Bill Text: NY A05312 | 2017-2018 | General Assembly | Introduced
Bill Title: Establishes the New York votes act; relates to automatic voter registration, pre-registration, transfer of registration, access to voter registration records and moving deadlines (Part A); polling place registration (Part B); qualified voter absentee (Part C); completing and filing watcher certifications, challenges of voter qualifications (Part D); qualified absentee voters (Part E); the completing and filing watcher certificates and the form and manner of challenges of voter qualifications (Part F); mandatory core curriculum and language access (Part G); early voting (Part H); voting by convicted felons (Part I); voting and disasters (Part J); primary elections and deadlines for military ballots; and filling of vacancies (Part K); and reimbursement of counties and the city of New York of certain additional costs associated with implementation and administration of the New York votes act (Part L).
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 34-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2018-01-03 - referred to election law [A05312 Detail]
Download: New_York-2017-A05312-Introduced.html
STATE OF NEW YORK ________________________________________________________________________ 5312 2017-2018 Regular Sessions IN ASSEMBLY February 8, 2017 ___________ Introduced by M. of A. CUSICK, KAVANAGH, WALKER, O'DONNELL, ABINANTI, GALEF, BUCHWALD, LIFTON, ZEBROWSKI, CARROLL -- (at request of the Department of Law) -- read once and referred to the Committee on Election Law AN ACT to amend the election law, in relation to establishing an elec- tronic registration process integrated within designated agency appli- cations (Part A); to amend the election law, in relation to establish- ing an electronic personal voter registration and absentee ballot application process (Part B); to amend the election law, in relation to student voting, transfer of registrations, affidavit ballots, moving deadlines and access to records (Part C); to amend the election law, in relation to allowing for polling place voter registration for any qualified person who is not registered to vote (Part D); to amend the election law, in relation to qualified absentee voters and to repeal certain provisions of such law relating thereto (Part E); to amend the election law, in relation to completing and filing watcher certificates and the form and manner of challenges of voter qualifica- tions (Part F); to amend the election law, in relation to mandatory core curriculum and language access; and to amend the election law, in relation to mandatory training curriculum for election commissioners, key staff of boards of elections and poll workers (Part G); to amend the election law, in relation to early voting (Part H); to amend the election law and the correction law, in relation to voting by convicted felons (Part I); to amend the election law, in relation to additional days of voting as a result of emergencies (Part J); to amend the election law, in relation to primary elections and amending certain deadlines to facilitate the timely transmission of ballots to military voters stationed overseas and in relation to date of primary elections; and to amend the public officers law, in relation to fill- ing vacancies in elective offices (Part K); and to amend the election law, in relation to the reimbursement to counties and the city of New York of certain additional costs associated with implementation and administration of the New York votes act (Part L) EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets [] is old law to be omitted. LBD07824-05-7A. 5312 2 The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem- bly, do enact as follows: 1 Section 1. This act enacts into law major components of legislation 2 which are necessary to enact the New York votes act. Each component is 3 wholly contained within a Part identified as Parts A through L. The 4 effective date for each particular provision contained within such Part 5 is set forth in the last section of such Part. Any provision in any 6 section contained within a Part, including the effective date of the 7 Part, which makes reference to a section "of this act", when used in 8 connection with that particular component, shall be deemed to mean and 9 refer to the corresponding section of the Part in which it is found. 10 Section four of this act sets forth the general effective date of this 11 act. 12 § 2. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "New York votes 13 act". 14 PART A 15 Section 1. Article 5 of the election law is amended by adding a new 16 title 9 to read as follows: 17 TITLE IX 18 AUTOMATIC ELECTRONIC VOTER REGISTRATION PROCESS 19 Section 5-900. Integrated personal voter registration application 20 required. 21 5-902. Automatic reinstatement after forfeiture. 22 5-904. Failure to provide exemplar signature not to prevent 23 registration. 24 5-906. Presumption of innocent authorized error. 25 5-908. Forms. 26 § 5-900. Integrated personal voter registration application required. 