Additionally, states may need to continue to offer some in-person polling options. Certain communities, such as infrequent voters and voters with disabilities, often find mail balloting difficult to navigate. This may be all the more true this November as more voters dislocated by the recession live in addresses different than those on file with an election office. But staffing in-person polling places may be impossible. In 2016, a U.S. Election Assistance Commission survey found that two-thirds of America’s local jurisdictions couldn’t recruit enough poll workers for Election Day — up from half of jurisdictions in 2012 and 2008. And workers may shy away from such jobs because of the health risks. In Florida’s March primary, for example, about 8% of the expected 4,800 poll workers did not show up in Miami-Dade County, forcing some polling places to open late and disrupting voting for some voters.