County administrators have a lot of autonomy
Pennsylvania counties have a board of elections and an election director. The board and director, as well as the county solicitor, decide how to interpret Pennsylvania’s old code when there are conflicts.
Election directors are generally selected by their county’s board of elections and come from a variety of backgrounds. While some who have served in the role in recent years came from other administrative local government roles, others were funeral home owners, educators, and nurses.
These directors handle the day-to-day work of running elections and oversee the canvassing process, wherein poll workers sort and count ballots. They locate polling places, make sure there are enough poll workers for each precinct, and organize the printing of ballots. In preparation for Election Day, directors also test voting machines and secure them in a safe location where they cannot be tampered with.
Boards of elections oversee this work and collaborate with directors to make major policy decisions.
In most of Pennsylvania, elected county commissioners serve on election boards. Counties with home rule charters can use a different process to pick members. The Election Code requires each board of elections to feature representation from a minority political party, based on the composition of the county commissioners.
The board is empowered to make critical decisions such as whether to use mail ballot drop boxes or allow voters to correct flawed mail ballots before Election Day. That’s an important responsibility, since there are ill-defined areas within the guardrails of the state’s Election Code, legal precedents, and directives that the board must clarify.
The passage of Act 77 in 2019 raised the stakes. The law allows all voters to use mail ballots, but it’s silent on many issues, including drop boxes. So far, state lawmakers have not agreed on legislation that would fill in those details.
This has led to disparate practices across the state, which can result in some voters having more opportunities to ensure their vote is counted than others, depending on the county in which they live.