Alliance Alert: A new report highlights the reality that for many people with disabilities, voting is not a simple civic act. It can take weeks of coordination or be entirely out of reach. One Texas voter described navigating multiple applications, unreliable mail access, and a lack of in-home supports just to cast a ballot, underscoring how systemic barriers, not a lack of interest, stand in the way of participation.
This is not an isolated experience. Across the country, people with disabilities, individuals with low incomes, and those living in rural or under-resourced communities face significant hurdles. These include limited access to transportation, long waitlists for home- and community-based services, insufficient support navigating complex voting systems, and restrictive policies that add layers of bureaucracy to an already difficult process.
Rather than addressing these barriers, the SAVE America Act risks making things worse by placing additional burdens on individuals seeking to register to vote. Requiring more documentation and creating additional verification hurdles could disproportionately impact people with disabilities, people with low incomes, and others who may not have easy access to required records or the ability to navigate complex administrative processes. These approaches fail to recognize the realities people face and instead shift responsibility onto those already navigating the most obstacles.
We must take a different path.
The goal should be clear. Support more people in exercising their right to vote, not create new barriers that make participation harder. That means investing in and expanding accommodations such as accessible vote-by-mail options, reliable in-home supports, transportation assistance, and well-trained poll workers so that people can participate fully and independently. As research shows, when states take steps to make voting easier, participation increases.
This is why the Alliance for Rights and Recovery will continue to work alongside national partners to advance disability rights and protect access to voting and other essential freedoms. As a member of the People Organized for Wellness, Empowerment and Recovery (POWER) Coalition, the Alliance is actively supporting national voter education and registration efforts to ensure people, especially those of us with mental health and substance use challenges, have the information, resources, and support needed to exercise their right to vote.
At a time when too many are being pushed to the margins, we must recommit to building systems that include everyone.
For Texans with Disabilities, Voting Can Take Weeks 鈥 or be Out of Reach
By Jackie Velez | Texas Public Radio | April 29, 2026
For one Texas voter, casting a ballot in the March primary took weeks of coordination, multiple phone calls, two applications and help from several people just to meet the deadline.
鈥淎s a multi-disabled, homebound senior living in a rural area 鈥 there are a number of barriers I have to overcome just to cast my ballot by mail,鈥 he said in a written account to Texas Public Radio.
The voter requested anonymity due to pending litigation with the state of Texas.
Without regular care at home, even basic steps depend on others. Living on a county road without mail delivery, the voter relies on a post office box and a volunteer who can only pick up mail occasionally.
鈥淚 get my mail once a month,鈥 he said.
After requesting a ballot by mail in January, delays meant the application did not reach election officials for several weeks. Then another problem came up.
鈥淐ounty election staff called me that day and told me I had failed to choose a party preference, as required under Texas law, so I would not get a ballot for the primaries,鈥 he said.
He said local county election officials were helpful and did what they could within the limits of the system.
With the deadline approaching, he had to start over. A second application was picked up, delivered and returned on the final day. Even then, retrieving and returning the ballot required coordination with a volunteer and a case manager to ensure it arrived on time.
鈥淭he lack of regular home care and volunteers, not as easy to find as you might think, is the greatest obstacle to voting,鈥 the voter said.
Barriers beyond the ballot
Advocates and researchers say this experience reflects a broader pattern that may pose added challenges with two elections scheduled in May: The May 2 municipal elections and the May 26 primary runoffs.
For many voters with disabilities, the biggest barriers are not the ballot itself, but the systems people rely on to navigate the process on time, including gaps in home care, transportation and access to assistance.
While theis protected under federal law, the support services many people rely on to cast a ballot are governed by separate systems that are often underfunded and inconsistent.
Some election officials and advocacy groups are working to address those gaps, though to those solutions remains uneven.
Isaac Gutierrez, a San Antonio artist who lives with low vision, said he has faced similar challenges. Medically retired, he said the lack of in-home support can make even basic civic participation difficult.
