Election worker came to polls despite positive coronavirus test, then died
O'FALLON, Mo. — A suburban St. Louis election official who worked at a polling place on election day despite a positive test for the coronavirus has died, raising concerns for the nearly 2,000 people who voted there.
A spokeswoman for St. Charles County, Mo., said Thursday that the person, whose cause of death is not yet known, was an election judge supervisor Tuesday at the Blanchette Park Memorial Hall polling site in St. Charles, about 25 miles northwest of St. Louis. The county’s health department and election authority recently learned that the poll worker tested positive Oct. 30 for the coronavirus and had been advised to quarantine for 14 days.
“The election judge nevertheless failed to follow the advice” and worked throughout the day on Tuesday, spokeswoman Mary Enger said in a news release. “Authorities have informed the County that this individual has died, although a cause of death has not been given at this time.”
No details about the worker, including his or her age or gender, were released.
COVID-19 deaths are draining political support for Republicans, from Trump to candidates for Congress, according to a new study.
Contact tracing has begun and county health officials have contacted the other nine election workers at the site, who were advised to be tested for the virus, Enger said. The infected poll worker’s duties did not “typically” include handling iPads or having close contact with the 1,858 voters, such as taking voter identification, Enger said.
County officials urged anyone who was at the precinct on election day to watch closely for symptoms and call a hotline if they have questions.
St. Charles County Director of Elections Kurt Bahr said election workers were required to wear masks or face shields. In addition, Plexiglas barriers separated workers from voters.
It’s not clear when the county decided to require workers to wear masks. In September, the election authority drew criticism for an email urging poll workers who had signed up for the November election to “act surprised” if voters asked why they weren’t wearing masks.
“You may act surprised that you don’t have a face mask on properly and then apologize as you put the mask on,” the email stated. “Wear your mask correctly until the voter leaves the polling place. Please do this every time a voter says something to you.”
If nearly all Americans would wear face masks when they leave their homes, they could save over 100,000 lives by the end of February, a study says.
Bahr said in an interview in September that the email was poorly worded but was meant to avoid a debate that would slow down the voting process. Phone calls to his office on Thursday went unanswered.
Missouri is among several Midwestern states seeing a surge in coronavirus cases. The state reported 3,553 new cases and 18 deaths on Thursday. All told, Missouri has reported 196,576 confirmed cases and 3,106 deaths. The positivity rate of 15.2% is triple the benchmark recommended by the World Health Organization.
The state also set a new record for hospitalizations, with a seven-day average of 1,721 — 49 more than the record set a day earlier.
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