Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Groups Urge NYS Voters to Register to Vote, Have a Plan to Cast Ballot as Deadlines Approach

WAER file photo

Pro voting rights groups are encouraging potential voters to register, and for those who do want to vote, to make a plan in advance.  There are some important dates for voters in New York to remember.

New Yorkers who are not currently registered to vote in the November elections have until October 9th to do so. You can register at your county board of elections, at several state agencies, request a voter registration form by mail or call a hotline number listed on the State Board of Elections website.

This year, due to the COVID- 19 pandemic,  a law passed by the legislature and signed by Governor Andrew Cuomo, says anyone who is registered to vote can request an absentee ballot to vote by mail in the November 3rd election. 

The New York State Board of Elections says the cut off date for requesting the absentee ballots by mail, email or telephone is October 27th. The Board warns though, that, the United States Postal Service says, due to recent cutbacks, that they cannot guarantee timely delivery of ballots that are requested 15 or fewer days before the election. That makes the defacto deadline October 19th.

The ballots must be postmarked by November 3rd, Election Day. They can also be hand delivered to an early polling site between October 24th and November 1st.

Voters can still go in person to their local or state boards of elections through November 2nd, the day before elections, to request an absentee ballot.

That’s a lot of dates to remember, and so groups, including the New York State League of Women Voters have compiled key information on their websites.  The League also launched a national website, Vote411,  to help guide voters through their state’s rules. The group’s Jennifer Wilson says all of the interest in voting, in one of the mostly hotly contested Presidential elections in recent history, can only be good for democracy.

I’m definitely optimistic, I’m excited to see high levels of turn out,” said Wilson, who says New York usually has one of the lowest rates of voter participation in the nation. 

Once the expected record number of mail in ballots arrive at board of elections offices, it’s likely that more of them will be counted than in the past. New York has historically had one of the highest numbers of absentee ballots disqualified on minor technical errors. But a recently settled lawsuit initiated by the League will allow more of the ballots to be considered valid. Wilson says the agreement will prevent ballots being thrown out for very minor technical glitches, including if the voter marked outside of the designated signature area, if they  filled out their  ballot in pencil instead of black or blue ink, or if they sealed the inner affirmation envelope with tape instead of licking it closed.

All of those things used to allow your ballot to get thrown out,” Wilson Said. “But now, those things will no longer cause your ballot to be disqualified.”

Voters will also be able to correct any problems with their signatures. Sometimes the voter signatures on file are decades old, and their handwriting may have changed over time.  Now, voters will be given an opportunity to verify that it is indeed them signing the ballot. 

In addition to voting by mail, voters also have the option of going in person to cast their ballots early. Early voting begins October 24 and runs through November 1 at selected sites across the state.