judge. Imagine my surprise when I received notice for training as a chief election judge! Now that sounds like a lot of responsibility, but I was ready to take it on.
The first training took almost five hours. I learned that the election process in Maryland is one of the most secure in the nation. And after attending this first training, I can concur. The reference manual was two inches thick! Learning the workings of the various equipment involved and the proper procedures was daunting. Fortunately, there are two chief judges assigned to each polling place (one from each party) and my partner was very experienced.
I was assigned to work primary day in Millington, Kent County. The Friday before, I was instructed to pick up supplies at the Board of Elections office — this effort turned into another half-day training session.
Then came primary day. I arrived at the Millington Firehouse at 5:15 a.m. with my cooler of food and drink for the day. No leaving the building, no cell phone until after the polls close at 8 p.m. The Board workers had left behind a large locked storage container with our equipment for the day that we unpacked and set up.
There are electronic poll machines that identify the voter and print out the appropriate voter card (Maryland primaries are based on party registration). Then there are private voter stations and electronic voting machines (the voter chooses between those two methods to vote). The final and most important machine scans the completed ballot and deposits it in a locked secure container.
An election judge at each station assists the voters if needed and makes sure the ballot is securely recorded. At the end of the day, all judges assist with putting the equipment back into the secured container and may not leave until everything is finished. Only then are they dismissed.
I never realized what a big job it is to be an election judge. Judges made sure that the voters had done everything they needed to do to make their votes count. The process was explained to each voter, their privacy was respected, their vote was counted (the numbers of voters checking in and ballots in the box must match!), and good humor was maintained. Delivering the locked box containing the ballots to the Board of Elections office made a rewarding end to a very long day.
Early voting and mail-in ballots make sure everyone has a voice, but nothing makes me feel more American than the privilege of going to the polling place on Election Day.
In case you’re interested in being an election judge yourself, here’s more information.
Carol Hilty Droge retired in 2005 as Vice President of Sales for a trust company in Wilmington, Del. A life-long "part-timer" of Kent County, she and her husband became full-time residents at that time. She serves on the boards of the United Way of Kent County, League of Women Voters of Kent County, and the Chester River Health Foundation, and volunteers for several other non-profit agencies.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk