Stating that "churches are an unconstitutionally hostile environment for nonreligious voters," the North Carolina State Board of Elections has been asked by the American Humanist Association (AHA) to cease allowing the use of churches as polling places.
The AHA's legal department, the Appignani Humanist Legal Center, sent a letter on May 31, 2012, to State Board of Elections Executive Director Gary O. Bartlett saying that state and federal law requires that "appropriate polling places must be neutral civic locations, welcoming to all voters," and "the use of churches as polling places is, in addition to being a violation of state law, unconstitutional."
When North Carolinians went to the polls on May 8 to vote on Amendment One, the amendment to the state's Constitution banning equal marriage rights, news reports highlighted how signs outside of churches being used as polling places displayed messages supporting the amendment. This practice is just one example of a broader situation in the state and across the country in which voters encounter religious messages and influences in what should be neutral polling places.
"Citizens are forced to enter a religious structure and encounter religious messages simply to exercise their fundamental right to vote," wrote Appignani Legal Center Director William J. Burgess in his letter. "This violates the Establishment Clause [of the U.S. Constitution], which requires the separation of church and state."
MORE: http://www.americanhumanist.org/news/details/2012-06-voting-in-north-carolina-churches-should-cease-says