27 1. In addition to any other method of voter registration provided for by 28 this chapter, state and local agencies designated in subdivision ten of 29 this section shall provide to the state board of elections voter regis- 30 tration qualification information associated with each person who 31 submits an application for services at such agency, or who notifies the 32 agency of a change of address or name. Such designated agencies shall 33 ensure agency applications substantially include all of the elements 34 required by section 5-210 of this article, including the appropriate 35 attestation, so that persons completing such applications shall be able 36 to also submit an application to register to vote through the electronic 37 voter registration transmittal system. For purposes of this section, 38 "agency" shall mean any state or local agency, department, division, 39 office, institution or other entity designated by the state board of 40 elections pursuant to subdivision ten of this section. 41 2. For each application submitted to the agency, whether electron- 42 ically or on paper, the agency shall transmit to the state board of 43 elections through an interface with the electronic voter registration 44 transmittal system established and maintained by the state board of 45 elections that portion of the application that includes voter registra- 46 tion information. The state board of elections shall electronically 47 forward such application to the applicable board of elections of each 48 county or the city of New York for filing, processing and verification 49 consistent with this chapter. 50 3. An integrated voter registration form submitted to an agency in 51 paper format shall be transmitted to the state board of electionsA. 5312 3 1 through an electronic voter registration transmittal system by convert- 2 ing the paper form to an image file or a portable document format file 3 which shall thereafter be deemed the original form for voter registra- 4 tion and enrollment purposes. The agency shall retain the complete 5 original paper application for no less than two years. The transmittal 6 of the converted paper application may include or be accompanied by data 7 elements and transmittal information as required by the rules and regu- 8 lations of the state board of elections. 9 4. An integrated voter registration application submitted to an agency 10 in an electronic format shall be transmitted to the state board of 11 elections through the electronic voter registration transmittal system 12 and shall include all of the voter registration data elements, including 13 electronic signature, as applicable, and record of attestation of the 14 accuracy of the voter registration information and any relevant document 15 images. 16 5. Information from the voter relevant to both voter registration and 17 the agency application shall be entered by the voter only once upon an 18 application. 19 6. The agency shall redact or remove from the completed integrated 20 application to be transmitted to the state board of elections any infor- 21 mation solely applicable to the agency application. 22 6-a. Information concerning the citizenship status of individuals, 23 when collected and transmitted pursuant to subdivision one of this 24 section, shall not be retained, used or shared for any other purpose 25 except as may be required by law. 26 7. A voter shall be able to decline to register to vote using an inte- 27 grated application by selecting a single check box, or equivalent, which 28 shall read "I DECLINE USE OF THIS FORM FOR VOTER REGISTRATION PURPOSES. 29 DO NOT FORWARD MY INFORMATION TO THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS". 30 8. The voter shall be able to sign the voter registration application 31 and the agency application by means of a single manual or electronic 32 signature unless the agency requires more than one signature for other 33 agency purposes. 34 9. No application for voter registration shall be submitted if the 35 applicant declines registration or fails to sign the integrated applica- 36 tion, whether on paper or online. 37 10. Designated agencies for purposes of this section shall include all 38 agencies designated as voter registration agencies in sections 5-211 and 39 5-212 of this article, as well as any other agency designated by the 40 state board of elections. Any such designated agency shall take all 41 actions that are necessary and proper for the implementation of this 42 section, including facilitating technological capabilities to allow 43 transmission of data through an interface with the electronic voter 44 registration transmittal system in a secure manner. 45 11. Upon the release from a state correctional facility of any person 46 serving a sentence of imprisonment on a felony conviction or any time 47 assessment referenced in subdivision two, three or four of section 5-106 48 of this article, the department of corrections and community supervision 49 shall provide such person a voter registration form, pursuant to section 50 seventy-five of the correction law and such form, if possible, shall be 51 integrated with the release documents normally presented and signed upon 52 release. The department of corrections and community supervision shall 53 submit relevant information for such person through the voter registra- 54 tion transmittal system and notify the board of elections of the 55 person's discharge.A. 5312 4 1 12. The state board of elections shall promulgate rules and regu- 2 lations for the creation and administration of an integrated electronic 3 voter registration process as provided for by this section. 