Life of a Pennsylvania mail-in ballot: From locked cages to an acid bath

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America’s election systems include safeguards – including for mail-in voting – to make sure that ballots are held securely and counted accurately, and that people can’t vote more than once.

In Philadelphia, nonpartisan election staff review applications for mail-in ballots, and send a list of approved voters to a printing vendor. When voters have received and completed their ballot, they drop it off in person at an election office, return it in the mail, or leave it in one of 23 dropboxes monitored with 24/7 video surveillance.

Why We Wrote This

Amid falling trust in the electoral process, we look at the chain of custody for a ballot in the state that was ground zero for GOP attacks on mail-in voting in 2020: Pennsylvania.

Those ballots are then taken to a warehouse, registered and checked for mistakes, and timestamped and locked with other ballots in a large cage. At 7 a.m. on Election Day, they are taken out of the cage and prepared for counting.

Once ballots have been scanned, the Board of Elections posts the electronic results. Until results are certified, which requires a mandatory audit within 20 days of the election, the ballots are stored in a second cage, and a badge ID and code are required to access them.

After 22 months, the ballots are put in an acid bath, destroying any trace of them.

Americans’ trust in the electoral process has fallen steeply in recent years, fueled in part by the fact that many don’t have a clear understanding of the steps involved in mailing, tracking, securing, and counting ballots. 

To that end, the Monitor took a closer look at the entire lifecycle of a ballot in Pennsylvania, one of the most contested states in the 2020 presidential election. 

Though Pennsylvania’s legislature had adopted mail-in voting just prior to the pandemic, the state – particularly the Democratic stronghold of Philadelphia – became a focus of complaints from then-President Donald Trump and the GOP that a rapid scaling up of mail-in voting amid the pandemic made the election less secure.

Why We Wrote This

Amid falling trust in the electoral process, we look at the chain of custody for a ballot in the state that was ground zero for GOP attacks on mail-in voting in 2020: Pennsylvania.

Mr. Trump brought dozens of lawsuits to bolster his claims that the election had been “stolen,” but none proved fraud.

Voting processes are highly localized in the United States. But examining the process in Philadelphia will give a sense of methods and procedures for securing ballots. This explainer is based on interviews with city commissioners, a tour of an election warehouse, and publicly available government information.

Applying for – and returning – mail-in ballots

In Pennsylvania, any registered voter can apply for a mail-in ballot, without providing a specific reason why they want it. Nonpartisan election staff review these applications, and send a list of approved voters to a printing vendor, The Phoenix Group of Companies. The Phoenix Group prints a ballot for each greenlighted application. 

Caitlin Babcock/The Christian Science Monitor.

The inside of an election warehouse in Philadelphia, Oct. 25, 2024. On Election Day, poll watchers stand inside this gated area as they watch votes being counted.

When an application is approved and a ballot is mailed to a Pennsylvania voter, election workers enter a record of that ballot into a statewide database. Voters can track their ballots on the Department of State’s website, and find out when their application is processed, when the ballot is put in the mail to them, and when the voted ballot has been safely returned. 

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