Bill Text: MN SF354 | 2011-2012 | 87th Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Voter photo identification and issuance requirement; picture identification and issuance provisions; provisional balloting procedure establishment; electronic polling place roster use requirement; recount procedure enacting and appropriation

Spectrum: Moderate Partisan Bill (Republican 4-1)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-02-17 - Referred to Local Government and Elections [SF354 Detail]

Download: Minnesota-2011-SF354-Introduced.html

1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to elections; requiring voters to provide picture identification before
1.3receiving a ballot; providing for the issuance of identification cards at no
1.4charge; establishing a procedure for provisional balloting; specifying other
1.5election administration procedures; requiring use of electronic polling place
1.6rosters; enacting procedures related to recounts; appropriating money;amending
1.7Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 135A.17, subdivision 2; 200.02, by adding
1.8a subdivision; 201.021; 201.022, subdivision 1; 201.061, subdivisions 3, 7;
1.9201.071, subdivision 3; 201.081; 201.091, subdivision 4; 201.121, subdivisions
1.101, 3; 201.171; 201.221, subdivision 3; 203B.06, subdivision 5; 203B.121,
1.11subdivision 1; 204B.14, subdivision 2; 204B.40; 204C.10; 204C.12, subdivisions
1.123, 4; 204C.14; 204C.15, subdivision 1; 204C.20, subdivisions 1, 2, 4, by adding
1.13a subdivision; 204C.23; 204C.24, subdivision 1; 204C.38; 204D.24, subdivision
1.142; 206.86, subdivisions 1, 2; 209.021, subdivision 1; 209.06, subdivision 1;
1.15211B.11, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
1.16chapters 200; 201; 204C; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes,
1.17chapters 204E; 206A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 204B.36,
1.18subdivision 5; 204C.34; 204C.35; 204C.36; 204C.361; Minnesota Rules,
1.19parts 8235.0200; 8235.0300; 8235.0400; 8235.0600; 8235.0700; 8235.0800;
1.208235.1100; 8235.1200.
1.21BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:

1.22ARTICLE 1
1.23VOTER REGISTRATION, PHOTO IDENTIFICATION, AND
1.24PROVISIONAL BALLOTING

1.25    Section 1. [200.035] DOCUMENTATION OF IDENTITY AND RESIDENCE.
1.26The following documents are sufficient proof of identity and residence for purposes
1.27of election day voter registration under section 201.061, subdivision 3, and for determining
1.28whether to count a provisional ballot under section 204C.135, subdivision 2:
2.1(1) a current, valid driver's license or identification card issued to the voter by the
2.2Department of Public Safety that contains the voter's current address of residence in the
2.3precinct;
2.4(2) an identification card issued to the voter by the tribal government of a tribe
2.5recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs that contains a photograph of the voter, the
2.6voter's current address of residence in the precinct, and all other items of data contained on
2.7a Minnesota identification card, as provided in section 171.07, subdivision 3;
2.8(3) an original receipt issued to the voter by the Department of Public Safety for a
2.9new, renewed, or updated driver's license or identification card that contains the voter's
2.10current address of residence in the precinct along with one of the following documents,
2.11provided that it contains a photograph of the voter:
2.12(i) a driver's license or identification card that is expired, invalidated, or does
2.13not contain the voter's current address of residence, issued to the voter by the state of
2.14Minnesota or any other state or territory of the United States;
2.15(ii) a United States passport, issued to the voter;
2.16(iii) an identification card issued by a branch, department, agency, entity, or
2.17subdivision of Minnesota or the federal government;
2.18(iv) an identification card issued by an accredited postsecondary institution with
2.19a campus located within Minnesota, if a list of students from that institution has been
2.20prepared under section 135A.17 and certified to the county auditor in the manner provided
2.21in rules of the secretary of state; or
2.22(v) an identification card issued to the voter by the tribal government of a tribe
2.23recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs; or
2.24(4) if the voter is a student, a driver's license or identification card issued by
2.25Minnesota or any other state or territory of the United States that does not contain
2.26the voter's current address of residence, along with a current student fee statement that
2.27contains the student's valid address of residence in the precinct.

2.28    Sec. 2. [201.017] STATE-SUBSIDIZED IDENTIFICATION.
2.29    Subdivision 1. Issuance of identification cards. (a) The Department of Public
2.30Safety shall provide a Minnesota identification card as described in section 171.07,
2.31subdivision 3, to any applicant who is eligible to vote in Minnesota and who does not
2.32possess a valid Minnesota driver's license or state identification card. The department
2.33may not require the applicant to pay a fee for issuance of an identification card under
2.34this section. A state-subsidized identification card may only be applied for at a driver's
2.35licensing facility operated by the Division of Driver and Vehicle Services.
3.1(b) Upon application for a state-subsidized identification card, including upon
3.2application for a renewal, duplicate card, or when a new card is required as a result of
3.3a change of address, an applicant must present verification that the applicant is at least
3.418 years of age, is a citizen of the United States, and will have maintained residence in
3.5Minnesota for at least 20 days immediately preceding the next election.
3.6    Subd. 2. State-subsidized identification card account. A state-subsidized
3.7identification card account is established in the special revenue fund. Money in the
3.8account shall be appropriated by law to the Department of Public Safety for purposes of
3.9providing state-subsidized identification cards to individuals qualifying under this section.
3.10The commissioner of public safety must report to the legislature at least monthly on
3.11expenditure of funds from this account.

3.12    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.061, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
3.13    Subd. 3. Election day registration. (a) An individual who is eligible to vote may
3.14register on election day by appearing in person at the polling place for the precinct in
3.15which the individual maintains residence, by completing a registration application, making
3.16an oath in the form prescribed by the secretary of state and providing proof of identity and
3.17residence. An individual may prove identity and residence for purposes of registering by:
3.18presenting documentation as permitted by section 200.035.
3.19    (1) presenting a driver's license or Minnesota identification card issued pursuant
3.20to section 171.07;
3.21    (2) presenting any document approved by the secretary of state as proper
3.22identification;
3.23    (3) presenting one of the following:
3.24    (i) a current valid student identification card from a postsecondary educational
3.25institution in Minnesota, if a list of students from that institution has been prepared under
3.26section 135A.17 and certified to the county auditor in the manner provided in rules of
3.27the secretary of state; or
3.28    (ii) a current student fee statement that contains the student's valid address in the
3.29precinct together with a picture identification card; or
3.30    (4) having a voter who is registered to vote in the precinct, or who is an employee
3.31employed by and working in a residential facility in the precinct and vouching for a
3.32resident in the facility, sign an oath in the presence of the election judge vouching that the
3.33voter or employee personally knows that the individual is a resident of the precinct. A
3.34voter who has been vouched for on election day may not sign a proof of residence oath
3.35vouching for any other individual on that election day. A voter who is registered to vote in
4.1the precinct may sign up to 15 proof-of-residence oaths on any election day. This limitation
4.2does not apply to an employee of a residential facility described in this clause. The
4.3secretary of state shall provide a form for election judges to use in recording the number
4.4of individuals for whom a voter signs proof-of-residence oaths on election day. The
4.5form must include space for the maximum number of individuals for whom a voter may
4.6sign proof-of-residence oaths. For each proof-of-residence oath, the form must include
4.7a statement that the voter is registered to vote in the precinct, personally knows that the
4.8individual is a resident of the precinct, and is making the statement on oath. The form must
4.9include a space for the voter's printed name, signature, telephone number, and address.
4.10    The oath required by this subdivision and Minnesota Rules, part 8200.9939, must be
4.11attached to the voter registration application.
4.12    (b) The operator of a residential facility shall prepare a list of the names of its
4.13employees currently working in the residential facility and the address of the residential
4.14facility. The operator shall certify the list and provide it to the appropriate county auditor
4.15no less than 20 days before each election for use in election day registration.
4.16    (c) "Residential facility" means transitional housing as defined in section 256E.33,
4.17subdivision 1
; a supervised living facility licensed by the commissioner of health under
4.18section 144.50, subdivision 6; a nursing home as defined in section 144A.01, subdivision
4.195
; a residence registered with the commissioner of health as a housing with services
4.20establishment as defined in section 144D.01, subdivision 4; a veterans home operated by
4.21the board of directors of the Minnesota Veterans Homes under chapter 198; a residence
4.22licensed by the commissioner of human services to provide a residential program as
4.23defined in section 245A.02, subdivision 14; a residential facility for persons with a
4.24developmental disability licensed by the commissioner of human services under section
4.25252.28; group residential housing as defined in section 256I.03, subdivision 3; a shelter
4.26for battered women as defined in section 611A.37, subdivision 4; or a supervised
4.27publicly or privately operated shelter or dwelling designed to provide temporary living
4.28accommodations for the homeless.
4.29    (d) For tribal band members, an individual may prove residence for purposes of
4.30registering by:
4.31    (1) presenting an identification card issued by the tribal government of a tribe
4.32recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, United States Department of the Interior, that
4.33contains the name, address, signature, and picture of the individual; or
4.34    (2) presenting an identification card issued by the tribal government of a tribe
4.35recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, United States Department of the Interior, that
5.1contains the name, signature, and picture of the individual and also presenting one of the
5.2documents listed in Minnesota Rules, part 8200.5100, subpart 2, item B.
5.3    (e) (b) A county, school district, or municipality may must require that an election
5.4judge responsible for election day registration initial sign each completed registration
5.5application.

5.6    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.10, is amended to read:
5.7204C.10 PERMANENT REGISTRATION; VERIFICATION OF
5.8REGISTRATION.
5.9    Subdivision 1. Polling place roster. (a) An individual seeking to vote shall sign a
5.10polling place roster which states that the individual is at least 18 years of age, a citizen
5.11of the United States, has resided in Minnesota for 20 days immediately preceding the
5.12election, maintains residence at the address shown, is not under a guardianship in which
5.13the court order revokes the individual's right to vote, has not been found by a court of
5.14law to be legally incompetent to vote or has the right to vote because, if the individual
5.15was convicted of a felony, the felony sentence has expired or been completed or the
5.16individual has been discharged from the sentence, is registered and has not already voted
5.17in the election. The roster must also state: "I understand that deliberately providing false
5.18information is a felony punishable by not more than five years imprisonment and a fine of
5.19not more than $10,000, or both."
5.20(b) A judge may, Before the applicant signs the roster, a judge must: (1) require the
5.21voter to present a photo identification document, as described in subdivision 2; and (2)
5.22confirm the applicant's name, address, and date of birth. A voter who cannot produce
5.23sufficient identification as required by subdivision 2 may not sign the polling place roster,
5.24but may cast a provisional ballot, as provided in section 204C.135.
5.25(c) After the applicant signs the roster, the judge shall give the applicant a voter's
5.26receipt. The voter shall deliver the voter's receipt to the judge in charge of ballots as proof
5.27of the voter's right to vote, and thereupon the judge shall hand to the voter the ballot. The
5.28voters' receipts must be maintained during the time for notice of filing an election contest
5.29for 36 months following the date of the election.
5.30    Subd. 2. Photo identification. To satisfy the photo identification requirement in
5.31subdivision 1, a voter must present a valid form of one of the following documents or sets
5.32of documents, issued to the voter:
5.33(1) a Minnesota driver's license or identification card that contains the voter's current
5.34address of residence in the precinct, issued under section 171.07 or 201.017;
6.1(2)(i) an original receipt for a new, renewed, or updated driver's license or
6.2identification card issued under section 171.07 or 201.017 that contains the voter's current
6.3address of residence in the precinct; and
6.4(ii) a driver's license or identification card that is expired, invalidated, or does not
6.5contain the voter's current address of residence in the precinct, issued to the voter by the
6.6state of Minnesota or any other state or territory of the United States; or
6.7(3) an identification card issued by the tribal government of a tribe recognized by
6.8the Bureau of Indian Affairs that contains a photograph of the voter, the voter's current
6.9address of residence in the precinct, and all other items of data contained on a Minnesota
6.10identification card, as provided in section 171.07, subdivision 3.

