(Headline USA) Voting will look a little different this November.
States are turning to stadiums, drive-thrus and possibly even movie theaters as safe options for in-person polling places amid virus hysteria and fears about fraud surrounding mail-in ballots.
The primary season brought voters to an outdoor wedding-style tent in Vermont and the state fairgrounds in Kentucky. The general election on Nov. 3 is expected to include voting at NBA arenas around the country.
Large venues and outdoor spaces allow for social isolation, though there are questions about keeping people warm as the weather gets cold and the possibility that fewer traditional neighborhood polling places could lower voter turnout.
Election Day is expected to bring a surge in mail-in voting, but some people may feel more comfortable casting their ballots in person.
Several states conduct their elections almost entirely by mail, and mail-in voting is well established in others.
In June, Utah broke voter turnout records despite not opening traditional polling places because of the virus. In-person voting will be back in November, but rather than only using schools, churches and public buildings like usual, clerks also are permitted to set up drive-thru or outdoor polling places.
The family that owns the NBA’s Utah Jazz also has a chain of movie theaters and offered three as voting sites in November.
One suburban Salt Lake City county ran a primary polling place where voters drove through an indoor convention center to pick up their ballots, completed them in their cars and then dropped them off in an outdoor parking area.
Davis County Clerk Curtis Koch said the system will be in place for the general election, too.
Chad Berbert, a 46-year-old Republican, said he’ll probably vote by mail in the fall, but he’s glad officials are offering alternative voting methods.
“The more options for voting in terms of mechanisms or ways that people can exercise their franchise I think is helpful,” said Berbert, who lives in Layton, Utah.
Less than 1% of Utah voters chose in-person options in June, according to election officials.
In Los Angeles, Dodger Stadium will be used as a vote center as part of a joint effort with More Than A Vote, a voting rights organization launched by LeBron James that’s dedicated to maximizing black turnout in November.
Many black voters — one of the Democratic Party’s most important voting groups — are wary of voting by mail.
Several teams, including the Milwaukee Bucks, Detroit Pistons and Atlanta Hawks, had already committed their arenas to be voting sites prior to the NBA’s announcement last week. Madison Square Garden also will be among the sports stadiums used.
Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press.