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Introduced Version House Bill 2681 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted


H. B. 2681


(By Delegates Caputo, Coleman, Mahan, Manuel,

Webster, Faircloth and Schadler)


[Introduced January 27, 2003 ; referred to the

Committee on the Judiciary.]



A BILL to amend and reenact sections one and three, article three of chapter three of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, all relating to absentee voting; changing voting dates for early in person voting; providing for emergency early person voting the Monday prior to a Tuesday election; and requiring notice to certain voters of law change.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That sections one and three, article three, article three of chapter three of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended and reenacted to read as follows:

§3-3-1. Persons eligible to vote absentee ballots.
(a) Registered and other qualified voters of the county may vote an absentee ballot pursuant to the provisions of this article.
(b) All registered and other qualified voters of the county may vote an absentee ballot during the period of regular absentee voting in person.
(c) Any registered voter or other qualified voter of the county who will be absent from the county throughout the regular period and available hours for voting in person because of personal or business travel or employment and who will be unable to receive an absentee ballot by mail at an address outside the county during that absence may vote an absentee ballot under special affidavit in person during the period of special absentee voting in person.
(d) Registered voters and other qualified voters in the county are authorized to vote an absentee ballot by mail in the following circumstances:
(1) Any voter who is confined to a specific location and prevented from voting in person throughout the period of voting in person because of:
(A) Illness, injury or other medical reason;
(B) Physical disability or immobility due to extreme advanced age; or
(C) Incarceration or home detention: Provided, That the underlying conviction is not for a crime which is a felony or a violation of section twelve, thirteen or sixteen, article nine of this chapter, involving bribery in an election;
(2) Any voter who is absent from the county throughout the period and available hours for voting in person because of:
(A) Personal or business travel;
(B) Attendance at a college, university or other place of education or training; or
(C) Employment which because of hours worked and distance from the county seat make voting in person impossible;
(3) Any voter absent from the county throughout the period and available hours for voting in person and who is an absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter, as defined by 42 U.S.C. §1973, et seq., the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act of 1986, including members of the uniformed services on active duty, members of the merchant marine, spouses and dependents of those members on active duty, and persons who reside outside the United States and are qualified to vote in the last place in which the person was domiciled before leaving the United States;
(4) Any voter who is required to dwell temporarily outside the county and is absent from the county throughout the time for voting in person because of:
(A) Serving as an elected or appointed federal or state officer; or
(B) Serving in any other documented employment assignment of specific duration of four years or less; and
(5) Any voter for whom the designated area for absentee voting within the county courthouse or annex of the courthouse and the voter's assigned polling place are inaccessible because of his or her physical disability.
(e) Registered voters and other qualified voters in the county may, in the following circumstances, vote an emergency absentee ballot, subject to the availability of the services as provided in this article:
(1) Any voter who is confined or expects to be confined in a hospital or other duly licensed health care facility within the county of residence or other authorized area, as provided in this article, on the day of the election;
(2) Any voter who resides in a nursing home within the county of residence and would be otherwise unable to vote in person, providing the county commission has authorized the services; and
(3) Any voter who is working as a replacement poll worker and is assigned to a precinct out of his or her voting district, if the assignment was made after the period for voting an absentee ballot in person has expired.
(f) Registered voters and other qualified voters in the county may, in the following circumstances, vote an absentee ballot in person on a Monday
for any election held on a Tuesday as provided in subsection (a), section three of this article, if the person attests to the following:
That due to one of the following reasons, which the voter was unaware until following the expiration of the early voting period, that he or she would be unavailable to vote on election day due to:
(1) Illness, injury or other medical reason; or

(2) Employment which because of hours worked and distance from the county seat make voting in person impossible.