6.11    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.12, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
6.12    Subd. 3. Determination of residence. In determining the legal residence of a
6.13challenged individual, the election judges shall be governed by the principles contained in
6.14section 200.031. If the challenged individual's answers to the questions show ineligibility
6.15to vote in that precinct, the individual shall not be allowed to vote. If the individual has
6.16marked ballots but not yet deposited them in the ballot boxes before the election judges
6.17determine ineligibility to vote in that precinct, the marked ballots shall be placed unopened
6.18with the spoiled ballots. If the answers to the questions fail to show that the individual is
6.19not eligible to vote in that precinct and the challenge is not withdrawn, the election judges
6.20shall verbally administer the oath on the voter certificate to the individual. After taking the
6.21oath and completing and signing the voter certificate, the challenged individual shall be
6.22allowed to vote permit the voter to cast a provisional ballot, in the manner provided in
6.23section 204C.135.

6.24    Sec. 6. [204C.135] PROVISIONAL BALLOTS.
6.25    Subdivision 1. Casting of provisional ballots. (a) The following voters seeking to
6.26vote are entitled to cast a provisional ballot in the manner provided by this section:
6.27(1) a voter who is unable to provide proper photo identification as required by
6.28section 204C.10;
6.29(2) a voter whose registration status is listed as "challenged" on the polling place
6.30roster; and
6.31(3) a voter whose eligibility to vote is challenged as permitted by section 204C.12.
6.32(b) A voter seeking to vote a provisional ballot must sign a provisional ballot roster
6.33and complete a provisional ballot envelope. The envelope must contain a space for the
6.34voter to list the voter's name, address of residence, date of birth, voter identification
7.1number, and any other information prescribed by the secretary of state. The voter must
7.2also swear or affirm, in writing, that the voter is eligible to vote, has not voted previously
7.3in the same election, and meets the criteria for registering to vote in the precinct in which
7.4the voter appears.
7.5Once the voter has completed the provisional ballot envelope, the voter must be
7.6allowed to cast a provisional ballot. The provisional ballot must be in the same form
7.7as the official ballot available in the precinct on election day. A completed provisional
7.8ballot shall be sealed in a secrecy envelope. The secrecy envelope shall be sealed inside
7.9the voter's provisional ballot envelope and deposited by the voter in a secure, sealed
7.10provisional ballot box. Completed provisional ballots may not be combined with other
7.11voted ballots in the polling place.
7.12(c) The form of the secrecy and provisional ballot envelopes shall be prescribed by
7.13the secretary of state. The provisional ballot envelope must be a color other than that
7.14provided for absentee ballot envelopes and must be prominently labeled "Provisional
7.15Ballot Envelope."
7.16(d) Provisional ballots and related documentation shall be delivered to and securely
7.17maintained by the county auditor or municipal clerk in the same manner as required for
7.18other election materials under sections 204C.27 to 204C.28.
7.19    Subd. 2. Counting provisional ballots. (a) A voter who casts a provisional ballot in
7.20the polling place may personally appear before the county auditor or municipal clerk no
7.21later than seven calendar days following the election to prove that the voter's provisional
7.22ballot should be counted. The county auditor or municipal clerk must count a provisional
7.23ballot in the final certified results from the precinct if:
7.24(1) the statewide voter registration system indicates that the voter is eligible to vote
7.25or, if challenged, the voter presents evidence of the voter's eligibility to vote; and
7.26(2) the voter presents proof of identity and residence in the precinct in the manner
7.27permitted by section 200.035.
7.28(b) If a voter does not appear before the county auditor or municipal clerk within
7.29seven calendar days following the election or otherwise does not satisfy the requirements
7.30of paragraph (a), or if the data listed on the items of identification presented by the voter
7.31does not match the data submitted by the voter on the provisional ballot envelope, the
7.32voter's provisional ballot must not be counted.
7.33(c) The county auditor or municipal clerk must notify, in writing, any provisional
7.34voter who does not appear within seven calendar days of the election that their provisional
7.35ballot was not counted because of the voter's failure to appear before the county auditor or
8.1municipal clerk within the time permitted by law to determine whether the provisional
8.2ballot should be counted.
8.3    Subd. 3. Provisional ballots; reconciliation. Prior to counting any provisional
8.4ballots in the final vote totals from a precinct, the county auditor must verify that the
8.5number of signatures appearing on the provisional ballot roster from that precinct is equal
8.6to or greater than the number of accepted provisional ballots submitted by voters in the
8.7precinct on election day. Any discrepancy must be resolved before the provisional ballots
8.8from the precinct may be counted. Excess provisional ballots to be counted must be
8.9randomly withdrawn in the manner required by section 204C.20, subdivision 2, after the
8.10period for a voter to appear to prove residence and identity has expired and the ballots to
8.11be counted have been separated from the provisional ballot envelopes.

8.12    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.14, is amended to read:
8.13204C.14 UNLAWFUL VOTING; PENALTY.
8.14No individual shall intentionally:
8.15(a) misrepresent the individual's identity in applying for a ballot, depositing a ballot
8.16in a ballot box, requesting a provisional ballot or requesting that a provisional ballot be
8.17counted, or attempting to vote by means of a voting machine or electronic voting system;
8.18(b) vote more than once at the same election;
8.19(c) put a ballot in a ballot box for any illegal purpose;
8.20(d) give more than one ballot of the same kind and color to an election judge to
8.21be placed in a ballot box;
8.22(e) aid, abet, counsel or procure another to go into any precinct for the purpose
8.23of voting in that precinct, knowing that the other individual is not eligible to vote in
8.24that precinct; or
8.25(f) aid, abet, counsel or procure another to do any act in violation of this section.
8.26A violation of this section is a felony.

8.27    Sec. 8. APPROPRIATION.
8.28$....... is appropriated for fiscal years 2012 and 2013 to the state-subsidized
8.29identification card account for purposes of providing state-subsidized identification cards
8.30to individuals qualifying under Minnesota Statutes, section 201.017.

8.31    Sec. 9. EFFECTIVE DATE.
8.32This article is effective June 1, 2012, and applies to elections held on or after that
8.33date.

9.1ARTICLE 2
9.2ELECTION ADMINISTRATION AND INTEGRITY

9.3    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 135A.17, subdivision 2, is amended to
9.4read:
9.5    Subd. 2. Residential housing list. All postsecondary institutions that enroll students
9.6accepting state or federal financial aid may prepare a current list of students enrolled in the
9.7institution and residing in the institution's housing or within ten miles of the institution's
9.8campus. The list shall include each student's current address. The list shall be certified and
9.9sent to the appropriate county auditor or auditors, in an electronic format approved by the
9.10secretary of state, for use in election day registration as provided under section 201.061,
9.11subdivision 3
. A residential housing list provided under this subdivision may not be used
9.12or disseminated by a county auditor or the secretary of state for any other purpose.

9.13    Sec. 2. [200.05] RULES; LEGISLATIVE APPROVAL REQUIRED.
9.14Any administrative rule authorized by the Minnesota Election Law and promulgated
9.15by the secretary of state shall not take effect until the rule has been enacted into law by the
9.16legislature and approved by the governor.
9.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment,
9.18and applies to rules adopted before, on, or after that date.

9.19    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.021, is amended to read:
9.20201.021 PERMANENT REGISTRATION SYSTEM.
9.21A permanent system of voter registration by county is established, with a single,
9.22official, centralized, interactive computerized statewide voter registration list defined,
9.23maintained, and administered at the state level that contains the name and registration
9.24information of every legally registered voter in the state, and assigns a unique identifier
9.25to each legally registered voter in the state. The unique identifier shall be permanently
9.26assigned to the voter and may not be changed or reassigned to another voter. The
9.27interactive computerized statewide voter registration list constitutes the official list of every
9.28legally registered voter in the state. The county auditor shall be chief registrar of voters
9.29and the chief custodian of the official registration records in each county. The secretary of
9.30state is responsible for defining, maintaining, and administering the centralized system.

9.31    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.022, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
10.1    Subdivision 1. Establishment. The secretary of state shall maintain a statewide
10.2voter registration system to facilitate voter registration and to provide a central database
10.3containing voter registration information from around the state. The system must be
10.4accessible to the county auditor of each county in the state. The system must also:
10.5(1) provide for voters to submit their voter registration applications to any county
10.6auditor, the secretary of state, or the Department of Public Safety;
10.7(2) provide for the definition, establishment, and maintenance of a central database
10.8for all voter registration information;
10.9(3) provide for entering data into the statewide registration system;
10.10(4) provide for electronic transfer of completed voter registration applications from
10.11the Department of Public Safety to the secretary of state or the county auditor;
10.12(5) assign a unique, permanent identifier to each legally registered voter in the state;
10.13(6) provide for the acceptance of the Minnesota driver's license number, Minnesota
10.14state identification number, and last four digits of the Social Security number for each
10.15voter record;
10.16(7) coordinate with other agency databases within the state;
10.17(8) allow county auditors and the secretary of state to add or modify information in
10.18the system to provide for accurate and up-to-date records;
10.19(9) allow county auditors, municipal and school district clerks, and the secretary
10.20of state to have electronic access to the statewide registration system for review and
10.21search capabilities;
10.22(10) provide security and protection of all information in the statewide registration
10.23system and ensure that unauthorized access is not allowed;
10.24(11) provide access to municipal clerks to use the system;
10.25(12) provide a system for each county to identify the precinct to which a voter
10.26should be assigned for voting purposes;
10.27(13) provide daily reports accessible by county auditors on the driver's license
10.28numbers, state identification numbers, or last four digits of the Social Security numbers
10.29submitted on voter registration applications that have been verified as accurate by the
10.30secretary of state; and
10.31(14) provide reports on the number of absentee ballots transmitted to and returned
10.32and cast by voters under section 203B.16.
10.33The appropriate state or local official shall provide security measures to prevent
10.34unauthorized access to the computerized list established under section 201.021.

