TITLE 1. ADMINISTRATION
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The State Board of Elections is claiming an exemption from the Administrative Process Act pursuant to § 2.2-4002 B 8 of the Code of Virginia, which exempts agency action relating to the conduct of elections or eligibility to vote.
Title of Regulation: 1VAC20-70. Absentee Voting (amending 1VAC20-70-20).
Statutory Authority: § 24.2-103 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: December 21, 2021.
Agency Contact: Ashley Coles, Regulatory Coordinator, Department of Elections, Washington Building, 1100 Bank Street, 1st Floor, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 864-8933, or email ashley.coles@elections.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendment adds "during a declared state of emergency related to a communicable disease of public health threat pursuant to § 24.2-707 of the Code of Virginia" as an exception to the requirement that an omitted voter's witness signature on an Envelope B containing an absentee ballot is material and therefore renders the ballot invalid.
1VAC20-70-20. Material omissions from absentee ballots.
A. Pursuant to the requirements of § 24.2-706 of the Code of Virginia, a timely received absentee ballot contained in an Envelope B shall not be rendered invalid if it contains an error or omission not material to its proper processing.
B. The following omissions are always material and any Envelope B containing such omissions shall be rendered invalid if any of the following exists:
1. Except as provided in subdivisions C 2 and C 3 of this section, the voter did not include his full first name;
2. The voter did not provide his last name;
3. The voter omitted his generational suffix when one or more individuals with the same name are registered at the same address, and it is impossible to determine the identity of the voter;
4. The voter did not provide his house number and street name or his rural route address;
5. The voter did not provide either his city or zip code;
6. The voter did not sign Envelope B; or
7. The voter's witness did not sign Envelope B, except during a declared state of emergency related to a communicable disease of public health threat pursuant to § 24.2-707 of the Code of Virginia.
C. The ballot shall not be rendered invalid if on the Envelope B:
1. The voter included his full name in an order other than "last, first, middle";
2. The voter used his first initial instead of his first full name, so long as the voter provided his full middle name;
3. The voter provided a derivative of his legal name as his first or middle name (e.g., "Bob" instead of "Robert");
4. If the voter provided his first name and last name, the voter did not provide a middle name or a middle initial;
5. The voter did not provide his residential street identifier (Street, Drive, etc.);
6. The voter did not provide a zip code, so long as the voter provided his city;
7. The voter did not provide his city, so long as the voter provided his zip code;
8. The voter omitted the date, or provided an incorrect or incomplete date on which he signed Envelope B; or
9. The ballot is imperfectly sealed within Envelope B, provided that the outer envelope with Envelope B and the ballot arrived sealed.
10. The illegibility of a voter's or witness' signature on an Envelope B shall not be considered an omission or error.
D. For the purposes of this regulation, "city" may include the voter's locality, town, or any acceptable mailing name for the five-digit zip code of the voter's residence.
E. Whether an error or omission on an Envelope B not specifically addressed by this regulation is material and shall render the absentee ballot invalid shall be determined by a majority of the officers of the election present.
F. If a ballot is received by the general registrar's office by noon on the third day after the election pursuant to § 24.2-709 of the Code of Virginia but the return envelope has a missing or illegible postmark, the General Registrar shall refer to the Intelligent Mail barcode on the return envelope to determine whether the ballot was mailed on or before the date of the relevant election.
1. If there is evidence from the Intelligent Mail barcode that the ballot was mailed after the close of polls for the relevant election, the ballot shall be rendered invalid.
2. If there is no evidence from the Intelligent Mail barcode that the ballot was mailed after the close of polls for the relevant election, but the return envelope has an illegible postmark, the General Registrar shall refer to the date on which the oath on Envelope B was signed to determine whether the ballot was cast on or before the date of the relevant election.
3. If there is no evidence from the Intelligent Mail barcode that the ballot was mailed after the close of polls for the relevant election and if the return envelope has a missing postmark, the ballot shall be rendered invalid.
VA.R. Doc. No. R22-7036; Filed December 06, 2021