鈥淵ou should be able to say you need home assistance of some kind because of your disability,鈥 Gutierrez said. 鈥淥r at least have someone come in, some type of caseworker, to identify what your needs are 鈥 what are my actual needs in order for me to get around my home?鈥
Gutierrez said he also ran into problems when Texas changed its rules requiring voters to reapply annually for a mail-in ballot.
鈥淪o when it came time for elections, I couldn鈥檛 get one,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen I tried to get one, it wasn鈥檛 going to arrive in time.鈥
Angie Collier, a teacher at , said her adult son Jacob, who lives with schizophrenia, faces a different set of barriers. His condition makes complex tasks like researching candidates or navigating the voting process difficult without assistance.
鈥淚f he wanted to know how to register, where to vote, getting to the voting facility, because he can鈥檛 drive, everything would be really complicated,鈥 Collier said. 鈥淭he illness really does a number on him as far as any kind of planning.鈥
Collier said Jacob鈥檚 insurance covers limited home health services, but not the kinds of support that would help him participate in elections.
鈥淭hings like driving him to appointments or helping him obtain information, those aren鈥檛 covered,鈥 she said. 鈥淰oting wouldn鈥檛 be covered either.鈥
Gaps in services
The Texas voter who shared his experience with TPR said he has been without in-home health care services for 10 years. He said even a small amount of weekly assistance could have made the process easier.
鈥淚f I had 10 hours per week of in-home care,鈥 the voter said, 鈥渟omeone could have handled the mail in a more timely way.鈥
Lydia Nunez Landry, a coordinator with , said the barriers described are common across the state.
Home and community-based services in Texas have more than 340,000 people on waiting lists, she said, with some waiting up to 20 years.
鈥淪o, a lot of people actually die before they receive those services,鈥 Landry said.
She said those gaps affect far more than medical care, shaping whether people can carry out everyday tasks, including participating in elections.
鈥淲ithout those services, people rely on family, friends or volunteers for things like transportation, paperwork or even just getting out the door,鈥 Landry said. 鈥淰oting becomes one more thing that depends on whether someone is available to help.鈥
Advocates say the shortage of caregivers and long waitlists can leave many people without consistent support, especially those who live alone or in rural areas.
Transportation challenges
Landry said transportation is another major hurdle, especially in areas without accessible public transit.
鈥淢y area, and I鈥檓 in a suburb of Houston, but the MetroLift doesn鈥檛 come to where I鈥檓 located,鈥 she said.
Anna Gray, executive director of said gaps are often compounded in rural areas, where basic logistics require advance planning.
鈥淩ural transportation, many times, is something you have to schedule a month in advance,鈥 Gray said.
She said for voters who rely on others for rides, even small delays can mean missing key deadlines for early voting or mail-in ballots.
鈥淲hen every step takes that much coordination, it discourages people before they even get started,鈥 Gray said.
Gray said the challenges are not limited to rural communities. Even in urban areas, limited routes, long wait times and accessibility issues can make getting to polling places difficult.
Advocates say transportation can be especially challenging for people who rely on scheduled rides or assistance. Even during early voting, those voters may have only limited opportunities to get to a polling place. Small delays can mean missing that window altogether.
What the data show
A 2024 report from Rutgers University, , found that about 20 million people with disabilities voted in the 2024 election.
Doug Kruse, a co-author of the study and a professor of labor studies and employment relations, said that reflects strong participation, but also persistent gaps.
鈥淲e do see lower turnout among people with cognitive impairments and people with more severe disabilities,鈥 Kruse said. 鈥淏ut even then, about half still voted.鈥
The study found that 21% of voters with disabilities who cast ballots in person reported difficulties. Among voters with vision impairments, the challenges were more pronounced.
More than half, about 52.5%, of voters with vision impairments who voted in person reported some type of difficulty, and nearly 40% said they had trouble reading or seeing the ballot.
Lisa Schur, a co-author of the study, said those challenges reflect barriers faced by people with a range of disabilities in both rural and urban areas.
