
Last week I worked three six and a half hour shifts as a poll worker for the Johnson County Auditor, helping with drive-through voting. This operation is conducted in a parking ramp located next to the county administration building. If a person is sociable, the work interacting with voters can be engaging. If less so, it is the perfunctory stuff people do to fill out a schedule of security and retail work, and retirement activities. As I said to a colleague after the shift, and before they went to their next job as security staff, “It is good work if you can get it.”
My job was guarding the ballot bin, and making sure voters signed their ballot envelopes and sealed them before they went into the slot. The first two days, my partner was a Republican with whom I had worked at the home, farm and auto supply store. I got caught up on the doings over there. With a couple of exceptions, everyone I knew no longer works there.
The county makes sure there is an even match between the number of Democratic and Republican poll workers. Not that it makes a difference, because the process itself delivers fairness. These days, accusations fly and the Republican-Democratic evenness is an antidote to accusations of foul play.
We were not very busy. My mobile device monitor recorded two hours of reading my kindle app on Friday, our busiest day of the three. I had forgotten I started Suze Rotolo’s book, A Freewheelin’ Time: A Memoir of Greenwich Village in the Sixties. She is not a great writer, yet the record of that time is of interest to people like me who participated vicariously in that era. Rotolo was Bob Dylan’s girlfriend and is featured on the cover of his 1963 breakthrough album The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan. It helped pass time.
On the last day I partnered with a younger man with a backpack. We got along fine and got the job done. He was not a talker, hence the two hours of reading my Kindle.
The worst part of the shifts was standing on a concrete floor. The auditor provided folding chairs for us, yet being on my feet so long in a day is something I had forgotten. I knew to wear shoes with inserts to protect my feet from the concrete.
Of the jobs I held previously, it most reminded me of working at Kentucky Electric Steel near Ashland, Kentucky, and at the sub-assembly operation for Whirlpool in North Liberty, both of which had concrete floors. There I wore steel-toed shoes with metatarsal protection yet the concrete floors were hard on my feet. The latter led to my first case of plantar fasciitis. During poll working shifts I did exercises to hold off plantar fasciitis. My shoe inserts and exercises did their job and my feet were fine immediately after work and the next days.
I have two additional shifts as a poll worker. One is at the auditor’s office working on early voting inside and the other is election day coverage in our precinct. My spouse and I voted early so there would be no hassle on election day. I have been a Democratic poll watcher the last two election cycles, and know the level of activity to expect. I may be able to finish my Kindle book.
The bipartisan nature of poll working makes it a positive experience. Unlike some of my colleagues at the drive-through, I don’t expect to marry up poll working with security work, despite the similarities. Will know more on that after the primary election.


















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