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House Bill 2438 History
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ENROLLED
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE
for
H. B. 2438
(By Delegates Miley, Hunt, Brown, Frazier,
Barker, Moore, Hamilton and Ellem)
[Passed March 9, 2011; in effect ninety days from passage.]
AN ACT
to amend and reenact §3-1-2 of the Code of West Virginia,
1931, as amended; and to amend and reenact §3-4A-9 and §3-4A-
20 of said code, all relating to independent voters; defining
independent voters; reforming conflicts in voting procedures;
and making technical corrections throughout.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That §3-1-2 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be
amended and reenacted; and that §3-4A-9 and §3-4A-20 of said code
be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS AND DEFINITIONS.
§3-1-2. Scope of chapter; definitions.
Unless restricted by the context, the provisions of this
chapter apply to every general, primary and special election in
which candidates are nominated or elected or in which voters pass
upon any public question submitted to them, except that the
provisions hereof shall be construed to be operative in municipal
elections only in those instances in which they are made expressly
so applicable.
Unless the context clearly requires a different meaning, as
herein used:
"Voter" means any person who possesses the statutory and
Constitutional qualifications for voting;
"Independent" means a registered voter who declined to state
a preference for party affiliation on their voter registration or
who listed a party affiliation which is not qualified as a
political party as defined in section eight, article one of this
chapter.
"Election" means the procedures whereby the voters of this
state or any subdivision thereof elect persons to fill public
offices, or elect members of a Constitutional convention, or vote
on public questions;
"Any election" or "all elections" means every general, primary
or special election held in this state, or in any of its
subdivisions, for the purpose of nominating or electing federal or
state officers, or county, city, town or village officers of any
subdivision now existing or hereafter created, or for the purpose
of electing members of a Constitutional convention, or for voting
upon any public question submitted to the people of the state or
any of the aforesaid subdivisions;
"Office" or "public office" means: (1) Any elective office
provided for by the Constitution or laws of the United States or of
this state to which a salary or other compensation attaches; or (2)
membership in a Constitutional convention.
"Candidate" means any person to be voted for at an election;
"Public question" means any issue or proposition, now or
hereafter required by the governing body of this state or any of
its subdivisions to be submitted to the voters of the state or
subdivision for decision at elections;
The term "minor" as used in article four, section one of the
State Constitution and as used in this chapter means a person who
has not become eighteen years of age.
ARTICLE 4A. ELECTRONIC VOTING SYSTEMS.
§3-4A-9. Minimum requirements of electronic voting systems.
An electronic voting system of particular make and design may
not be approved by the State Election Commission or be purchased,
leased or used by any county commission unless it meets the
following requirements:
(1) It secures or ensures the voter absolute secrecy in the
act of voting or, at the voter's election, provides for open
voting;
(2) It is constructed to ensure that, except in instances of
open voting as provided in this section, the contents of a ballot
may not be seen or known by anyone other than the voter who has
voted or is voting;
(3) It permits each voter to vote at any election for all
persons and offices for whom and which he or she is lawfully
entitled to vote, whether or not the name of any person appears on
a ballot as a candidate; and it permits each voter to vote for as
many persons for an office as he or she is lawfully entitled to
vote for; and to vote for or against any question upon which he or she is lawfully entitled to vote. The automatic tabulating
equipment used in electronic voting systems is to reject choices
recorded on any ballot if the number of choices exceeds the number
to which a voter is entitled;
(4) It permits each voter to, write in, the names of persons
for whom he or she desires to vote whose names do not appear upon
the ballots or ballot labels;
(5) It permits each voter to change his or her vote for any
candidate and upon any question appearing upon the ballots or
ballot labels up to the time when his or her ballot is deposited in
the ballot box or his or her ballot is cast by electronic means;
(6) It contains programming media containing sequentially
numbered program instructions and coded or otherwise protected from
tampering or substitution of the media or program instructions of
unauthorized persons and capable of tabulating all votes cast in
each election;
(7) It contains two standard validation test decks approved as
to form and testing capabilities by the State Election Commission;
(8) It correctly records and counts accurately all votes cast
for the candidate and for and against each question appearing upon
the ballots;
(9) It permits each voter at any election, other than a primary
election, to vote a straight party ticket, as provided in section
five, article six of this chapter, by one mark or punch;
(10) It permits a voter in a primary election to: (A) vote only
for the candidates of the party for which the voter is legally permitted to vote; (B) vote for the candidates, if any, for
nonpartisan nominations or election; and (C) vote on public
questions; and precludes the voter from voting for any candidate
seeking nomination by any other political party unless that
political party has determined that the voter may participate in its
primary election;
(11) It, where applicable, is provided with means for sealing
or electronically securing the vote recording device to prevent its
use and to prevent operation of the vote recording device for an
election is begun and immediately after the polls are closed of
after the operation of the vote recording device for an election is
completed;
(12) It has the capacity to contain the names of candidates
constituting the tickets of at least nine political parties and
accommodates the wording of at least fifteen questions;
(13) (A) Direct recording electronic voting machines must
generate a paper copy of each voter's vote that will be
automatically kept within a storage container, that is locked,
closely attached to the direct recording electronic voting machine,
and inaccessible to all but authorized voting officials, who will
handle such storage containers and such paper copies contained
therein in accordance with section nineteen of this article.