4 § 5-902. Automatic reinstatement after forfeiture. Any person whose 5 voter registration is canceled pursuant to section 5-106 of this article 6 shall be automatically reinstated as a voter upon becoming eligible, 7 unless such voter shall affirmatively decline such reinstatement. The 8 department of corrections and community supervision shall notify the 9 board of elections through the voter registration transmittal system of 10 the date when the forfeiture of voting rights shall end and provide an 11 updated address for such person, if known. If no new address for such 12 voter is available at that time, such voter shall be reinstated at the 13 address of the previously canceled registration; provided, however, if 14 the mailed notification of such registration shall be returned undeliv- 15 erable to the board of elections, such returned mail shall be processed 16 in accordance with this article. 17 § 5-904. Failure to provide exemplar signature not to prevent regis- 18 tration. If a voter registration exemplar signature is not provided by 19 an applicant who submits a voter registration application pursuant to 20 this title and such signature exemplar is not otherwise available from 21 the statewide voter registration database or a state or local agency, 22 the local board of elections shall, absent another reason to reject the 23 application, proceed to register and, as applicable, enroll the appli- 24 cant. Within ten days of such action, the board of elections shall send 25 a standard form promulgated by the state board of elections to the voter 26 whose record lacks an exemplar signature, requiring such voter to submit 27 a signature for identification purposes. The voter shall submit to the 28 board of elections a voter registration exemplar signature by any one of 29 the following methods: in person, by mail with return postage paid 30 provided by the board of elections, by electronic mail, or by electronic 31 upload to the board of elections through the electronic voter registra- 32 tion transmittal system. If such voter does not provide the required 33 exemplar signature, when the voter appears to vote the voter shall be 34 entitled to vote in the same manner as a voter with a notation indicat- 35 ing the voter's identity has not yet been verified in the manner 36 provided by section 8-302 of this chapter. 37 § 5-906. Presumption of innocent authorized error. 1. If a person who 38 is ineligible to vote becomes registered to vote pursuant to section 39 5-902 of this title, that person's registration shall be presumed to 40 have been effected with official authorization and not the fault of that 41 person. Such presumption may be rebutted with evidence of knowing and 42 willful intent to falsely register to vote. 43 2. If a person who is ineligible becomes registered to vote pursuant 44 to section 5-902 of this title and either votes or attempts to vote in 45 an election held after the effective date of the person's registration, 46 that person shall be presumed to have acted with official authorization 47 and shall not be guilty of illegal voting or illegally attempting to 48 vote. Such presumption may be rebutted with evidence of knowing and 49 willful intent to vote or attempt to vote with knowledge that such 50 person is not qualified or entitled to vote. 51 § 5-908. Forms. The state board of elections shall promulgate rules 52 and regulations to implement this title. All agency forms and notices 53 required by this title shall be approved by the state board of 54 elections. All applications and notices for use by a board of elections 55 pursuant to this title shall be promulgated by the state board of 56 elections, and no addition or alternation to such forms by a board ofA. 5312 5 1 elections shall be made without approval of the state board of 2 elections. 3 § 2. This act shall take effect on the earlier occurrence of: (i) two 4 years after it shall have become a law; provided, however, the state 5 board of elections shall be authorized to implement necessary rules and 6 regulations and to take steps required to implement this act immediate- 7 ly; or (ii) five days after the date of certification by the state board 8 of elections that the information technology infrastructure to substan- 9 tially implement this act is functional. Provided, further that the 10 state board of elections shall notify the legislative bill drafting 11 commission upon the occurrence of the enactment of the legislation 12 provided for in this act in order that the commission may maintain an 13 accurate and timely effective data base of the official text of the laws 14 of the state of New York in furtherance of effectuating the provisions 15 of section 44 of the legislative law and section 70-b of the public 16 officers law. 17 PART B 18 Section 1. Article 5 of the election law is amended by adding a new 19 title 8 to read as follows: 20 TITLE VIII 21 ELECTRONIC PERSONAL VOTER REGISTRATION AND 22 ABSENTEE BALLOT APPLICATION PROCESS 23 Section 5-800. Electronic voter registration transmittal system. 