10.35    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.061, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
11.1    Subd. 7. Record of attempted registrations. The election judge responsible for
11.2election day registration shall attempt to keep a record of the number of individuals who
11.3attempt to register on election day but who cannot provide proof of residence as required
11.4by this section. The record shall be forwarded to the county auditor with the election
11.5returns for that precinct.

11.6    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.071, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
11.7    Subd. 3. Deficient registration. No voter registration application is deficient if it
11.8contains the voter's name, address, date of birth, current and valid Minnesota driver's
11.9license number or Minnesota state identification number, or if the voter has no current and
11.10valid Minnesota driver's license or Minnesota state identification number, the last four
11.11digits of the voter's Social Security number, if the voter has been issued a Social Security
11.12number, prior registration, if any, and signature. The absence of a zip code number does
11.13not cause the registration to be deficient. Failure to check a box on an application form
11.14that a voter has certified to be true does not cause the registration to be deficient. The
11.15election judges shall request an individual to correct a voter registration application if it is
11.16deficient or illegible. No eligible voter may be prevented from voting unless the voter's
11.17registration application is deficient or the voter is duly and successfully challenged in
11.18accordance with section 201.195 or 204C.12.
11.19    A voter registration application accepted prior to August 1, 1983, is not deficient for
11.20lack of date of birth. The county or municipality may shall attempt to obtain the date of
11.21birth for a voter registration application accepted prior to August 1, 1983, by a request to
11.22the voter at any time except at the polling place. Failure by the voter to comply with this
11.23request does not make the registration deficient.
11.24    A voter registration application accepted before January 1, 2004, is not deficient for
11.25lack of a valid Minnesota driver's license or state identification number or the last four
11.26digits of a Social Security number. A voter registration application submitted by a voter
11.27who does not have a Minnesota driver's license or state identification number, or a Social
11.28Security number, is not deficient for lack of any of these numbers.

11.29    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.081, is amended to read:
11.30201.081 REGISTRATION FILES.
11.31    The statewide registration system is the official record of registered voters. The voter
11.32registration applications and the terminal providing access to the statewide registration
11.33system must be under the control of the county auditor or the public official to whom the
11.34county auditor has delegated the responsibility for maintaining voter registration records.
12.1The voter registration applications and terminals providing access to the statewide
12.2registration system must not be removed from the control of the county auditor except
12.3as provided in this section. The county auditor may make photographic copies of voter
12.4registration applications in the manner provided by section 138.17.
12.5    A properly completed voter registration application that has been submitted to the
12.6secretary of state or a county auditor must be maintained by the secretary of state or
12.7the county auditor for at least 22 36 months after the date that the information on the
12.8application is entered into the database of the statewide registration system. The secretary
12.9of state or the county auditor may dispose of the applications after retention for 22 36
12.10months in the manner provided by section 138.17.

12.11    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.091, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
12.12    Subd. 4. Public information lists. The county auditor shall make available for
12.13inspection a public information list which must contain the name, address, year of birth,
12.14and voting history of each registered voter in the county. The telephone number must be
12.15included on the list if provided by the voter. The public information list may also include
12.16information on voting districts. The county auditor may adopt reasonable rules governing
12.17access to the list. No individual inspecting the public information list shall tamper with
12.18or alter it in any manner. No individual who inspects the public information list or who
12.19acquires a list of registered voters prepared from the public information list may use any
12.20information contained in the list for purposes unrelated to elections, political activities, or
12.21law enforcement. The secretary of state may provide copies of the public information lists
12.22and other information from the statewide registration system for uses related to elections,
12.23political activities, or in response to a law enforcement inquiry from a public official
12.24concerning a failure to comply with any criminal statute or any state or local tax statute.
12.25Before inspecting the public information list or obtaining a list of voters or other
12.26information from the list, the individual shall provide identification to the public official
12.27having custody of the public information list and shall state in writing that any information
12.28obtained from the list will not be used for purposes unrelated to elections, political
12.29activities, or law enforcement. Requests to examine or obtain information from the public
12.30information lists or the statewide registration system must be made and processed in the
12.31manner provided in the rules of the secretary of state.
12.32Upon receipt of a statement signed by the voter that withholding the voter's name
12.33from the public information list is required for the safety of the voter or the voter's family,
12.34the secretary of state and county auditor must withhold from the public information list the
12.35name and address of a registered voter. In place of a withheld voter's name and address,
13.1the public information list must state: "voter's name and address withheld by request." The
13.2public information list must still include the voting history, city, and precinct of a voter
13.3whose name and address are withheld from the list.

13.4    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.121, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
13.5    Subdivision 1. Entry of registration information. (a) At the time a voter
13.6registration application is properly completed, submitted, and received in accordance with
13.7sections 201.061 and 201.071, the county auditor shall enter the information contained on
13.8it into the statewide registration system. Voter registration applications completed before
13.9election day must be entered into the statewide registration system within ten days after
13.10they have been submitted to the county auditor. Voter registration applications completed
13.11on election day must be entered into the statewide registration system within 42 days after
13.12the election, unless the county auditor notifies the secretary of state before the 42-day
13.13deadline has expired that the deadline will not be met.
13.14(b) Upon receiving a completed voter registration application, the secretary of state
13.15may electronically transmit the information on the application to the appropriate county
13.16auditor as soon as possible for review by the county auditor before final entry into the
13.17statewide registration system. The secretary of state may mail the voter registration
13.18application to the county auditor.
13.19(c) Within ten days after the county auditor has entered information from a voter
13.20registration application into the statewide registration system, the secretary of state shall
13.21compare the voter's name, date of birth, and driver's license number, state identification
13.22number, or the last four digits of the Social Security number with the same information
13.23contained in the Department of Public Safety database.
13.24(d) The secretary of state shall provide a report to the county auditor on a weekly
13.25basis that includes a list of voters whose name, date of birth, or identification number have
13.26been compared with the same information in the Department of Public Safety database
13.27and cannot be verified as provided in this subdivision. The report must list separately
13.28those voters who have submitted a voter registration application by mail and have not
13.29voted in a federal election in this state.
13.30(e) The county auditor shall compile a list of voters for whom the county auditor
13.31and the secretary of state are unable to conclude that information on the voter registration
13.32application and the corresponding information in the Department of Public Safety database
13.33relate to the same person.
13.34(f) The county auditor shall send a notice of incomplete registration to any voter
13.35whose name appears on the list and change the voter's status to "incomplete." A voter who
14.1receives a notice of incomplete registration from the county auditor may either provide
14.2the information required to complete the registration at least 21 days before the next
14.3election or at the polling place on election day.

14.4    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.121, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
14.5    Subd. 3. Postelection sampling. Within ten days after an election, the county
14.6auditor shall send the notice required by subdivision 2 to a random sampling of the
14.7individuals registered on election day. The random sampling shall be determined in
14.8accordance with the rules of the secretary of state. As soon as practicable after the
14.9election, but no later than January 1 of the following year, the county auditor shall mail
14.10the notice required by subdivision 2 to all other individuals registered on election day.
14.11If a notice is returned as not deliverable, the county auditor shall attempt to determine
14.12the reason for the return. A county auditor who does not receive or obtain satisfactory
14.13proof of an individual's eligibility to vote shall immediately notify the county attorney of
14.14all of the relevant information and the secretary of state of the numbers by precinct. By
14.15March 1 of every odd-numbered year, the secretary of state shall report to the chair and
14.16ranking minority members of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over elections
14.17the number of notices reported under this subdivision to the secretary of state for the
14.18previous state general election by county and precinct.

14.19    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.171, is amended to read:
14.20201.171 POSTING VOTING HISTORY; FAILURE TO VOTE;
14.21REGISTRATION REMOVED.
14.22    Within six weeks after every election, the county auditor shall post the voting
14.23history for every person who voted in the election. After the close of the calendar year, the
14.24secretary of state shall determine if any registrants have not voted during the preceding
14.25four years. The secretary of state shall perform list maintenance by changing the status of
14.26those registrants to "inactive" in the statewide registration system. The list maintenance
14.27performed must be conducted in a manner that ensures that the name of each registered
14.28voter appears in the official list of eligible voters in the statewide registration system.
14.29A voter must not be removed from the official list of eligible voters unless the voter is
14.30not eligible or is not registered to vote. List maintenance must include procedures for
14.31eliminating duplicate names from the official list of eligible voters.
14.32    The secretary of state shall also prepare a report to the county auditor containing the
14.33names of all registrants whose status was changed to "inactive."
15.1    Registrants whose status was changed to "inactive" must register in the manner
15.2specified in section 201.054 before voting in any primary, special primary, general, school
15.3district, or special election, as required by section 201.018.
15.4    Although not counted in an election, a late or rejected absentee or mail ballot must
15.5be considered a vote for the purpose of continuing registration under this section, but is
15.6not considered voting history for the purpose of public information lists available under
15.7section 201.091, subdivision 4.

15.8    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.221, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
15.9    Subd. 3. Procedures for polling place rosters. The secretary of state shall
15.10prescribe the form of polling place rosters that include the voter's name, address, date of
15.11birth, school district number, and space for the voter's signature. The secretary of state
15.12may prescribe additional election-related information to be placed on the polling place
15.13rosters on an experimental basis for one state primary and general election cycle; the same
15.14information may not be placed on the polling place roster for a second state primary and
15.15general election cycle unless specified in this subdivision. The polling place roster must
15.16be used to indicate whether the voter has voted in a given election. The secretary of state
15.17shall prescribe procedures for transporting the polling place rosters to the election judges
15.18for use on election day. The secretary of state shall prescribe the form for a county or
15.19municipality to request the date of birth from currently registered voters. The county or
15.20municipality shall not request the date of birth from currently registered voters by any
15.21communication other than the prescribed form and the form must clearly indicate that a
15.22currently registered voter does not lose registration status by failing to provide the date of
15.23birth. In accordance with section 204B.40, the county auditor shall retain the prescribed
15.24polling place rosters used on the date of election for 22 36 months following the election.

15.25    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 203B.06, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
15.26    Subd. 5. Preservation of records. An application for absentee ballots shall be
15.27dated by the county auditor or municipal clerk when it is received and shall be initialed
15.28when absentee ballots are mailed or delivered to the applicant. All applications shall be
15.29preserved by the county auditor or municipal clerk for 22 36 months.

