Bill

Bill > A4466


NJ A4466

NJ A4466
Permits voters to cure signature defects on mail-in and provisional ballots.


summary

Introduced
07/30/2020
In Committee
07/30/2020
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/11/2022

Introduced Session

2020-2021 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill prohibits county boards of elections from rejecting any mail-in or provisional ballot with a missing signature or a signature mismatch unless the voter is provided the opportunity to cure signature discrepancies. The ballot will be tentatively rejected until the voter cures the discrepancies within 14 days following the election. Under the bill, when a county board of elections has identified a mail-in or provisional ballot containing either a missing signature or a signature mismatch, the board must notify the voter within 24 hours from the time the ballot was tentatively rejected. The bill requires the board to send the voter a cure letter instructing the voter to return the enclosed cure form by mail, fax, email, or in person to the board of elections 14 days following the date of the election. The form would allow the voter to verify his or her identity by providing the number of a driver's license or a non-driver identification card. If the voter does not possess either form of identification, the last four digits of his or her social security number may be provided. If the voter does not have any of the above forms of identification, a copy of a state-accepted form of identification listing the voter's name and address may be submitted. If a voter timely returns a properly completed cure form and the information provided verifies his or her identity, the mail-in or provisional ballot would be counted in the final election results. Failure to return the cure form would result in a rejection of the mail-in or provisional ballot. A county board of elections must report to the Division of Elections, within 14 days after an election, whether it has completed the processing of all mail-in and provisional ballots. If processing has not been completed, the board must provide an update on its progress. This bill also directs the Secretary of State to issue guidance advising county boards of elections to, at a minimum, meet in advance of the date of an election and eight days after an election to discharge their duties under the bill and to issue guidance regarding signature variation. Finally, the Division of Elections is required to conduct a public awareness campaign in advance of an election concerning the importance of signatures on mail-in and provisional ballots, how signatures are verified, and the notice and cure process.

AI Summary

This bill prohibits county boards of elections from rejecting mail-in or provisional ballots with missing or mismatched signatures unless the voter is given the opportunity to "cure" or resolve the signature discrepancy within 14 days after the election. The bill requires county boards to notify voters within 24 hours if their ballot is tentatively rejected and provide a cure form for the voter to verify their identity. If the voter timely returns the completed cure form and their identity is verified, their ballot will be counted. The bill also directs the Secretary of State to issue guidance to county boards on signature verification and to conduct a public awareness campaign informing voters about the signature curing process.

Committee Categories

Government Affairs

Sponsors (4)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly State and Local Government Committee (on 07/30/2020)

bill text


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