24 5-802. Online voter registration application. 25 5-803. Online absentee ballot application. 26 5-804. Failure to provide exemplar signature not to prevent 27 registration. 28 § 5-800. Electronic voter registration transmittal system. In addition 29 to any other means of voter registration provided for by this chapter, 30 the state board of elections shall establish and maintain an electronic 31 voter registration transmittal system through which applicants may apply 32 to register to vote online. The state board of elections shall elec- 33 tronically transmit such applications to the applicable board of 34 elections of each county or the city of New York for filing, processing 35 and verification consistent with this chapter. In accordance with tech- 36 nical specifications provided by the state board of elections, each 37 board of elections shall maintain a voter registration system capable of 38 receiving and processing voter registration application information, 39 including electronic signatures, from the electronic voter registration 40 transmittal system established by the state board of elections. Notwith- 41 standing any other inconsistent provision of this chapter, applications 42 filed using such system shall be considered filed with the applicable 43 board of elections on the calendar date the application is initially 44 transmitted by the voter through the electronic voter registration tran- 45 smittal system. 46 § 5-802. Online voter registration application. 1. A voter shall be 47 able to apply to register to vote using a personal online voter regis- 48 tration application submitted through the electronic voter registration 49 transmittal system when the voter: 50 (a) completes an electronic voter registration application promulgated 51 by the state board of elections which shall include all of the voter 52 registration information required by section 5-210 of this article; and 53 (b) affirms, subject to penalty of perjury, by means of electronic or 54 manual signature, that the information contained in the voter registra-A. 5312 6 1 tion application is true and that the applicant meets all of the quali- 2 fications to become a registered voter; and 3 (c) consents to the use of an electronic copy of the individual's 4 manual signature that is in the custody of the department of motor vehi- 5 cles, the state board of elections, or other agency designated by 6 sections 5-211 or 5-212 of this title, as the individual's voter regis- 7 tration exemplar signature, or provides such a signature by direct 8 upload in a manner that complies with the New York state electronic 9 signature and records act and the rules and regulations promulgated by 10 the state board of elections. 11 2. The board of elections shall provide the personal online voter 12 registration application in any language required by the federal Voting 13 Rights Act of 1965 (52 U.S.C. Sec. 10503) in any county in the state. 14 3. The online voter registration application process shall provide 15 reasonable accommodations to improve accessibility for persons with 16 disabilities, and shall be compatible for use with standard online 17 accessibility assistance tools for persons with visual, physical or 18 perceptive disabilities. 19 4. The state board of elections shall promulgate rules and regulations 20 for the creation and administration of an online voter registration and 21 absentee ballot application system pursuant to this section. 22 § 5-803. Online absentee ballot application. As part of, or in addi- 23 tion to, the electronic voter registration transmittal system estab- 24 lished pursuant to section 5-800 of this title, the state board of 25 elections also shall provide a means by which qualified voters seeking 26 to vote by absentee ballot can access, complete and submit online an 27 absentee ballot application. 28 § 5-804. Failure to provide exemplar signature not to prevent regis- 29 tration. If a voter registration exemplar signature is not provided by 30 an applicant who submits a voter registration application pursuant to 31 this title and such signature exemplar is not otherwise available from 32 the statewide voter registration database or a state or local agency, 33 the local board of elections shall, absent another reason to reject the 34 application, proceed to register and, as applicable, enroll the appli- 35 cant. Within ten days of such action, the board of elections shall send 36 a standard form promulgated by the state board of elections to the voter 37 whose record lacks an exemplar signature, requiring such voter to submit 38 a signature for identification purposes. The voter shall submit to the 39 board of elections a voter registration exemplar signature by any one of 40 the following methods: in person, by mail with return postage paid 41 provided by the board of elections, by electronic mail, or by electronic 42 upload to the board of elections through the electronic voter registra- 43 tion transmittal system. If such voter does not provide the required 44 exemplar signature, when the voter appears to vote the voter shall be 45 entitled to vote in the same manner as a voter with a notation indicat- 46 ing the voter's identity has not yet been verified in the manner 47 provided by section 8-302 of this chapter. 