{"id":62785,"date":"2020-08-18T12:59:00","date_gmt":"2020-08-18T20:59:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/village-president-polls-closed-in-kake-by-covid-19-not-politics\/"},"modified":"2020-08-18T12:59:00","modified_gmt":"2020-08-18T20:59:00","slug":"village-president-polls-closed-in-kake-by-covid-19-not-politics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/village-president-polls-closed-in-kake-by-covid-19-not-politics\/","title":{"rendered":"Village president: Polls closed in Kake by COVID-19, not politics"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last-minute poll closures due to coronavirus-related health concerns don’t seem to have inhibited anybody’s ability to vote Tuesday in the Organized Village of Kake, according to President Joel Jackson.<\/p>\n
The Department of Elections announced the closure of six polling places in rural communities Monday night, less than 12 hours before voting was set to begin. But Kake’s decision was made because of local health concerns and not because of the Trump administration, who some have accused of deliberately cutting the United States Postal Service in an effort to undermine voting by mail.<\/p>\n
“This decision has nothing to do with the president’s efforts to try to discourage voting,” Jackson told the Empire Wednesday in a phone interview. “We have six active cases. We are being cautious because we are a small community.”<\/p>\n
Kake’s polling place was technically closed, he said, but anyone who wanted to vote simply had to call ahead and a poll worker would bring them a ballot in the parking lot of Kake City Hall.<\/p>\n
DOE’s announcement said absentee voting ballots would still be accepted at all six locations.<\/p>\n
Kake only has one clinic run by the Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium, Jackson said, and while the village has been able to get testing supplies and other medical equipment, there are concerns about maintaining those supplies.<\/p>\n
Asked if the closure had frustrated anyone’s attempt at voting, Jackson said he hadn’t heard of any.<\/p>\n
“No, not today,” he said. “I’m disappointed that the president is trying to block people’s right to vote by using the mail but we’re just being cautious.”<\/p>\n