(B) The paper copy of the voter's vote shall be generated at
the time the voter is at the voting station using the direct
recording electronic voting machine.
(C) The voter may examine the paper copy visually or through headphone readout, and may accept or reject the printed copy.
(D) The voter may not touch, handle or manipulate the printed
copy manually in any way.
(E) Once the printed copy of the voter's votes is accepted by
the voter as correctly reflecting the voter's intent, but not
before, it will automatically be stored for recounts or random
checks and the electronic vote will be cast within the computer
mechanism of the direct recording electronic voting machine.
(F) Direct recording electronic voting machines with a
mandatory paper copy shall be approved by the Secretary of State.
The Secretary of State may promulgate rules and emergency rules to
implement or enforce this subsection pursuant to the provisions of
section five, article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code.
(14) Where vote recording devices are used, they shall:
(A) Be durably constructed of material of good quality and in
a workmanlike manner and in a form which makes it safely
transportable;
(B) Bear a number that will identify it or distinguish it from
any other machine;
(C) Be constructed to ensure that a voter may easily learn the
method of operating it and may expeditiously cast his or her vote
for all candidates of his or her choice and upon any public
question;
(D) Be accompanied by a mechanically or electronically operated
instruction model which shows the arrangement of ballot labels,
party columns or rows, and questions;
(15) For electronic voting systems that utilize a screen upon
which votes may be recorded by means of a stylus or by means of
touch:
(A) Be constructed to provide for the direct electronic
recording and tabulating of votes cast in a system specifically
designed and engineered for the election application;
(B) Be constructed to prevent any voter from voting for more
than the allowable number of candidates for any office, to include
an audible or visual signal, or both, warning any voter who attempts
to vote for more than the allowable number of candidates for any
office or who attempts to cast his or her ballot prior to its
completion and are constructed to include a visual or audible
confirmation, or both, to the voter upon completion and casting of
the ballot;
(C) Be constructed to present the entire ballot to the voter,
in a series of sequential pages, and to ensure that the voter sees
all of the ballot options on all pages before completing his or her
vote and to allow the voter to review and change all ballot choices
prior to completing and casting his or her ballot;
(D) Be constructed to allow election commissioners to spoil a
ballot where a voter fails to properly cast his or her ballot, has
departed the polling place and cannot be recalled by a poll clerk
to complete his or her ballot;
(E) Be constructed to allow election commissioners, poll
clerks, or both, to designate, mark or otherwise record provisional
ballots;
(F) Consist of devices which are independent, nonnetworked
voting systems in which each vote is recorded and retained within
each device's internal nonvolatile electronic memory and contain an
internal security, the absence of which prevents substitution of any
other device;
(G) Store each vote in no fewer than three separate,
independent, nonvolatile electronic memory components and that each
device contains comprehensive diagnostics to ensure that failures
do not go undetected;
(H) Contain a unique, embedded internal serial number for
auditing purposes for each device used to activate, retain and
record votes;
(I) Be constructed to record all preelection, election and
post-election activities, including all ballot images and system
anomalies, in each device's internal electronic memory and are to
be accessible in electronic or printed form;
(J) Be constructed with a battery backup system in each device
to, at a minimum, prevent the loss of any votes, as well as all
preelection, election and post-election activities, including all
ballot images and system anomalies, stored in the device's internal
electronic memory and to allow voting to continue for two hours of
uninterrupted operation in case of an electrical power failure; and
(K) Be constructed to prevent the loss of any votes, as well
as all preelection, election and post-election activities, including
all ballot images and system anomalies, stored in each device's
internal electronic memory even in case of an electrical and battery power failure.
§3-4A-20. Non-affiliated voters in primary elections.
Unless voter not affiliated with a party, is permitted to
participate in the primary election of a political party, the
following provisions apply to voters, not affiliated with a party,
in primary elections that include non-partisan candidates or public
questions:
(1) Election officers shall provide a vote recording device,
where applicable, or the appropriate ballot to be marked by an
electronically sensible pen or ink, or by means of a stylus or by
means of touch, or by other electronic means, so that voters not
affiliated with a party may vote only those portions of the ballot
relating to the nonpartisan candidates and the public questions
submitted, or shall provide a ballot containing only provisions for
voting for those candidates and upon those issues submitted common
to the ballots provided to all voters regardless of political party
affiliation, or both.
(2) In counties utilizing electronic voting systems in which
votes are recorded by perforating, if vote recording devices are not
available for the voters not affiliated with a party, provisions are
to be made for sealing the partisan section or sections of the
ballot or ballot labels on a vote recording device using temporary
seals, thus permitting the voter not affiliated with a party to vote
for the nonpartisan section or sections of the ballot or ballot
labels.
(3) After a voter not affiliated with a party has voted, temporary seals may be removed and the device may then be used by
partisan voters.