15.30    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 203B.121, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
15.31    Subdivision 1. Establishment; applicable laws. (a) The governing body of each
15.32county, municipality, and school district with responsibility to accept and reject absentee
15.33ballots must, by ordinance or resolution, establish a ballot board. The board must consist
16.1of a sufficient number of election judges trained in the handling of absentee ballots and
16.2appointed as provided in sections 204B.19 to 204B.22. The board may include staff
16.3trained as election judges.
16.4(b) Each jurisdiction must pay a reasonable compensation to each member of that
16.5jurisdiction's ballot board for services rendered during an election.
16.6(c) A ballot board may only meet to perform its duties under this chapter during the
16.7period in which completed absentee ballots are accepted for an election. The time and
16.8place of each meeting must be scheduled, announced, and posted on the Web site of
16.9the governing body of the county, municipality, or school district at least 14 days prior
16.10to convening the first meeting of the ballot board for an election. Meetings of the ballot
16.11board must be convened every business day, at the same time and in the same location.
16.12The ballot board must also meet on any day during which the county or municipal offices
16.13are open for the purposes of conducting election business prior to an election. A ballot
16.14board may not meet except during regularly scheduled meetings announced and posted as
16.15required by this paragraph.
16.16(c) (d) Except as otherwise provided by this section, all provisions of the Minnesota
16.17Election Law apply to a ballot board.

16.18    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204B.40, is amended to read:
16.19204B.40 BALLOTS; ELECTION RECORDS AND OTHER MATERIALS;
16.20DISPOSITION; INSPECTION OF BALLOTS.
16.21The county auditors, municipal clerks, and school district clerks shall retain all
16.22election materials returned to them after any election for at least 22 36 months from
16.23the date of that election. All election materials involved in a contested election must be
16.24retained for 22 36 months or until the contest has been finally determined, whichever is
16.25later. Abstracts filed by canvassing boards shall be retained permanently by any officer
16.26with whom those abstracts are filed. Election materials no longer required to be retained
16.27pursuant to this section shall be disposed of in accordance with sections 138.163 to 138.21.
16.28Sealed envelopes containing voted ballots must be retained unopened, except as provided
16.29in this section, in a secure location. The county auditor, municipal clerk, or school district
16.30clerk shall not permit any voted ballots to be tampered with or defaced.
16.31After the time for filing a notice of contest for an election has passed, the secretary
16.32of state may, for the purpose of monitoring and evaluating election procedures: (1)
16.33open the sealed ballot envelopes and inspect the ballots for that election maintained by
16.34the county auditors, municipal clerks, or school district clerks; (2) inspect the polling
16.35place rosters and completed voter registration applications; or (3) examine other forms
17.1required in the Minnesota election laws for use in the polling place. No inspected ballot or
17.2document may be marked or identified in any manner. After inspection, all ballots must be
17.3returned to the ballot envelope and the ballot envelope must be securely resealed. Any
17.4other election materials inspected or examined must be secured or resealed. No polling
17.5place roster may be inspected until the voting history for that precinct has been posted.
17.6No voter registration application may be inspected until the information on it has been
17.7entered into the statewide registration system.

17.8    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.15, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
17.9    Subdivision 1. Physical assistance in marking ballots. A voter who claims a
17.10need for assistance because of inability to read English or physical inability to mark
17.11a ballot may obtain the aid of two election judges who are members of different major
17.12political parties. The election judges shall mark the ballots as directed by the voter and in
17.13as secret a manner as circumstances permit. If the voter is deaf or cannot speak English or
17.14understand it when it is spoken, the election judges may select two individuals who are
17.15members of different major political parties to provide assistance. The individuals shall
17.16assist the voter in marking the ballots. A voter in need of assistance may alternatively
17.17obtain the assistance of any individual the voter chooses. Only the following persons may
17.18not provide assistance to a voter: the voter's employer, an agent of the voter's employer, an
17.19officer or agent of the voter's union, the voter's court-appointed guardian or conservator,
17.20any paid individual providing health care or health-related personal assistance to the voter,
17.21or a candidate for election. The person who assists the voter shall, unaccompanied by an
17.22election judge, retire with that voter to a booth and mark the ballot as directed by the voter.
17.23No person who assists another voter as provided in the preceding sentence shall mark the
17.24ballots of more than three voters at one election. Before the ballots are deposited, the
17.25voter may show them privately to an election judge to ascertain that they are marked as
17.26the voter directed. An election judge or other individual assisting a voter shall not in any
17.27manner request, persuade, induce, or attempt to persuade or induce the voter to vote for
17.28any particular political party or candidate. The election judges or other individuals who
17.29assist the voter shall not reveal to anyone the name of any candidate for whom the voter
17.30has voted or anything that took place while assisting the voter.

17.31    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.20, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
17.32    Subdivision 1. Determination of proper number. The election judges shall
17.33determine the number of ballots to be counted by adding the number of return envelopes
17.34from accepted absentee ballots to the number of signed voter's certificates, or to the
18.1number of names entered in the election register counting the number of original voter
18.2signatures contained in the polling place roster, or on voter's receipts generated from an
18.3electronic roster. The election judges may not count the number of voter receipts collected
18.4in the precinct as a substitute for counting original voter signatures unless the voter
18.5receipts contain the name, voter identification number, and signature of the voter to whom
18.6the receipt was issued. The election judges shall then remove all the ballots from the box.
18.7Without considering how the ballots are marked, the election judges shall ascertain that
18.8each ballot is separate and shall count them to determine whether the number of ballots in
18.9the box corresponds with the number of ballots to be counted.

18.10    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.20, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
18.11    Subd. 2. Excess ballots. If two or more ballots are found folded together like
18.12a single ballot, the election judges shall lay them aside until all the ballots in the box
18.13have been counted. If it is evident from the number of ballots to be counted that the
18.14ballots folded together were cast by one voter, the election judges shall preserve but not
18.15count them. If the number of ballots in one box exceeds the number to be counted, the
18.16election judges shall examine all the ballots in the box to ascertain that all are properly
18.17marked with the initials of the election judges. If any ballots are not properly marked with
18.18the initials of the election judges, the election judges shall preserve but not count them;
18.19however, if the number of ballots does not exceed the number to be counted, the absence
18.20of either or both sets of initials of the election judges does not, by itself, disqualify the
18.21vote from being counted and must not but may be the basis of a challenge in a recount.
18.22If there is still an excess of properly marked ballots, the election judges shall replace
18.23them in the box, and one election judge, without looking, shall withdraw from the box
18.24a number of ballots equal to the excess. The withdrawn ballots shall not be counted but
18.25shall be preserved as provided in subdivision 4.

18.26    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.20, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
18.27    Subd. 4. Ballots not counted; disposition. When the final count of ballots agrees
18.28with the number of ballots to be counted, those ballots not counted shall be clearly marked
18.29"excess" on the front of the ballot and attached to a certificate made by the election judges
18.30which states the number of ballots not counted and why the ballots they were not counted.
18.31The certificate and uncounted ballots shall be sealed in a separate envelope and returned
18.32to clearly marked "excess ballots." The election judges shall sign their names over the
18.33envelope seal and return the ballots to the county auditor or municipal or school district
18.34clerk from whom they were received. Tabulation of vote totals from a precinct where
19.1excess ballots were removed from the ballot box shall be completed by the canvassing
19.2board responsible for certifying the election results from that precinct.

19.3    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.20, is amended by adding a
19.4subdivision to read:
19.5    Subd. 5. Applicability. The requirements of this section apply regardless of the
19.6voting system or method of tabulation used in a precinct.

19.7    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.23, is amended to read:
19.8204C.23 SPOILED, DEFECTIVE, AND DUPLICATE BALLOTS.
19.9(a) A ballot that is spoiled by a voter must be clearly marked "spoiled" by an election
19.10judge, placed in an envelope designated for spoiled ballots from the precinct, sealed, and
19.11returned as required by section 204C.25.
19.12(b) A ballot that is defective to the extent that the election judges are unable to
19.13determine the voter's intent shall be marked on the back "Defective" if it is totally
19.14defective or "Defective as to ......," naming the office or question if it is defective only in
19.15part. Defective ballots must be placed in an envelope designated for defective ballots from
19.16the precinct, sealed, and returned as required by section 204C.25.
19.17(c) A damaged or defective ballot that requires duplication must be handled as
19.18required by section 206.86, subdivision 5.

19.19    Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.24, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
19.20    Subdivision 1. Information requirements. Precinct summary statements shall be
19.21submitted by the election judges in every precinct. For all elections, the election judges
19.22shall complete three or more copies of the summary statements, and each copy shall
19.23contain the following information for each kind of ballot:
19.24(a) the number of ballots delivered to the precinct as adjusted by the actual count
19.25made by the election judges, the number of unofficial ballots made, and the number of
19.26absentee ballots delivered to the precinct;
19.27(b) the number of votes each candidate received or the number of yes and no votes
19.28on each question, the number of undervotes, the number of overvotes, and the number of
19.29defective ballots with respect to each office or question;
19.30(c) the number of spoiled ballots, the number of duplicate ballots made, the number
19.31of absentee ballots rejected, and the number of unused ballots, presuming that the total
19.32count provided on each package of unopened prepackaged ballots is correct;
19.33(d) the number of ballots cast;
20.1(d) (e) the number of individuals who voted at the election in the precinct voter
20.2signatures contained on the polling place roster or on voter receipts generated by an
20.3electronic roster, which must equal the total number of ballots cast in the precinct, as
20.4required by sections 204C.20 and 206.86, subdivision 1;
20.5(f) the number of excess ballots removed by the election judges, as required by
20.6section 204C.20;
20.7(e) (g) the number of voters registering on election day in that precinct; and
20.8(f) (h) the signatures of the election judges who counted the ballots certifying that
20.9all of the ballots cast were properly piled, checked, and counted; and that the numbers
20.10entered by the election judges on the summary statements correctly show the number of
20.11votes cast for each candidate and for and against each question.
20.12At least two copies of the summary statement must be prepared for elections not
20.13held on the same day as the state elections.

20.14    Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 206.86, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
20.15    Subdivision 1. At the voting location Precinct polling locations; duties;
20.16reconciliation. In precincts where an electronic voting system is used, as soon as the polls
20.17are closed the election judges shall secure the voting systems against further voting. They
20.18shall then open the ballot box and count the number of ballot cards ballots or envelopes
20.19containing ballot cards that have been cast to determine that the number of ballot cards
20.20ballots does not exceed the number of voters shown on original voter signatures contained
20.21in the election register or registration file polling place roster or on voter receipts generated
20.22from an electronic roster. The election judges may not count the number of voter receipts
20.23collected in the precinct as a substitute for counting original voter signatures unless the
20.24voter receipts contain the name, voter identification number, and signature of the voter to
20.25whom the receipt was issued. If there is an excess, the judges shall seal the ballots in a
20.26ballot container and transport the container to the county auditor or municipal clerk who
20.27shall process the ballots in the same manner as paper ballots are processed in section
20.28204C.20, subdivision 2, then enter the ballots into the ballot counter proceed in the manner
20.29required for excess ballots under section 204C.20, subdivisions 2 to 4. The total number
20.30of voters must be entered on the forms provided. The judges shall next count the write-in
20.31votes and enter the number of those votes on forms provided for the purpose.