48 § 2. This act shall take effect on the earlier occurrence of: (i) two 49 years after it shall have become a law; provided, however, the state 50 board of elections shall be authorized to implement necessary rules and 51 regulations and to take steps required to implement this act immediate- 52 ly; or (ii) five days after the date of certification by the state board 53 of elections that the information technology infrastructure to substan- 54 tially implement this act is functional. Provided, further that the 55 state board of elections shall notify the legislative bill drafting 56 commission upon the occurrence of the enactment of the legislationA. 5312 7 1 provided for in this act in order that the commission may maintain an 2 accurate and timely effective data base of the official text of the laws 3 of the state of New York in furtherance of effectuating the provisions 4 of section 44 of the legislative law and section 70-b of the public 5 officers law. 6 PART C 7 Section 1. Section 5-104 of the election law is amended by adding a 8 new subdivision 3 to read as follows: 9 3. The provisions set forth in subdivision one of this section regard- 10 ing the right of students to register and vote shall be interpreted in a 11 manner consistent with the constitutional requirement that each citizen 12 must be permitted to vote in that community which is the "locus of ... 13 primary concern" to that citizen at the time of the election. According- 14 ly, a student attending a college or university in this state shall be 15 permitted to retain his or her parental residence for voting purposes if 16 the parental community remains the locus of the student's primary 17 concern or, in the alternative, a student shall be permitted to register 18 and vote from his or her residence within the college or university 19 community if he or she regards the college or university as the communi- 20 ty of primary concern. 21 § 2. Subdivisions 1 and 6 of section 5-208 of the election law, subdi- 22 vision 1 as amended by chapter 200 of the laws of 1996 and subdivision 6 23 as added by chapter 659 of the laws of 1994, are amended to read as 24 follows: 25 1. The board of elections shall transfer the registration and enroll- 26 ment of any voter for whom it receives a notice of change of address to 27 another address in the [same county or city] state, or for any voter who 28 [casts] submits a ballot in an affidavit ballot envelope which sets 29 forth such a new address. Such notices shall include, but not be limit- 30 ed to, notices received from any state agency which conducts a voter 31 registration program pursuant to the provisions of sections 5-211 and 32 5-212 of this title or which transmits information, that the voter has 33 notified such agency of a change of address in the [same city or county] 34 state unless the voter has indicated that such change of address is not 35 for voter registration purposes, notices of change of address from the 36 United States Postal Service through the National Change of Address 37 System, any notices of a forwarding address on mail sent to a voter by 38 the board of elections and returned by the postal service, national or 39 state voter registration forms, confirmation mailing response cards, 40 United States Postal Service notices to correspondents of change of 41 address, applications for registration from persons already registered 42 [in such county or city], or any other notices to correspondents sent to 43 the board of elections by such voters. 44 6. If a notice sent pursuant to [subdivision five of] this section is 45 returned [by the postal service] as undeliverable and without a forward- 46 ing address, the board of elections shall return the registration of 47 such voter to the original address, send such voter a confirmation 48 notice pursuant to the provisions of subdivision one of section 5-712 of 49 this [title] article and place such voter in inactive status. 50 § 3. Subdivision 3 of section 5-208 of the election law, as added by 51 chapter 659 of the laws of 1994, is amended to read as follows: 52 3. If such a notice is received at least [twenty] ten days before a 53 primary, special or general election, such change of address must be 54 completed before such election. If such a notice is not received atA. 5312 8 1 least ten days before a primary, special or general election, then a 2 voter may vote in accordance with subdivision three of section 8-302 of 3 this chapter. 