First Responders and Emergency Workers Involved in Recovery Efforts Included
Governor Andrew Cuomo today
signed an executive order that will greatly facilitate voting for New Yorkers
who were affected by Hurricane Sandy.
The Executive Order provides
for any voter who is registered in a federally-declared disaster county to vote
on an affidavit ballot at any poll site in New York State, regardless of where
they are registered.
In addition, the Executive
Order also mandates every board of elections in New York State to send such
affidavit ballot to the board of elections where the voter is actually
registered, so that the vote is counted in the correct place.
Such a vote will count for the
office of President and United States Senator and for any other candidate and
ballot initiative that appears on the official ballot where the voter is
registered.
First responders and emergency workers involved
in the Hurricane Sandy recovery efforts are also included in the Executive
Order if they reside in one of the federally-declared disaster counties.
New Yorkers should attempt to vote at their
regular polling place. If they cannot reach their polling site or their site is
shutdown, only then should they vote at an alternative site. The only votes
that will count are the votes that voters would have legally been allowed to
cast at their regular polling site.
The federally-declared disaster counties
include: Bronx, Kings, Nassau, New York, Queens, Richmond, Rockland, Suffolk
and Westchester.
“Hurricane Sandy has already disrupted the lives
of countless New Yorkers, but we will not let it disrupt anyone seeking to
exercise the most fundamental of democratic rights: the right to vote,” said
Governor Cuomo.
“Even in times of great tragedy and suffering,
New Yorkers understand that we must continue to do all that we can to maintain
the integrity of our system. That is why the State is making every effort to
ensure that voters who are displaced from their homes because of the storm will
still be able to make their voices heard on Election Day.”
The County Boards of Elections (CBEs) were
directed to use all available means to:
Provide notice to election inspectors and post
the provisions of the Executive Order conspicuously on the boards’ websites and
at poll sites in New York State giving instruction on how to implement such
Order;
Instruct poll workers to provide affidavit
ballots and guidance to voters in accordance with the Order
Provide notice and guidance to voters in
accordance with this Executive Order that indicates that:
voters who
reside in the counties of Nassau, Rockland, Suffolk, or Westchester, or in New
York City may receive and complete an affidavit ballot at any polling place in
New York State
the
voter’s vote will count for the office of President and United States Senator
and it will also count for any other candidate for office and district as well
as any ballot initiative that appears on the official ballot in the voter’s
home district.
For example, a voter staying with family in
Orange County who was displaced from Westchester, would be entitled to vote for
statewide contests and Supreme Court (because those 2 counties share a judicial
district) and possibly a Congressional or State Senate contest. A voter who
sought refuge further upstate might be eligible to vote only in the statewide
contests, as they would share no other offices/contests.
Below is the text of the Executive Order:
No. 62
E X E C U T I V E O R D E R
TEMPORARY
SUSPENSION OF PROVISIONS RELATING TO THE ELECTION LAW
WHEREAS, on October 26, 2012, I issued Executive
Order Number 47, declaring a disaster emergency in all 62 counties in the State
of New York; and
WHEREAS, New York State is firmly committed to
holding a fair and accessible general election and maximizing voter
participation in this election; and
WHEREAS, Hurricane Sandy has struck
a deadly blow, destroying lives, countless houses and businesses, displacing
thousands of New Yorkers from their homes, disrupting transportation, the flow
of commerce and daily life and complicating even the simplest and most routine
acts of living; and
WHEREAS, New Yorkers who are victims of
Hurricane Sandy should not lose their right to vote; and
WHEREAS, it is incumbent upon the State not to
let this devastation undermine our democracy, and to actively facilitate the
exercise of the fundamental, constitutional right to vote of registered voters
who reside in the federally declared counties who have been impacted and
displaced by Hurricane Sandy;
NOW,
THEREFORE,
I, ANDREW M. CUOMO, Governor of the State of New York, by virtue of the
authority vested in me by Section 29-a of Article 2-B of the Executive Law to
temporarily suspend and otherwise alter or modify specific provisions of any
statute, local law, ordinance, orders, rules or regulations, or parts thereof,
of any agency during a State disaster emergency, if compliance with such
provisions would prevent, hinder or delay action necessary to cope with the
disaster, hereby temporarily suspend and otherwise alter or modify, for the
period from the date of this Executive Order until further notice, the
following:
Section 8-302 of the Election Law is temporarily
suspended and otherwise altered and modified so that a voter seeking to vote by
affidavit ballot need not affirm that such voter is duly registered in the
election district in which such voter seeks to cast an affidavit ballot if such
voter is registered to vote within one of the federally declared counties or
New York City.
Section 9-209 of the Election Law is temporarily
suspended and otherwise modified so that every board of elections in the State
shall transmit the affidavit or provisional ballot of any voter who resides in
one of the federally declared counties to the board of elections wherein such
voter is registered to vote to be canvassed with other affidavit and absentee
ballots for the election district wherein the voter resides.
Subparagraph (iii) of Paragraph (a) of
Subdivision 2 of Section 9-209 of the Election Law is temporarily suspended and
otherwise altered and modified so that the board of elections for the county in
which such voter resides shall cast and canvass such ballot, if it determines
that such voter was entitled to vote regardless of the fact that the voter may
have appeared in the incorrect polling place, provided that such vote shall not
be cast and canvassed for such contests for which the person was not entitled
to vote at such election.
FURTHER, the State Board of Elections shall
promptly instruct county boards of elections on the proper implementation of
this Executive Order including requiring such boards:
to instruct poll workers to provide affidavit
ballots and guidance to voters; and
to provide notice and guidance to voters in
accordance with this Executive Order:
(a) that indicates that voters who reside in the
counties of Nassau, Rockland, Suffolk, or Westchester, or in New York City may
receive and complete an affidavit ballot at any polling place in New York
State; and
(b) that the voter’s vote will count for the
office of President and United States Senator and it will also count for any
other candidate for office and district as well as any ballot initiative that
appears on the official ballot in the voter’s home district.
Notice of this Executive Order and its contents shall be provided by the State Board of Elections on its website and by boards of elections, at a minimum, at every poll site and on any website maintained by such boards.
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