20.32    Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 206.86, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
20.33    Subd. 2. Transportation of ballot cards. The judges shall place all voted ballot
20.34cards, excess ballots, defective ballots, and damaged ballots in the container provided for
21.1transporting them to the counting center. The container must be sealed and delivered
21.2immediately to the counting center by two judges who are not of the same major political
21.3party. The judges shall also deliver to the counting center in a suitable container the
21.4unused ballot cards ballots, the spoiled ballot envelope, and the ballot envelopes issued to
21.5the voters and deposited during the day in the ballot box.

21.6    Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 209.021, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
21.7    Subdivision 1. Manner; time; contents. Service of a notice of contest must be
21.8made in the same manner as the service of summons in civil actions. The notice of contest
21.9must specify the grounds on which the contest will be made. The contestant shall serve
21.10notice of the contest on the parties enumerated in this section. Notice must be served and
21.11filed within five days after the canvass is completed in the case of a primary or special
21.12primary or within seven days after the canvass is completed in the case of a special or
21.13general election; except that:
21.14(1) if a contest is based on a deliberate, serious, and material violation of the election
21.15laws which was discovered from the statements of receipts and disbursements required
21.16to be filed by candidates and committees, the action may be commenced and the notice
21.17served and filed within ten days after the filing of the statements in the case of a general
21.18or special election or within five days after the filing of the statements in the case of a
21.19primary or special primary.;
21.20(2) if a notice of contest questions only which party received the highest number
21.21of votes legally cast at the election, a contestee who loses may serve and file a notice of
21.22contest on any other ground during the three days following expiration of the time for
21.23appealing the decision on the vote count.; and
21.24(3) if data or documents necessary to determine grounds for a contest, including but
21.25not limited to lists of the names of every voter who participated in an election, are not
21.26available to a candidate or the general public prior to the close of the period for filing a
21.27notice of contest under this section due to nonfeasance, malfeasance, or failure to perform
21.28duties within the time required by statute on the part of the secretary of state, a county
21.29auditor, or other state, county, or municipal election official, a notice of contest may be
21.30served and filed within seven days after the data or documents become available for
21.31inspection by the candidates and the general public.

21.32    Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 209.06, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
21.33    Subdivision 1. Appointment of inspectors. After a contest has been instituted,
21.34either party may have the ballots all materials relating to the election, including but not
22.1limited to polling place rosters, voter registration applications, accepted absentee ballot
22.2envelopes, rejected absentee ballot envelopes, applications for absentee ballots, precinct
22.3summary statements, printouts from voting machines, and precinct incident logs, inspected
22.4before preparing for trial. The party requesting an inspection shall file with the district
22.5court where the contest is brought a verified petition, stating that the case cannot properly
22.6be prepared for trial without an inspection of the ballots and designating the precincts in
22.7which an inspection is desired. A judge of the court in which the contest is pending shall
22.8then appoint as many sets of three inspectors for a contest of any office or question as are
22.9needed to count and inspect the ballots expeditiously. One inspector must be selected by
22.10each of the parties to the contest and a third must be chosen by those two inspectors. If
22.11either party neglects or refuses to name an inspector, the judge shall appoint the inspector.
22.12The compensation of inspectors is the same as for referees, unless otherwise stipulated.

22.13    Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 211B.11, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
22.14    Subdivision 1. Soliciting near polling places. A person may not display campaign
22.15material, post signs, ask, solicit, or in any manner try to induce or persuade a voter within
22.16a polling place or within 100 feet of the building in which a polling place is situated,
22.17or anywhere on the public property on which a polling place is situated, on primary or
22.18election day to vote for or refrain from voting for a candidate or ballot question. A person
22.19may not provide political badges, political buttons, or other political insignia to be worn at
22.20or about the polling place on the day of a primary or election. A political badge, political
22.21button, or other political insignia may not be worn at or about the polling place on primary
22.22or election day if it is designed to influence voting for or against a particular candidate,
22.23political party, or question on the ballot at the election. This section applies to areas
22.24established by the county auditor or municipal clerk for absentee voting as provided in
22.25chapter 203B.
22.26The secretary of state, county auditor, municipal clerk, or school district clerk may
22.27provide stickers which contain the words "I VOTED" and nothing more. Election judges
22.28may offer a sticker of this type to each voter who has signed the polling place roster
22.29or a voter's receipt.

22.30    Sec. 28. REPEALER.
22.31Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204B.36, subdivision 5, is repealed.

23.1ARTICLE 3
23.2ELECTRONIC ROSTERS

23.3    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 200.02, is amended by adding a
23.4subdivision to read:
23.5    Subd. 12a. Polling place roster. "Polling place roster" means the official lists used
23.6to record a voter's appearance in a polling place on election day, including the list of
23.7registered voters in the precinct, and the list of voters registering on election day. A polling
23.8place roster may be in a printed or electronic format, as permitted by section 201.225.

23.9    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 201.221, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
23.10    Subd. 3. Procedures for polling place rosters. The secretary of state shall
23.11prescribe the form of polling place rosters that include the voter's name, address, date of
23.12birth, school district number, and space for the voter's signature. A polling place roster
23.13provided in an electronic form must allow for a printed voter's receipt with a space for the
23.14voter's original signature. The secretary of state may prescribe additional election-related
23.15information to be placed on the polling place rosters on an experimental basis for one state
23.16primary and general election cycle; the same information may not be placed on the polling
23.17place roster for a second state primary and general election cycle unless specified in this
23.18subdivision. The polling place roster must be used to indicate whether the voter has voted
23.19in a given election. The secretary of state shall prescribe procedures for transporting the
23.20polling place rosters to the election judges for use on election day. The secretary of state
23.21shall prescribe the form for a county or municipality to request the date of birth from
23.22currently registered voters. The county or municipality shall not request the date of birth
23.23from currently registered voters by any communication other than the prescribed form and
23.24the form must clearly indicate that a currently registered voter does not lose registration
23.25status by failing to provide the date of birth. In accordance with section 204B.40, the
23.26county auditor shall retain the prescribed polling place rosters used on the date of election
23.27for 22 36 months following the election.

23.28    Sec. 3. [201.225] ELECTRONIC ROSTER; STANDARDS.
23.29    Subdivision 1. Requirement; certification of system. (a) Except as provided in
23.30paragraph (c), each precinct must have a secure electronic connection to the statewide
23.31voter registration system maintained by the secretary of state, to serve as the precinct's
23.32electronic polling place roster.
24.1(b) Precincts may not use an electronic roster until the secretary of state has certified
24.2that the secure electronic connection to the statewide voter registration system is sufficient
24.3to prevent any voter from voting more than once at an election and to prevent access to
24.4the system by unauthorized individuals.
24.5(c)(1) If the county auditor or municipal clerk certifies to the secretary of state that a
24.6precinct is unable to access the statewide connection, the precinct may use two computers
24.7connected together in the precinct as the electronic roster. At a minimum, computers used
24.8in a precinct that do not have a live connection to the statewide voter registration system
24.9must have a stored electronic roster of registered voters for that precinct.
24.10(2) Use of electronic rosters and the secure statewide connection is not required in a
24.11precinct with 100 or fewer registered voters.
24.12    Subd. 2. Minimum standards for electronic rosters. At a minimum, an electronic
24.13roster must:
24.14(1) be preloaded with data from the statewide voter registration system, including
24.15data on individuals known to be ineligible to vote;
24.16(2) permit all voting information processed by any computer in a precinct to be
24.17immediately accessible to all other computers at all other connected precincts in the state;
24.18(3) provide for a printed voter's receipt, containing the voter's name, address of
24.19residence, date of birth, voter identification number, the oath required by section 204C.10,
24.20and a space for the voter's original signature;
24.21(4) immediately alert the election judge if the statewide voter registration system
24.22indicates that a voter has already voted at the election in another polling place, is ineligible
24.23to vote, or the voter's registration status is challenged;
24.24(5) automatically accept and input data from a scanned Minnesota driver's license or
24.25identification card and match the data to an existing voter registration record, and permit
24.26manual input of voter data, if necessary; and
24.27(6) perform any other functions required for the efficient and secure administration
24.28of an election, as required by law.
24.29    Subd. 3. Costs. Costs to purchase and maintain electronic roster software, including
24.30costs associated with maintaining the necessary secure data connections to the statewide
24.31voter registration system, and the initial purchase of equipment shall be paid by the state.
24.32Subsequent equipment maintenance and purchasing costs shall be paid by the county or
24.33municipality through cost savings generated by the use of electronic roster technology.

24.34    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204B.14, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
25.1    Subd. 2. Separate precincts; combined polling place. (a) The following shall
25.2constitute at least one election precinct:
25.3(1) each city ward; and
25.4(2) each town and each statutory city.
25.5(b) A single, accessible, combined polling place may be established no later than
25.6May 1 of any year:
25.7(1) for any city of the third or fourth class, any town, or any city having territory in
25.8more than one county, in which all the voters of the city or town shall cast their ballots;
25.9(2) for two contiguous precincts in the same municipality that have a combined
25.10total of fewer than 500 registered voters;
25.11(3) for up to four contiguous municipalities located entirely outside the metropolitan
25.12area, as defined by section 200.02, subdivision 24, that are contained in the same county; or
25.13(4) for noncontiguous precincts located in one or more counties.
25.14A copy of the ordinance or resolution establishing a combined polling place must
25.15be filed with the county auditor within 30 days after approval by the governing body. A
25.16polling place combined under clause (3) must be approved by the governing body of each
25.17participating municipality. A polling place combined under clause (4) must be approved
25.18by the governing body of each participating municipality and the secretary of state and
25.19may be located outside any of the noncontiguous precincts. A municipality withdrawing
25.20from participation in a combined polling place must do so by filing a resolution of
25.21withdrawal with the county auditor no later than April 1 of any year.
25.22The secretary of state shall provide a separate polling place electronic roster
25.23connection for each precinct served by the combined polling place. A single set of election
25.24judges may be appointed to serve at a combined polling place. The number of election
25.25judges required must be based on the total number of persons voting at the last similar
25.26election in all precincts to be voting at the combined polling place. Separate ballot boxes
25.27must be provided for the ballots from each precinct. The results of the election must be
25.28reported separately for each precinct served by the combined polling place, except in a
25.29polling place established under clause (2) where one of the precincts has fewer than ten
25.30registered voters, in which case the results of that precinct must be reported in the manner
25.31specified by the secretary of state.