4 § 4. Subdivision 1 of section 4-117 of the election law, as amended by 5 chapter 44 of the laws of 2016, is amended to read as follows: 6 1. The board of elections, [between August first and August fifth of7each year] not less than sixty-five days nor more than seventy days 8 before the primary election in each year, shall send by mail on which is 9 endorsed such language designated by the state board of elections to 10 ensure postal authorities do not forward such mail but return it to the 11 board of elections with forwarding information, when it cannot be deliv- 12 ered as addressed and which contains a request that any such mail 13 received for persons not residing at the address be dropped back in the 14 mail, a communication, in a form approved by the state board of 15 elections, to every registered voter who has been registered without a 16 change of address since the beginning of such year, except that the 17 board of elections shall not be required to send such communications to 18 voters in inactive status. The communication shall notify the voter of 19 the days and hours of the ensuing primary and general elections, the 20 place where he or she appears by his or her registration records to be 21 entitled to vote, the fact that voters who have moved or will have moved 22 from the address where they were last registered must [re-register or,23that if such move was to another address in the same county or city,24that such voter may] either notify the board of elections of his or her 25 new address or vote by paper ballot at the polling place for his or her 26 new address even if such voter has not re-registered, or otherwise noti- 27 fied the board of elections of the change of address. If the location of 28 the polling place for the voter's election district has been moved, the 29 communication shall contain the following legend in bold type: "YOUR 30 POLLING PLACE HAS BEEN CHANGED. YOU NOW VOTE AT..........". The commu- 31 nication shall also indicate whether the polling place is accessible to 32 physically disabled voters, that a voter who will be out of the city or 33 county on the day of the primary or general election or a voter who is 34 ill or physically disabled may obtain an absentee ballot, that a phys- 35 ically disabled voter whose polling place is not accessible may request 36 that his or her registration record be moved to an election district 37 which has a polling place which is accessible, the phone number to call 38 for applications to move a registration record or for absentee ballot 39 applications, the phone number to call for the location of registration 40 and polling places, the phone number to call to indicate that the voter 41 is willing to serve on election day as an election inspector, poll 42 clerk, interpreter or in other capacities, the phone number to call to 43 obtain an application for registration by mail, and such other informa- 44 tion concerning the elections or registration as the board may include. 45 In lieu of sending such communication to every registered voter, the 46 board of elections may send a single communication to a household 47 containing more than one registered voter, provided that the names of 48 all such voters appear as part of the address on such communication. 49 § 5. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 5-400 of the election 50 law, as amended by chapter 659 of the laws of 1994, is amended to read 51 as follows: 52 (a) Moved his or her residence outside the [city or county in which he53is registered] state. 54 § 6. Paragraphs (b), (c) and (d) of subdivision 2 of section 5-400 of 55 the election law, paragraphs (b) and (d) as added by section 20 andA. 5312 9 1 paragraph (c) as added and paragraph (d) as relettered by section 22 of 2 chapter 659 of the laws of 1994, are amended to read as follows: 3 (b) A notice that the registrant has moved to an address outside the 4 [city or county] state which is signed by the registrant and sent to the 5 board of elections. 6 (c) A notice signed by the registrant which states that such regis- 7 trant has moved to an address outside the [city or county] state and 8 that such change of address is for voter registration purposes. 9 (d) A notice from a board of elections or other voter registration 10 officer or agency that such person has registered to vote from an 11 address outside [such city or county] the state. 12 § 7. Subdivision 3 of section 5-210 of the election law, as amended by 13 chapter 255 of the laws of 2015, is amended to read as follows: 14 3. Completed application forms, when received by any board of 15 elections and, with respect to application forms promulgated by the 16 federal election commission, when received by the state board of 17 elections, or showing a dated cancellation mark of the United States 18 Postal Service or contained in an envelope showing such a dated cancel- 19 lation mark which is not later than the [twenty-fifth] tenth day before 20 the next ensuing primary, general or special election, and received no 21 later than the [twentieth] fifth day before such election, or delivered 22 in person to such board of elections not later than the tenth day before 23 a special election, shall entitle the applicant to vote in such 24 election, if he or she is otherwise qualified, provided, however, such 25 applicant shall not vote on a voting machine until his or her identity 26 is verified. Any board of elections receiving an application form from a 27 person who does not reside in its jurisdiction but who does reside else- 28 where in the state of New York, shall forthwith forward such application 29 form to the proper board of elections. Each board of elections shall 30 make an entry on each such form of the date it is received by such 31 board. 