§3-3-3. Voting an absentee ballot in person.
(a) Regular absentee voting in person is to be conducted during regular business hours beginning on the fifteenth day before the election and continuing through 1:00 p.m. the Monday Saturday before the election for any election held on a Tuesday, or continuing through 1:00 p.m. the day two days before the election for any election held on another day. For any election held on a Tuesday, regular absentee voting in person is to be available from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on the two prior Saturday Saturdays before the election.
Registered voters and other qualified voters in the county may vote an emergency absentee ballot in person on a Monday for any election held on a Tuesday in cases of personal emergency, as provided in subsection (f), section one of this article
(b) Special absentee voting in person for persons eligible to vote an absentee ballot under the provisions of subsection (c), section one of this article is to be conducted during regular business hours in the office of the official designated to supervise and conduct absentee voting beginning on the forty-second day before the election and continuing until the first day when regular absentee voting in person begins. Any person seeking to vote absentee under this subsection is to first give an affidavit, on a form prescribed by the secretary of state, stating under oath the specific circumstances which prevent voting absentee during the period for regular absentee voting in person or by mail.
(c) Upon oral request, the official designated to supervise and conduct absentee voting shall provide the voter with the appropriate application for voting absentee in person, as provided in this article. The voter shall complete and sign the application in his or her own handwriting or, if the voter is unable to complete the application because of illiteracy or physical disability, the person assisting the voter and witnessing the mark of the voter shall sign his or her name in the space provided.
(d) Upon completion, the application is to be immediately returned to the official designated to supervise and conduct absentee voting who shall determine:
(1) Whether the application has been completed as required by law;
(2) Whether the applicant is duly registered to vote in the precinct of his or her residence and, in a primary election, is qualified to vote the ballot of the political party requested; and
(3) Whether the applicant is authorized for the reasons given in the application to vote an absentee ballot by personal appearance during the special absentee voting period at the time of the application.
(e) If the official designated to supervise and conduct absentee voting determines the conditions provided in subsection (d) of this section have not been met, or has evidence that any of the information contained in the application is not true, the clerk shall challenge the voter's absentee ballot as provided in this article.
(f) The official designated to supervise and conduct absentee voting shall provide each person voting an absentee ballot in person the following items to be printed as prescribed by the secretary of state:
(1) One of each type of official absentee ballot the voter is eligible to vote, prepared according to law;
(2) For all punch card and paper ballot voting and for optical scan ballots voted after election supplies are delivered to the election supply commissioner, one envelope, unsealed, which may have no marks except the designation "Absent Voter's Ballot Envelope No. 1" and printed instructions to the voter;
(3) For all punch card and paper ballot voting and for optical scan ballots voted after election supplies are delivered to the election supply commissioner, one envelope, unsealed, designated "Absent Voter's Ballot Envelope No. 2"; and
(4) For optical scan voting systems, ballots, a secrecy sleeve and access to a ballot box secured by two locks with keys kept by the president of the county commission and the county clerk.
(g) The voter shall enter the voting booth alone and there mark the ballot: Provided, That the voter may have assistance in voting according to the provisions of section four of this article. After the voter has voted the ballot or ballots, the punch card and paper absentee voter shall: (1) Place the ballot or ballots in envelope no. 1 and seal that envelope; (2) place the sealed envelope no. 1 in envelope no. 2 and seal that envelope; (3) complete and sign the forms on envelope no. 2; and (4) return that envelope to the official designated to supervise and conduct the absentee voting.
(h) Upon receipt of the sealed envelope, the official designated to supervise and conduct the absentee voting shall:
(1) Enter onto the envelope any other required information; (2) Enter the challenge, if any, to the ballot;

(3) Enter the required information into the permanent record of persons applying for and voting an absentee ballot in person; and
(4) Place the sealed envelope in a secure location in the official's office, to remain until delivered to the polling place or, in the case of a challenged ballot, to the board of canvassers.
(i) Due to the reenactment of this section by the Legislature in the two thousand and three regular session removing authorization for in person early voting on the Monday prior to a Tuesday election, to assure notice to all persons that voted on the Monday before the Tuesday election day of the two thousand and two general election are made aware of this change, the clerk of each county shall, for the primary election of the year two thousand and four, include along with the sample ballots published in local newspapers as required by this chapter, a notice to voters that Monday in person voting will no longer be available.


NOTE: The purpose of this bill is remove the Monday before Tuesday elections as a voting day for early in person voting and require opening of polls the Saturday a week ahead of election day; allowing voters to vote on the Monday before a Tuesday election day in certain emergency circumstances; and requiring notice to voters that voted Monday in the last general election that Monday will no longer be available for early in person voting.

This bill was recommended for introduction and passage by the Joint Standing Committee on the Judiciary.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.
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