25.32    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.10, is amended to read:
25.33204C.10 PERMANENT REGISTRATION; VERIFICATION OF
25.34REGISTRATION.
26.1(a) An individual seeking to vote shall sign a polling place roster or printed voter's
26.2receipt, generated from an electronic roster which states that the individual is at least
26.318 years of age, a citizen of the United States, has resided in Minnesota for 20 days
26.4immediately preceding the election, maintains residence at the address shown, is not
26.5under a guardianship in which the court order revokes the individual's right to vote, has
26.6not been found by a court of law to be legally incompetent to vote or has the right to vote
26.7because, if the individual was convicted of a felony, the felony sentence has expired or
26.8been completed or the individual has been discharged from the sentence, is registered
26.9and has not already voted in the election. The roster must also state: "I understand that
26.10deliberately providing false information is a felony punishable by not more than five years
26.11imprisonment and a fine of not more than $10,000, or both."
26.12(b) A judge may, before the applicant signs the roster or receipt, confirm the
26.13applicant's name, address, and date of birth.
26.14(c) In precincts where a paper roster is used, after the applicant signs the roster, the
26.15judge shall give the applicant a voter's receipt. Regardless of the form of roster used, a
26.16voter shall deliver the voter's receipt to the judge in charge of ballots as proof of the
26.17voter's right to vote, and thereupon the judge shall hand to the voter the ballot. The voters'
26.18receipts must be maintained during the time for notice of filing an election contest for 36
26.19months following the date of the election.

26.20    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.12, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
26.21    Subd. 4. Refusal to answer questions or sign a polling place roster. A challenged
26.22individual who refuses to answer questions or sign a polling place roster or voter's receipt
26.23as required by this section must not be allowed to vote. A challenged individual who
26.24leaves the polling place and returns later willing to answer questions or sign a polling
26.25place roster or voter's receipt must not be allowed to vote.

26.26    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204D.24, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
26.27    Subd. 2. Voter registration. An individual may register to vote at a special primary
26.28or special election at any time before the day that the polling place rosters for the special
26.29primary or special election are prepared finally secured by the secretary of state for the
26.30election. The secretary of state shall provide the county auditors with notice of this date
26.31at least seven days before the printing of the rosters are secured. This subdivision does
26.32not apply to a special election held on the same day as the state primary, state general
26.33election, or the regularly scheduled primary or general election of a municipality, school
26.34district, or special district.

27.1    Sec. 8. [206A.01] APPLICABILITY.
27.2This chapter applies to each designated election official who transmits election
27.3records via teleprocessing lines to a centralized electronic roster maintained by the
27.4secretary of state for the purpose of conducting an election and compiling complete returns.

27.5    Sec. 9. [206A.02] DEFINITIONS.
27.6    Subdivision 1. Definitions. The definitions in this section apply to this chapter.
27.7    Subd. 2. Designated election official. "Designated election official" means the
27.8county auditor or municipal clerk.
27.9    Subd. 3. Elector data. "Elector data" means voting information, including, but not
27.10limited to, voter registration, voting history, and voting tabulations.
27.11    Subd. 4. Electronic roster. "Electronic roster" is a list of eligible electors in
27.12electronic format who are permitted to vote at a polling place in an election conducted
27.13under the Minnesota election law, which shall be processed by a computer at a precinct to
27.14be immediately accessible to all other computers at all precincts in the county.
27.15    Subd. 5. Teleprocessing lines. "Teleprocessing lines" means secure, dedicated
27.16communication transmission facilities used for the purpose of transferring elector data
27.17between precincts and a centralized computerized roster maintained by the secretary of
27.18state, to ensure the security and integrity of voting information so that no deviation can
27.19go undetected.

27.20    Sec. 10. [206A.03] MINIMUM CONTINGENCY AND SECURITY
27.21PROCEDURES.
27.22(a) The designated election official shall establish written security procedures
27.23covering the transference of precinct teleprocessing information. The procedures must
27.24include:
27.25(1) security covering the transmission of elector data processed through the
27.26electronic roster and reconciliation of the registration and history of voters casting ballots
27.27in a precinct; and
27.28(2) contingency procedures for network and power failure. The procedures must, at
27.29a minimum, include procedures to address all single point failures including:
27.30(i) network failure;
27.31(ii) power failure that lasts less than one hour; and
27.32(iii) power failure that lasts more than one hour.
27.33(b) Acceptable alternatives for addressing power or system failures include either:
28.1(1) a paper backup of the roster with the minimum information required to verify a
28.2voter's eligibility; or
28.3(2) a sufficient number of computers per precinct to ensure that the voter check-in
28.4continues in an efficient manner. The computers must have the ability to function on
28.5batteries or an external power source for up to two hours.
28.6(c) Each computer must have an electronic backup of the current roster in one of the
28.7following formats:
28.8(1) a portable document file (PDF);
28.9(2) a spreadsheet; or
28.10(3) a database with a basic look-up interface.
28.11In addition to acceptable backup roster procedures, the security procedures must
28.12address contingency procedures to protect against activities such as voting twice.

28.13    Sec. 11. [206A.04] MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR DATA ENCRYPTION.
28.14(a) The designated election official shall submit to the secretary of state evidence
28.15that the connection to an electronic roster is secure including details concerning encryption
28.16methodology. In addition, the electronic roster must meet or exceed the standards provided
28.17for in this section.
28.18(b) Proven, standard algorithms must be used as the basis for encryption
28.19technologies.
28.20(c) If an electronic roster utilizes a Virtual Private Network (VPN), the following
28.21apply:
28.22(1) it is the responsibility of the county to ensure that unauthorized users are not
28.23allowed access to internal networks;
28.24(2) VPN use is to be controlled using either a onetime password authentication such
28.25as a token device or a public/private key system with a strong passphrase;
28.26(3) when actively connected to the network, VPNs must force all traffic to and from
28.27the computer over the VPN tunnel and all other traffic must be dropped;
28.28(4) dual (split) tunneling is not permitted; only one network connection is allowed;
28.29(5) VPN gateways must be set up and managed by the county or its designee;
28.30(6) all computers connected to internal networks via VPN or any other technology
28.31must use up-to-date antivirus software; and
28.32(7) the VPN concentrator is limited to an absolute connection time of 24 hours.

28.33    Sec. 12. [206A.05] MINIMUM ELECTRONIC ROSTER TRANSACTION
28.34REQUIREMENTS.
29.1    Subdivision 1. Standards. (a) The electronic roster system connection must contain
29.2enough bandwidth to handle the processing time, taking into account secured transaction
29.3method, for any computer on the system as follows:
29.4(1) a maximum of five seconds to update voter activity;
29.5(2) a maximum of 1.5 seconds to process a voter inquiry by identification number;
29.6and
29.7(3) a maximum of 45 seconds for session startup and password verification.
29.8(b) The designated election official shall include in the security plan the system data
29.9transfer requirements to completely process a single voter record. This must include at
29.10least the following:
29.11(1) the data stream information on both sending and receiving data for all points of
29.12the transaction until the transaction is complete;
29.13(2) information on all points where the connection is closed and the data stream
29.14released between the remote computer and the server; and
29.15(3) the proposed method of securing transmissions across public networks.
29.16(c) The designated election official shall submit in the security plan a detailed list of
29.17all precincts, with a proposed number of workstations connecting to the database and the
29.18proposed connection, including bandwidth and security, for each location.

29.19    Sec. 13. [206A.06] ELECTRONIC ROSTER PREELECTION TESTING
29.20PROCEDURES.
29.21(a) The electronic roster application must be tested to ensure that it meets the
29.22minimum system requirements prior to the first election in which it is used. The
29.23application must also be tested after the implementation of any system modifications. The
29.24county shall indicate in the subsequent security plan whether such retesting has occurred.
29.25(b) The test must, at a minimum, include the following:
29.26(1) a load test must be demonstrated through either 60 percent of actual computers
29.27running at proposed bandwidth and security settings, or by simulating a load test;
29.28(2) a contingency/failure test must be demonstrated and documented illustrating the
29.29effects of failures identified in section 206A.03; and
29.30(3) all tests must be conducted with clients and servers in normal, typical, deployed
29.31operating mode.
29.32(c) All records and documentation of the testing must be retained by the designated
29.33election official for a period of 36 months as part of the election record. The testing record
29.34and documentation must include, but is not limited to, the following:
29.35(1) a formal test plan containing all test scripts used:
30.1(i) the test plan must include test environment containing make, model, type of
30.2hardware, and software versions used in testing; and
30.3(ii) the test plan must also include the number of client computers, servers, and
30.4physical locations involved in testing;
30.5(2) test logs of all events that were observed during testing, including:
30.6(i) the sequence of actions necessary to set up the tests;
30.7(ii) the actions necessary to start the tests;
30.8(iii) the actions taken during the execution of the tests;
30.9(iv) any measurements taken or observed during the tests;
30.10(v) any actions necessary to stop or shut down the tests;
30.11(vi) any actions necessary to bring the tests to a halt; and
30.12(vii) any actions necessary or taken to deal with anomalies experienced during
30.13testing;
30.14(3) performance logs and reports taken from both servers and workstations during
30.15the testing which contain performance information of:
30.16(i) network usage (bandwidth);
30.17(ii) processor utilization;
30.18(iii) Random Access Memory (RAM) utilization; and
30.19(iv) any additional performance monitoring reports necessary to explain the process
30.20taken and to support the findings of the tests; and
30.21(4) all test logs must contain date, time, operator, test status or outcome, and any
30.22additional information to assist the secretary in making a determination.

30.23    Sec. 14. [206A.07] MINIMUM NUMBER OF COMPUTERS REQUIRED FOR A
30.24PRECINCT.
30.25Except as provided in section 201.225, subdivision 1, the county auditor or municipal
30.26clerk shall allocate a minimum of two computers to each precinct. Additional computers
30.27may be allocated to a precinct as needed, at the expense of the county or municipality.

30.28    Sec. 15. [206A.08] WRITTEN PROCEDURES AND REPORTS.
30.29(a) Written procedures and reports required by this chapter must be submitted to the
30.30secretary of state for approval no later than 60 days before the election. The secretary of
30.31state shall either approve the procedures as submitted or notify the designated election
30.32official of recommended changes.
31.1(b) If the secretary of state rejects or approves the written procedures, the secretary
31.2of state shall provide written notice of the rejection or approval, including specifics of
31.3noncompliance with this chapter within 15 days of receiving the written procedures.
31.4(c) If the secretary of state rejects the written procedures, the designated election
31.5official shall submit a revised procedure within 15 days thereafter.
31.6(d) The secretary of state shall permit the filing of the revised procedures at a later
31.7date if it is determined that compliance with the 15-day requirement is impossible.