32 § 8. The opening paragraph of section 5-211 of the election law, as 33 amended by chapter 265 of the laws of 2013, is amended to read as 34 follows: 35 Each agency designated as a participating agency under the provisions 36 of this section shall implement and administer a program of distribution 37 of voter registration forms pursuant to the provisions of this section. 38 The following offices which provide public assistance and/or provide 39 state funded programs primarily engaged in providing services to persons 40 with disabilities are hereby designated as voter registration agencies: 41 designated as the state agencies which provide public assistance are the 42 office of children and family services, the office of temporary and 43 disability assistance and the department of health. Also designated as 44 public assistance agencies are all agencies of local government that 45 provide such assistance. Designated as state agencies that provide 46 programs primarily engaged in providing services to people with disabil- 47 ities are the department of labor, office for the aging, division of 48 veterans' affairs, office of mental health, office of vocational and 49 educational services for individuals with disabilities, commission on 50 quality of care for the mentally disabled, office [of mental retardation51and] for people with developmental disabilities, commission for the 52 blind, office of alcoholism and substance abuse services, the office of 53 the advocate for the disabled and all offices which administer programs 54 established or funded by such agencies. Additional [state] agencies 55 designated as voter registration offices are the department of state 56 [and], the division of workers' compensation, the state university ofA. 5312 10 1 New York, the city university of New York, all public housing authori- 2 ties listed in article thirteen of the public housing law, the depart- 3 ment of corrections and community supervision and the New York division 4 of military and naval affairs. Such agencies shall be required to offer 5 voter registration forms to persons upon initial application for 6 services, renewal or recertification for services and change of address 7 relating to such services. Such agencies shall also be responsible for 8 providing assistance to applicants in completing voter registration 9 forms, receiving and transmitting the completed application form from 10 all applicants who wish to have such form transmitted to the appropriate 11 board of elections. The state board of elections shall, together with 12 representatives of the department of defense, develop and implement 13 procedures for including recruitment offices of the armed forces of the 14 United States as voter registration offices when such offices are so 15 designated by federal law. The state board shall also make request of 16 the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service to include 17 applications for registration by mail with any materials which are given 18 to new citizens. [All institutions of the state university of New York19and the city university of New York, shall, at the beginning of the20school year, and again in January of a year in which the president of21the United States is to be elected, provide an application for registra-22tion to each student in each such institution.] The state board of 23 elections may, by regulation, grant a waiver from any or all of the 24 requirements of this section to any office or program of an agency, if 25 it determines that it is not feasible for such office or program to 26 administer such requirement. 27 § 9. Subdivision 3 of section 5-213 of the election law, as amended by 28 chapter 200 of the laws of 1996, is amended to read as follows: 29 3. The board of elections shall restore the registration of any such 30 voter to active status if such voter notifies the board of elections 31 that he resides at the address from which he is registered, or the board 32 finds that such voter has validly signed a designating or nominating 33 petition which states that he resides at such address, or if such voter 34 casts a ballot in an affidavit envelope which states that he resides at 35 such address, or if the board receives notice that such voter has voted 36 in an election conducted with registration lists prepared pursuant to 37 the provisions of section 5-612 of this article. If any such notifica- 38 tion or information is received [twenty] ten days or more before a 39 primary, special or general election, the voter's name must be restored 40 to active status for such election. 