A proposal to postpone the April 28 Pennsylvania primary due to the coronavirus is in the works, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

According to the news report, Gov. Tom Wolf and “key members of the state legislature” are preparing to ask for the election to be postponed until June 2.

No agreement has been reached, but the Inquirer reported lawmakers and members “of the governor’s administration have discussed the idea for the last several days."

Senate Republicans are expected to introduce the legislation early next week, Rep. Kevin Boyle (D-Philadelphia) told the Inquirer. If it passes there, then it would move to the House for consideration.

It’s unclear how the legislation will play out once it leaves the Senate.

The report explained county election officials have been “pleading with the state to postpone the primary, saying it is all but impossible to prepare for an April 28 election at a time when institutions are pulling out of hosting polling places and poll workers are declining to work - not to mention the possibility of endangering public health with in-person voting. Some elections offices have been temporarily closed or have been functioning with skeleton staffs as part of government shutdowns to prevent further spread of the coronavirus."

During a news conference Friday, Wolf said, "My administration is working with the legislature on that very issue and we’ve had conversations and discussions about that. So I think the House is coming back into session next week, the Senate is meeting remotely, and I think we should have some word on that very shortly. But this is something we all recognize. … We’ve got to make a decision. We are a democracy, and we’re working together here.”