31.8    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 211B.11, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
31.9    Subdivision 1. Soliciting near polling places. A person may not display campaign
31.10material, post signs, ask, solicit, or in any manner try to induce or persuade a voter within
31.11a polling place or within 100 feet of the building in which a polling place is situated,
31.12or anywhere on the public property on which a polling place is situated, on primary or
31.13election day to vote for or refrain from voting for a candidate or ballot question. A person
31.14may not provide political badges, political buttons, or other political insignia to be worn
31.15at or about the polling place on the day of a primary or election. A political badge,
31.16political button, or other political insignia may not be worn at or about the polling place on
31.17primary or election day. This section applies to areas established by the county auditor or
31.18municipal clerk for absentee voting as provided in chapter 203B.
31.19The secretary of state, county auditor, municipal clerk, or school district clerk may
31.20provide stickers which contain the words "I VOTED" and nothing more. Election judges
31.21may offer a sticker of this type to each voter who has signed the polling place roster
31.22or a voter's receipt.

31.23    Sec. 17. EFFECTIVE DATE.
31.24This article is effective June 1, 2012, and applies to elections held on or after that
31.25date.

31.26ARTICLE 4
31.27RECOUNTS

31.28    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204C.38, is amended to read:
31.29204C.38 CORRECTION OF OBVIOUS ERRORS; WHEN CANDIDATES
31.30AGREE.
31.31    Subdivision 1. Errors of election judges. If the candidates for an office
31.32unanimously agree in writing that the election judges in any precinct have made an
32.1obvious error in the counting or recording of the votes for that office, they shall deliver the
32.2agreement to the county auditor of that county who shall reconvene the county canvassing
32.3board, if necessary, and present the agreement to it. The county canvassing board shall
32.4correct the error as specified in the agreement.
32.5    Subd. 2. Errors of county canvassing board. If the candidates for an office
32.6unanimously agree in writing that the county canvassing board has made an obvious error
32.7in the counting and recording of the vote for that office they shall notify the county auditor
32.8who shall reconvene the canvassing board. The county canvassing board shall promptly
32.9correct the error as specified in the agreement and file an amended report. When an error is
32.10corrected pursuant to this subdivision, the county canvassing board and the county auditor
32.11shall proceed in accordance with sections 204C.32 to 204C.36 204C.33 and chapter 204E.
32.12    Subd. 3. Errors of State Canvassing Board. If the candidates for an office
32.13unanimously agree in writing that the State Canvassing Board has made an obvious error
32.14in the counting and recording of the vote for that office they shall deliver the agreement
32.15to the secretary of state. If a certificate of election has not been issued, the secretary of
32.16state shall reconvene the State Canvassing Board and present the agreement to it. The
32.17board shall promptly correct the error as specified in the agreement and file an amended
32.18statement. When an error is corrected pursuant to this subdivision by the State Canvassing
32.19Board, the State Canvassing Board and the secretary of state shall proceed in accordance
32.20with sections 204C.32 to 204C.36 204C.33 and chapter 204E.

32.21    Sec. 2. [204E.01] APPLICABILITY.
32.22This chapter establishes procedures for the conduct of all automatic and discretionary
32.23recounts provided for in law.

32.24    Sec. 3. [204E.02] RECOUNT OFFICIALS.
32.25(a) The secretary of state or secretary of state's designee is the recount official for
32.26recounts conducted by the State Canvassing Board. The county auditor or auditor's
32.27designee is the recount official for recounts conducted by the county canvassing board.
32.28The county auditor or auditor's designee shall conduct recounts for county offices. The
32.29municipal clerk or clerk's designee is the recount official for recounts conducted by the
32.30municipal governing body. The school district clerk or clerk's designee is the recount
32.31official for recounts conducted by the school board, or by a school district canvassing
32.32board as provided in section 205A.10, subdivision 5.
32.33(b) A recount official may delegate the duty to conduct a recount to a county auditor
32.34or municipal clerk by mutual consent. When the person who would otherwise serve as
33.1recount official is a candidate or is the employee or other subordinate, spouse, child,
33.2parent, grandparent, grandchild, stepparent, stepchild, sibling, half-sibling, or stepsibling
33.3of a candidate for the office to be recounted, the appropriate canvassing board shall select
33.4a county auditor or municipal clerk from another jurisdiction to conduct the recount.
33.5(c) As used in this chapter, "legal adviser" means counsel to the recount official and
33.6the canvassing board for the office being recounted.

33.7    Sec. 4. [204E.03] SCOPE OF RECOUNTS.
33.8A recount conducted as provided in this chapter is limited in scope to the
33.9determination of the number of votes validly cast for the office to be recounted. Only the
33.10ballots cast in the election and the summary statements certified by the election judges
33.11may be considered in the recount process. Original ballots that have been duplicated
33.12under section 206.86, subdivision 5, are not within the scope of a recount and must not be
33.13examined except as provided by a court in an election contest under chapter 209.

33.14    Sec. 5. [204E.04] FEDERAL, STATE, AND JUDICIAL RACES.
33.15    Subdivision 1. Automatic recounts. (a) In a state primary when the difference
33.16between the votes cast for the candidates for nomination to a statewide federal office,
33.17state constitutional office, statewide judicial office, congressional office, state legislative
33.18office, or district judicial office:
33.19(1) is less than one-half of one percent of the total number of votes counted for
33.20that nomination; or
33.21(2) is ten votes or less and the total number of votes cast for the nomination is 400
33.22votes or less, and the difference determines the nomination, the canvassing board with
33.23responsibility for declaring the results for that office shall manually recount the vote.
33.24(b) In a state general election when the difference between the votes of a candidate
33.25who would otherwise be declared elected to a statewide federal office, state constitutional
33.26office, statewide judicial office, congressional office, state legislative office, or district
33.27judicial office and the votes of any other candidate for that office:
33.28(1) is less than one-half of one percent of the total number of votes counted for
33.29that office; or
33.30(2) is ten votes or less if the total number of votes cast for the office is 400 votes or
33.31less, the canvassing board shall manually recount the votes.
33.32(c) Time for notice of a contest for an office recounted under this section begins to
33.33run upon certification of the results of the recount by the canvassing board, or as otherwise
33.34provided in section 209.021.
34.1(d) A losing candidate may waive a recount required by this section by filing a
34.2written notice of waiver with the canvassing board.
34.3    Subd. 2. Discretionary candidate recount. (a) A losing candidate whose name was
34.4on the ballot for nomination or election to a statewide federal office, state constitutional
34.5office, statewide judicial office, congressional office, state legislative office, or district
34.6judicial office may request a recount in a manner provided in this section at the candidate's
34.7own expense when the vote difference is greater than the difference required by this
34.8section. The votes must be manually recounted as provided in this section if the candidate
34.9files a request during the time for filing notice of contest of the primary or election for
34.10which a recount is sought.
34.11(b) The requesting candidate shall file with the filing officer a bond, cash, or surety in
34.12an amount set by the filing officer for the payment of the recount expenses. The requesting
34.13candidate is responsible for the following expenses: the compensation of the secretary of
34.14state or designees, and any election judge, municipal clerk, county auditor, administrator,
34.15or other personnel who participate in the recount; necessary supplies and travel related to
34.16the recount; the compensation of the appropriate canvassing board and costs of preparing
34.17for the canvass of recount results; and any attorney fees incurred in connection with the
34.18recount by the governing body responsible for the recount.
34.19(c) The requesting candidate may provide the filing officer with a list of up to three
34.20precincts that are to be recounted first and may waive the balance of the recount after these
34.21precincts have been counted. If the candidate provides a list, the recount official must
34.22determine the expenses for those precincts in the manner provided by paragraph (b).
34.23(d) If the winner of the race is changed by the optional recount, the cost of the
34.24recount must be paid by the jurisdiction conducting the recount.
34.25(e) If a result of the vote counting in the manual recount is different from the result
34.26of the vote counting reported on election day by a margin greater than the standard for
34.27acceptable performance of voting systems provided in section 206.89, subdivision 4, the
34.28cost of the recount must be paid by the jurisdiction conducting the recount.

