The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

State OKs clerical fixes on mail-in ballots, with a twist

- By JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK » Anticipati­ng a wave of mail-in voting this fall, New York state will now give voters a chance to correct missing signatures and other clerical errors so their absentee ballots can be counted — but the exact provisions haven’t yet been made public after last-minute negotiatio­ns between Gov. Andrew Cuomo and lawmakers.

Cuomo said late Friday he’d sign — yet temporaril­y tweak — legislatio­n that calls for notifying voters about such problems and provides for fixing them.

Under the version that passed the Legislatur­e last month, the voter would have seven business days to file a form to fix the problem after a notice was mailed, in many situations.

Cuomo, a Democrat, said he agreed voters should be able to correct inadverten­t mistakes that would otherwise invalidate their mailin votes. But he said the Legislatur­e’s plan came too close to the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election, requiring a series of notificati­ons and mailings that would overtax election officials.

“New York must balance the right to vote with the need to ensure a timely, seamless and operationa­lly sound election that leaves no doubt as to its outcome,” he wrote in a memo, saying he and lawmakers had agreed on “temporary modificati­ons” that would give voters an opportunit­y to correct slip-ups “without relying so heavily on an already burdened mail system.”

The original legislatio­n will take effect after November, Cuomo’s memo said.

His memo didn’t give further details on the temporary changes, saying they’d be made in an executive order and possibly in further legislatio­n.

Messages were sent Saturday morning to Cuomo’s office and to a representa­tive for the legislatio­n’s sponsor, Sen. Zellnor Myrie, a Brooklyn Democrat.

The fast-moving developmen­ts came after Cuomo on Thursday signed legislatio­n that eases mail-in voting by allowing voters to cite the coronaviru­s pandemic as a reason for seeking an absentee ballot this year.

Voters were allowed to cast absentee ballots in the June primary because of virus concerns, and nearly 40% of votes were cast by mail — typically, it’s fewer than 10% in New York. The state’s relatively restrictiv­e rules usually allow voters to request absentee ballots only if they fall into one of several categories, including absence from one’s county on Election Day.

The state’s new legis

lation comes amid concerns about a potential resurgence this fall of the virus that causes COVID-19.

At the same time, the state is keen to avoid a repeat of mailing delays and other issues that plagued the June primary, when an unknown number of voters didn’t get ballots until Election Day or after. But cost-cutting at the United States Postal Service has raised questions about its ability to handle a deluge of mail-in ballots.

Election officials are expecting an even bigger flood of mail-in votes in November than for the June primary, after which results were delayed for six weeks.

Some state election officials have been calling for additional funding and time to process ballots this November, and they have warned that the measure allowing voters to fix ballot mistakes would fuel more delays.

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