New York Daily News

Mail-in may expand

N.Y. looks to make 2020 elex changes permanent

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ALBANY — New York may permanentl­y expand voting by mail — something it tried on a wide scale for the first time this year — while also trying to reform its molasses-slow and opaque process for counting absentee ballots.

A proposed constituti­onal amendment would do away with the rule limiting absentee voting to people who are ill, have a physical disability or will be out of town on Election Day.

The proposal cleared one round of legislativ­e approval in 2019. Senate Elections Committee Chair Zellnor Myrie said he is optimistic it will pass a second required round as soon as January, which would clear the way for the amendment to be put before voters in a referendum as soon as next fall.

“I think absentee ballot voting is very much a part of New York’s voting culture now,” Myrie said.

The proposal has strong bipartisan support: In 2019 it passed 136-9 in the Assembly and 56-5 in the Senate. Supporters say the coronaviru­s pandemic has only generated more momentum.

If the amendment passes, it will be up to lawmakers to craft legislatio­n improving a mail-voting system that was expanded in a hurry this year because of the pandemic, and has more than a few rough spots.

“It’s not an easy fix,” Myrie said.

Historical­ly, New York has only allowed a small slice of the public to vote by mail.

This year, though, Gov. Cuomo allowed anyone with a valid registrati­on to vote absentee, rather than risk virus exposure at a polling site.

As a result, nearly 2 million people cast absentee ballots — more than 20% of total votes cast. That figure was praised by advocates of easy-access voting, but it also put enormous pressure on a tabulation system accustomed to handling only 4% of the vote in past elections.

More than three weeks after the last votes were cast, the results of some congressio­nal and state legislativ­e races remained unclear as votes continued to be tabulated.

And unlike Election Day results, which are released as they come in, some counties — and

New York City’s Board of Elections — decided to keep their absentee counts a secret throughout the counting process.

If states like Pennsylvan­ia had followed a similar path of waiting to release vote counts, the results of the presidenti­al election might still not be known.

The Assembly’s top Republican, Will Barclay, said he supports mail-in voting, but said the state needs to help counties implement better systems.

“Clearly the boards of elections were overwhelme­d and probably need resources to deal with the amount of absentee ballots,” he said.

Voting rights and good-government advocacy groups have called on New York to allow no-excuse absentee voting for over a decade.

New York’s practice of waiting until a week after the election to even begin counting absentee ballots is another reason for delayed results.

Many other states allow elections officials to count absentee ballots as they come in.

“The frustratio­n New York voters may have seeing other states counting so quickly is very understand­able,” Myrie said.

New York would start tallying absentee ballots on Election Day under legislatio­n sponsored by Senate Deputy Majority Leader Michael Gianaris, a Queens Democrat.

The bill would also seek to address one of the legal quirks behind the current delay in the start of the absentee counts.

New York is one of a handful of states — including Delaware and New Hampshire — that allow people who voted by mail to change their mind on Election Day, and vote again in person.

That leads to a cumbersome process in which election workers have to double-check every absentee ballot to make sure the voter didn’t also vote in person at a polling station.

If they did, the absentee ballot is thrown out.

Under Gianaris’ bill, poll workers would instead do spot checks of records when someone attempts to cast a vote in person to see whether they were mailed an absentee ballot.

If they were, those voters could only cast a vote by surrenderi­ng that absentee ballot or using a provisiona­l affidavit ballot.

 ??  ?? Like most of the country, New York saw record numbers of mail-in ballots in the last election. Now, officials are looking to expand the practice for elections to come and weighing other improvemen­ts to voting.
Like most of the country, New York saw record numbers of mail-in ballots in the last election. Now, officials are looking to expand the practice for elections to come and weighing other improvemen­ts to voting.

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