34.29    Sec. 6. [204E.05] RECOUNTS IN COUNTY, SCHOOL DISTRICT, AND
34.30MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS.
34.31    Subdivision 1. Required recounts. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b), a
34.32losing candidate for nomination or election to a county, municipal, or school district office
34.33may request a recount of the votes cast for the nomination or election to that office if
34.34the difference between the vote cast for that candidate and for a winning candidate for
34.35nomination or election is less than one-half of one percent of the total votes counted for
35.1that office. In case of offices where two or more seats are being filled from among all the
35.2candidates for the office, the one-half of one percent difference is between the elected
35.3candidate with the fewest votes and the candidate with the most votes from among the
35.4candidates who were not elected.
35.5(b) A losing candidate for nomination or election to a county, municipal, or school
35.6district office may request a recount of the votes cast for nomination or election to that
35.7office if the difference between the vote cast for that candidate and for a winning candidate
35.8for nomination or election is ten votes or less, and the total number of votes cast for the
35.9nomination or election of all candidates is no more than 400. In cases of offices where two
35.10or more seats are being filled from among all the candidates for the office, the ten-vote
35.11difference is between the elected candidate with the fewest votes and the candidate with
35.12the most votes from among the candidates who were not elected.
35.13(c) Candidates for county offices shall file a written request for the recount with the
35.14county auditor. Candidates for municipal or school district offices shall file a written
35.15request with the municipal or school district clerk as appropriate. All requests must be
35.16filed during the time for notice of contest of the primary or election for which a recount
35.17is sought.
35.18(d) Upon receipt of a request made pursuant to this section, the county auditor
35.19shall recount the votes for a county office at the expense of the county, the governing
35.20body of the municipality shall recount the votes for a municipal office at the expense of
35.21the municipality, and the school board of the school district shall recount the votes for a
35.22school district office at the expense of the school district.
35.23    Subd. 2. Discretionary candidate recounts. (a) A losing candidate for nomination
35.24or election to a county, municipal, or school district office may request a recount in the
35.25manner provided in this section at the candidate's own expense when the vote difference
35.26is greater than the difference required by subdivision 1, paragraphs (a) to (d). The votes
35.27must be manually recounted as provided in this section if the requesting candidate files
35.28with the county auditor, municipal clerk, or school district clerk a bond, cash, or surety in
35.29an amount set by the governing body of the jurisdiction or the school board of the school
35.30district for the payment of the recount expenses.
35.31    (b) The requesting candidate may provide the filing officer with a list of up to three
35.32precincts that are to be recounted first and may waive the balance of the recount after these
35.33precincts have been counted. If the candidate provides a list, the recount official must
35.34determine the expenses for those precincts in the manner provided by this paragraph.
35.35    (c) If the winner of the race is changed by the optional recount, the cost of the
35.36recount must be paid by the jurisdiction conducting the recount.
36.1    (d) If a result of the vote counting in the manual recount is different from the result
36.2of the vote counting reported on election day by a margin greater than the standard for
36.3acceptable performance of voting systems provided in section 206.89, subdivision 4, the
36.4cost of the recount must be paid by the jurisdiction conducting the recount.
36.5    Subd. 3. Discretionary ballot question recounts. A recount may be conducted
36.6for a ballot question when the difference between the votes for and the votes against the
36.7question is less than or equal to the difference provided in subdivision 1. A recount may
36.8be requested by any person eligible to vote on the ballot question. A written request for a
36.9recount must be filed with the filing officer of the county, municipality, or school district
36.10placing the question on the ballot and must be accompanied by a petition containing the
36.11signatures of 25 voters eligible to vote on the question. Upon receipt of a written request
36.12when the difference between the votes for and the votes against the question is less than or
36.13equal to the difference provided in subdivision 1, the county auditor shall recount the votes
36.14for a county question at the expense of the county, the governing body of the municipality
36.15shall recount the votes for a municipal question at the expense of the municipality, and the
36.16school board of the school district shall recount the votes for a school district question at
36.17the expense of the school district. If the difference between the votes for and the votes
36.18against the question is greater than the difference provided in subdivision 1, the person
36.19requesting the recount shall also file with the filing officer of the county, municipality, or
36.20school district a bond, cash, or surety in an amount set by the appropriate governing body
36.21for the payment of recount expenses. The written request, petition, and any bond, cash,
36.22or surety required must be filed during the time for notice of contest for the election for
36.23which the recount is requested.
36.24    Subd. 4. Expenses. In the case of a question, a person, or a candidate requesting a
36.25discretionary recount, is responsible for the following expenses: the compensation of the
36.26secretary of state, or designees, and any election judge, municipal clerk, county auditor,
36.27administrator, or other personnel who participate in the recount; necessary supplies and
36.28travel related to the recount; the compensation of the appropriate canvassing board and
36.29costs of preparing for the canvass of recount results; and any attorney fees incurred in
36.30connection with the recount by the governing body responsible for the recount.
36.31    Subd. 5. Notice of contest. Except as otherwise provided in section 209.021, the
36.32time for notice of contest of a nomination or election to an office which is recounted
36.33pursuant to this section begins to run upon certification of the results of the recount by the
36.34appropriate canvassing board or governing body.

36.35    Sec. 7. [204E.06] NOTICE.
37.1Within 24 hours after determining that an automatic recount is required or within 48
37.2hours of receipt of a written request for a recount and filing of a security deposit if one is
37.3required, the official in charge of the recount shall send notice to the candidates for the
37.4office to be recounted and the county auditor of each county wholly or partially within
37.5the election district. The notice must include the date, starting time, and location of the
37.6recount, the office to be recounted, and the name of the official performing the recount.
37.7The notice must state that the recount is open to the public and, in case of an automatic
37.8recount, that the losing candidate may waive the recount.

37.9    Sec. 8. [204E.07] SECURING BALLOTS AND MATERIALS.
37.10(a) The official who has custody of the voted ballots is responsible for keeping
37.11secure all election materials. Registration cards of voters who registered on election day
37.12may be processed as required by rule. All other election materials must be kept secure by
37.13precinct as returned by the election judges until all recounts have been completed and until
37.14the time for contest of election has expired.
37.15(b) Any candidate for an office to be recounted may have all materials relating
37.16to the election, including but not limited to polling place rosters, voter registration
37.17applications, accepted absentee ballot envelopes, rejected absentee ballot envelopes,
37.18applications for absentee ballots, precinct summary statements, printouts from voting
37.19machines, and precinct incident logs inspected before the canvassing board may certify
37.20the results of the recount.

37.21    Sec. 9. [204E.08] FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT.
37.22All recounts must be accessible to the public. In a multicounty recount the secretary
37.23of state may locate the recount in one or more of the election jurisdictions or at the site of
37.24the canvassing board. Each election jurisdiction where a recount is conducted shall make
37.25available, without charge to the recount official or body conducting the recount, adequate
37.26accessible space and all necessary equipment and facilities.

37.27    Sec. 10. [204E.09] GENERAL PROCEDURES.
37.28At the opening of a recount the recount official or legal adviser shall present the
37.29procedures contained in this section for the recount. The custodian of the ballots shall
37.30make available to the recount official the precinct summary statements, the precinct boxes
37.31or the sealed containers of voted ballots, and any other election materials requested by the
37.32recount official. If the recount official needs to leave the room for any reason, the recount
37.33official must designate a deputy recount official to preside during the recount official's
38.1absence. A recount official must be in the room at all times. The containers of voted ballots
38.2must be unsealed and resealed within public view. No ballots or election materials may be
38.3handled by candidates, their representatives, or members of the public. There must be an
38.4area of the room from which the public may observe the recount. Cell phones and video
38.5cameras may be used in this public viewing area, as long as their use is not disruptive. The
38.6recount official shall arrange the counting of the ballots so that the candidates and their
38.7representatives may observe the ballots as they are recounted. Candidates may each have
38.8one representative observe the sorting of each precinct. One additional representative per
38.9candidate may observe the ballots when they have been sorted and are being counted
38.10pursuant to section 204E.10. Candidates may have additional representatives in the public
38.11viewing area of the room. If other election materials are handled or examined by the
38.12recount officials, the candidates and their representatives may observe them. The recount
38.13official shall ensure that public observation does not interfere with the counting of the
38.14ballots. The recount official shall prepare a summary of the recount vote by precinct.

38.15    Sec. 11. [204E.10] COUNTING AND CHALLENGING BALLOTS.
38.16    Subdivision 1. Breaks in counting process. Recount officials may not take a break
38.17for a meal or for the day prior to the completion of the sorting, counting, review, and
38.18labeling of challenges, and secure storage of the ballots for any precinct. All challenged
38.19ballots must be stored securely during breaks in the counting process.
38.20    Subd. 2. Sorting ballots. Ballots must be recounted by precinct. The recount
38.21official shall open the sealed container of ballots and recount them in accordance with
38.22section 204C.22. The recount official must review each ballot and sort the ballots into
38.23piles based upon the recount official's determination as to which candidate, if any, the
38.24voter intended to vote for: one pile for each candidate that is the subject of the recount
38.25and one pile for all other ballots.
38.26    Subd. 3. Challenge. During the sorting, a candidate or candidate's representative
38.27may challenge the ballot if he or she disagrees with the recount official's determination of
38.28for whom the ballot should be counted and whether there are identifying marks on the
38.29ballot. At a recount of a ballot question, the manner in which a ballot is counted may
38.30be challenged by the person who requested the recount or that person's representative.
38.31Challenges may not be automatic or frivolous and the challenger must state the basis
38.32for the challenge pursuant to section 204C.22. Challenged ballots must be placed into
38.33separate piles, one for ballots challenged by each candidate. Only the canvassing board
38.34with responsibility to certify the results of the recount has the authority to declare a
38.35challenge to be "frivolous."
39.1    Subd. 4. Counting ballots. Once ballots have been sorted, the recount officials must
39.2count the piles using the stacking method described in section 204C.21. A candidate or
39.3candidate's representative may immediately request to have a pile of 25 counted a second
39.4time if there is not agreement as to the number of votes in the pile.
39.5    Subd. 5. Reviewing and labeling challenged ballots. After the ballots from
39.6a precinct have been counted, the recount official may review the challenged ballots
39.7with the candidate or the candidate's representative. The candidate's representative may
39.8choose to withdraw any challenges previously made. The precinct name, the reason
39.9for the challenge, and the name of the person challenging the ballot or the candidate
39.10that person represents, and a sequential number must be marked on the back of each
39.11remaining challenged ballot before it is placed in an envelope marked "Challenged
39.12Ballots." After the count of votes for the precinct has been determined, all ballots except
39.13the challenged ballots must be resealed in the ballot envelopes and returned with the other
39.14election materials to the custodian of the ballots. The recount official may make copies
39.15of the challenged ballots. After the count of votes for all precincts has been determined
39.16during that day of counting, the challenged ballot envelope must be sealed and kept secure
39.17for presentation to the canvassing board.

39.18    Sec. 12. [204E.11] RESULTS OF RECOUNT; TIE VOTES.
39.19    Subdivision 1. Certification of results. The recount official shall present the
39.20summary statement of the recount and any challenged ballots to the canvassing board.
39.21The candidate or candidate's representative who made the challenge may present the
39.22basis for the challenge to the canvassing board. The canvassing board shall rule on the
39.23challenged ballots and incorporate the results into the summary statement. The canvassing
39.24board shall certify the results of the recount. Challenged ballots must be returned to the
39.25election official who has custody of the ballots.
39.26    Subd. 2. Tie votes. In case of a tie vote for nomination or election to an office, the
39.27canvassing board with the responsibility for declaring the results for that office shall
39.28determine the tie by lot.

39.29    Sec. 13. [204E.12] SECURITY DEPOSIT.
39.30When a bond, cash, or surety for recount expenses is required by section 204E.04
39.31or 204E.05, the governing body or recount official shall set the amount of the security
39.32deposit at an amount which will cover expected recount expenses. In multicounty districts,
39.33the secretary of state shall set the amount taking into consideration the expenses of the
39.34election jurisdictions in the district and the expenses of the secretary of state. The security
40.1deposit must be filed during the period for requesting an administrative recount. In
40.2determining the expenses of the recount, only the actual recount expenditures incurred
40.3by the recount official and the election jurisdiction in conducting the recount may be
40.4included. General office and operating costs may not be taken into account.

40.5    Sec. 14. REVISOR'S INSTRUCTION.
40.6Except where otherwise amended by this article, the revisor of statutes shall
40.7renumber each section of Minnesota Statutes listed in column A with the number listed in
40.8column B. The revisor shall make necessary cross-reference changes consistent with the
40.9renumbering.
40.10
Column A
Column B
40.11
204C.34
204E.11, subdivision 2
40.12
204C.35
204E.04
40.13
204C.36
204E.05

40.14    Sec. 15. REPEALER.
40.15Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 204C.34; 204C.35; 204C.36; and 204C.361,
40.16and Minnesota Rules, parts 8235.0200; 8235.0300; 8235.0400; 8235.0600; 8235.0700;
40.178235.0800; 8235.1100; and 8235.1200, are repealed.

40.18    Sec. 16. EFFECTIVE DATE.
40.19This article is effective June 1, 2011, and applies to recounts conducted on or after
40.20that date.
feedback