Dayton Daily News

Cost for mailing in your vote? Depends

Ballot size determines postage; it’s 55 cents in Montgomery County.

- By Josh Sweigart

Voters casting their ballots by mail in this year’s general election will need to use more than one 55-cent Forever Stamp in some area counties.

In Butler County, mailing back a completed ballot will require 70 cents in postage, according to the Butler County Board of Elections. Greene County voters will need to pay 68 cents to mail back their ballots.

A 55-cent Forever Stamp will suffice in Montgomery, Clark, Warren, Miami and Preble counties. This is less than the 70 cents it cost Montgomery County voters in the primary.

“We took it down with everything in it and verified it at thepost office,” Preble County Board of Elections Director Terri Hans said.

The cost varies based on the size of the ballot, which can be bumped up by local issues. In Champaign County, for example, voters in Urbana will need to pay 65 cents in postage because the city has

eight charter amendments on the ballot. One Forever Stamp is all that’s needed in the rest of the county.

Voters have options other than mailing their ballot. They can vote in-person at their polling place on Election Day, vote early in-person at the board of elections starting Oct. 6, or drop off their absentee ballot at a secure drop box at their local board of elections.

“We are definitely­recommendi­ng people use our drop box,” Warren County Board of Elections Deputy Director Shari Huff said.

Requests for absentee ballots have surged this year to 1.3million statewide, already surpassing the number of absentee ballots cast by mail in the 2016 presidenti­al election in some area counties. Ballots will be mailed to voters who request them on Oct. 6, and elections official surge voters to fill them out and send them back as quickly as possible tomake sure they are received on time.

The cost of voting hasbeen a contentiou­s issue thisweek. On Monday, a panel of state lawmakers denied a request by Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose to spend up to $3 million fromhis agency’s budget to pre-pay postage for voters.

On Tuesday, a Franklin County judge ordered La Rose to allow local boards of elections to provide multiple drop boxes at different locations around their counties if they want, where voters can deposit ballots without postage. LaRose previously said he supported allowing multiple drop boxes but issued a directive prohibitin­g them saying they weren’t allowed by state law. LaRose said he plans to appeal the judge’s order.

“( The) ruling has enormous implicatio­ns for holding a secure and fair election in Ohio and assuring voters of the integrity of its result,” Secretary of StateShe eh an said.

“For those reasons, Ohioans deserve a full and immediate review of the ruling by the appellate courts.”

The Ohio Republican Party blasted the judge’s ruling as partisan.

“The judge’s interpreta­tion of this law due to his partisan affiliatio­n is a blatant obstructio­n of his judicial responsibi­lity,” the party said in a statement.

Ohio Supreme Court Justice Maureen O’Connor, a Republican, condemned the GOP’s allegation that the judge’s decisionwa­s politicall­y motivated.

Susan Hess el gess er, executive director of the League of Woman Voters of the Greater Dayton Area, said her organizati­on is hopeful legal challenges allowing boards of elections to offer more than one drop box per county will succeed.

“There should be no charge for voting; even affixing, at minimum, two stamps to each mailed in ballot is an unnecessar­y and, for some, a costly experience,” she said.

“Many people pay bills online and do not have stamps on-hand,” Hesselgess­er said. “With Montgomery County experienci­ng one of the largest spreads of C OVID -19, sending people to the post office to purchase stamps or to have postage affixed to their ballots could constitute a health risk for some and a physical challenge for others.”

 ??  ?? The cost ofmailing in a completed ballot for this election varies depending on the size of the ballotwhic­h can bebumped up by local issues.
The cost ofmailing in a completed ballot for this election varies depending on the size of the ballotwhic­h can bebumped up by local issues.

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