鈥淯rban voters can face long lines, which make it difficult for people who can鈥檛 stand for extended periods,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut rural voters often face distance and access issues.鈥
Policy and access
Schur and Kruse also served as expert witnesses in legal challenges to Texas , a sweeping voting law passed in 2021 that added new identification requirements for mail-in ballots and limited how voters can receive assistance.
Supporters of the law said the changes were intended to prevent voter fraud, including practices sometimes referred to as 鈥渂allot harvesting,鈥 in which third parties collect and return ballots.
鈥淎 federal judge found the law had a disproportionate impact on voters with disabilities,鈥 Schur said.
Gaps in support services persist despite federal requirements under , a U.S. Supreme Court decision interpreting the that requires states to provide services to people with disabilities in community-based settings whenever possible.
Advocates say addressing those gaps will likely require broader changes beyond election policy, including expanding Medicaid-funded home- and community-based services, strengthening the caregiving workforce and reducing long waitlists for in-home care.
These services are the backbone of daily support for many people with disabilities, from help with transportation, paperwork and basic tasks at home.
While some states have expanded services or raised pay for caregivers, advocates say Medicaid cuts under the Trump administration are moving in the opposite direction. Staffing shortages and long waitlists continue to limit access.
Luke Sikinyi of the Alliance for Rights and Recovery said states often scale back these services when funding is uncertain.
鈥淏ecause home- and community-based services are optional for states, they鈥檙e often some of the first to be cut,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where people get help with daily living, so when those services go away, it affects everything else.鈥
Many people remain on waitlists for years or rely on family members and volunteers to fill the gaps.
Those broader gaps often shape how accessible voting is in practice.
Researchers say voting access can vary widely depending on how states and local jurisdictions structure their policies.
Kruse said broader access measures, such as expanded vote-by-mail options, tend to improve participation.
鈥淲e see turnout improve in states that take steps to make voting easier,鈥 he said.
What鈥檚 helping, and where it falls short
Broader access measures, such as expanded vote-by-mail, have helped increase participation among voters with disabilities, Kruse said.
In Bexar County, voters with certain disabilities can access an electronic ballot system known as which works with screen readers and allows voters to fill out a ballot digitally before printing and mailing it.
Wendy Walker of the National Federation of the Blind of Texas said the system can help, but it still requires multiple steps.
鈥淵ou fill it out digitally, but then you still have to print it, sign it and mail it back,鈥 she said.
Texas law also allows curbside voting at polling places for voters with disabilities, though awareness and implementation can vary.
Tools like those can make a difference for voters who are blind or have low vision, particularly when they are set up correctly and paired with clear instructions.
Voters who make errors on mail-in ballots may also have opportunities to correct them, but that process can require follow-up and access to assistance.
Access still out of reach for many
Kruse said accessibility has improved since the passage of the Help America Vote Act in 2002. The share of voters with disabilities reporting problems at polling places has dropped from about 30% in 2012 to around 20% in 2024.
But significant challenges remain.
鈥淭he biggest problems are for people with visual impairments,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey are far more likely than others to report difficulties, both with voting by mail and in-person.鈥
Some solutions are relatively simple, Schur said, like providing seating at polling places or ensuring poll workers are trained on accessible voting equipment.
Others require broader systemic changes.
In practice, those challenges often mean voters still rely on personal support to navigate the process.
San Antonio artist Jenny Salinas, who also lives with low vision, said she relies on her sister to vote.
Accessible voting machines are required at polling sites, but Salinas said she has never been able to use one successfully because poll workers were unfamiliar with the equipment.
鈥淪o they give me a headset, and it just keeps repeating instructions,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no keyboard. It鈥檚 not set up. My sister ends up helping me again.鈥
Anna Gray of Prosumers International said the consequences of those barriers go beyond a single election.
She said the impact can shape whether people feel included in civic life at all.
鈥淣ot only in the sense that they鈥檙e not able to vote, but in the sense that they are a full citizen with civic responsibilities and privileges,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat discouragement just adds to the message: 鈥榊ou don鈥檛 belong. You鈥檙e not OK.鈥欌