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Election Supervisor Bender Preps for Aug. 18 Election

Man at a podium during an Escambia County election event, with a large 'America's 250' sign on display behind him.

Elections

Bender Unveils New “I Voted” Sticker, Ballot-Tracking Upgrades and 10 Polling Location Changes Ahead of August Primary

Escambia County’s Supervisor of Elections says a barcode-tracked vote-by-mail envelope, an America 250-themed sticker and a veteran-honoring pin program are part of a broader push to boost turnout for an August 18 primary that will decide the Pensacola mayor’s race and a countywide referendum.


Escambia County Supervisor of Elections Robert Bender held a press conference this morning to roll out a slate of changes ahead of the Aug. 18 and Nov. 3 elections, from a redesigned “I Voted” sticker to new ballot-tracking technology and a list of polling locations that are moving.

Bender opened by tying much of the year’s branding to the nation’s America 250 celebration, which is being incorporated into a new office badge, the 2026 election worker pin and the redesigned sticker voters will receive after casting a ballot.

Honoring Veteran Election Workers

The office has partnered with Vet the Vote to recognize election workers who are veterans or come from military families. Bender said that of the workers who have completed the office’s survey so far, roughly 45% identified as part of a veteran military family. Those workers will receive a special pin featuring Vet the Vote’s 250th anniversary logo and the 2026 motto, “honoring service through service.” The county expects to have more than 600 election workers on hand for Election Day.

“It’s not just those who are serving that pay the price. It’s the sacrifices that their families make also. So I love that it’s incorporated the families as well.” — Election Supervisor Robert Bender


10 Polling Locations Are Changing

The elections office is distributing a press release detailing precinct changes falling into three categories:

The changes include:


Vote-by-Mail Gets a Tracking Upgrade

Bender said his office has spent the past 15 months improving the vote-by-mail experience. As of the press conference, Escambia County had more than 22,000 vote-by-mail requests on file — about 50% of the requests received during the 2024 general election, which saw a late surge of roughly 10,000 requests in the final three weeks. Voters must renew their vote-by-mail request every election cycle.

New this cycle:

Bender explained the practical benefit: previously, if a voter said they never received a ballot, the office could only confirm it had been mailed, not where it was. Now, working with Evergreen and the local USPS office, staff can see an expected delivery date and, if ballots appear to be stuck somewhere in the system, flag the issue directly with postal officials.

“A lot of times a voter would call and say, ‘Hey, you never sent me my ballot.’ … We didn’t know where it was. So as long as the USPS is scanning that barcode through their system, then we’re able to track it and see where it is.” — Election SupervisorRobert Bender

Bender was clear that the barcode tracks the envelope, not how a person voted, and that paper ballots themselves carry no tracking barcode. A separate scannable format is used only for overseas voters’ ballots, which are reproduced into a machine-readable form and then verified, without identifying whose ballot it is.


The 2026 “I Voted” Sticker

Bender unveiled this year’s “I Voted” sticker design, which pairs the office’s America 250 theme with local identity: a tall ship representing 1776 alongside a sleeker sailboat representing 2026, set against a fireworks backdrop. The office plans to return to its previous sticker design in 2028. This year’s stickers will be included in vote-by-mail packets and available at early voting sites and precincts on Election Day — a change from past cycles, when stickers were generally limited to voters who dropped off ballots in person.

 


Bender’s Pitch: Turnout Matters Most in August

Bender pointed to historically low participation in non-general election years, noting 75% of registered voters did not vote in the 2024 primary. He’s making turnout for the August 18 primary his top priority this cycle, since several consequential decisions will be made that day rather than in November.

“My emphasis this year is really about an August 18th election because we do have things on the ballot that will be decided in the August primary election.” — Robert Bender


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