41 § 10. Subdivision 3 of section 5-304 of the election law, as amended 42 by chapter 90 of the laws of 1991, is amended to read as follows: 43 3. A change of enrollment received by the board of elections, showing 44 a dated cancellation mark of the United States Postal Service or 45 contained in an envelope showing such cancellation mark which is dated, 46 not later than the [twenty-fifth] one hundred twentieth day before the 47 [general election shall be deposited in a sealed enrollment box, which48shall not be opened until the first Tuesday following such general49election. Such change of enrollment shall be then removed and entered as50provided in this article] next ensuing primary, general or special 51 election or delivered in person to such county board of elections not 52 later than the one hundred twentieth day before a primary, general or 53 special election, shall be effective for such election. Enrollment 54 changes shall be entered as provided in this article and shall be deemed 55 to take effect on the fifth day after such change of enrollment is 56 received by the board of elections or if the change of enrollment, orA. 5312 11 1 the envelope containing it, bears a dated cancellation mark of the 2 United States Postal Service, such change shall be entered and shall be 3 deemed to take effect on the tenth day after the date of such mark, 4 whichever is earlier; except that no change will take effect sooner than 5 the fifth day after the receipt of such change of enrollment by the 6 board of elections. 7 § 11. The opening paragraph of paragraph (e) of subdivision 3 of 8 section 8-302 of the election law, as amended by chapter 125 of the laws 9 of 2011, is amended to read as follows: 10 Whenever a voter presents himself or herself and offers to cast a 11 ballot, and he or she claims to live in the election district in which 12 he or she seeks to vote but no registration poll record can be found for 13 him or her in the poll ledger or his or her name does not appear on the 14 computer generated registration list or his or her signature does not 15 appear next to his or her name on such computer generated registration 16 list or his or her registration poll record or the computer generated 17 registration list does not show him or her to be enrolled in the party 18 in which he or she claims to be enrolled and the voter is not otherwise 19 eligible to cast an affidavit ballot pursuant to subdivision three-d of 20 this section, a poll clerk or election inspector shall consult a map, 21 street finder or other description of all of the polling places and 22 election districts within the political subdivision in which said 23 election district is located and if necessary, contact the board of 24 elections to obtain the relevant information and advise the voter of the 25 correct polling place and election district for the residence address 26 provided by the voter to such poll clerk or election inspector. There- 27 after, such voter shall be permitted to vote in said election district 28 only as hereinafter provided: 29 § 12. Section 8-302 of the election law is amended by adding a new 30 subdivision 3-d to read as follows: 31 3-d. A person appearing on election day whose name cannot be found in 32 a poll ledger or computer generated registration list and who affirms 33 that he or she interacted with an agency designated in subdivision ten 34 of section 5-900 of this chapter and consented to voter registration 35 shall be permitted to cast an affidavit ballot. Such affidavit ballot 36 shall be counted if at the polling place, the person presents proof of 37 identity and evidence of registering to vote or performing an activity 38 specified in subdivision one of section 5-900 of this chapter, and there 39 is no affirmative proof that the person is ineligible to register to 40 vote or that the person did not register or perform any activity speci- 41 fied in subdivision one of section 5-900 of this chapter. 42 (a) A person may swear to and subscribe to an affidavit stating that 43 the person has registered to vote or performed any activity specified in 44 subdivision one of section 5-900 of this chapter and consented to use 45 agency information for voter registration. That affidavit shall be 46 sufficient evidence of registering to vote or performing any activity 47 specified in subdivision one of section 5-900 of this chapter for the 48 purposes of this section. 49 (b) A person without identification may swear to and subscribe to an 50 affidavit stating that the person did not present documentary proof of 51 identity, but that all of the identifying information on the affidavit 52 ballot envelope is complete and accurate. That affidavit shall be suffi- 53 cient evidence of identity for the purposes of this section. Nothing in 54 this subdivision shall be deemed to override the provisions of subdivi- 55 sion two-a of this section governing the requirements for a person whose 56 name appears in the computer generated registration list with a notationA. 5312 12 1 indicating that the voter's identity was not yet verified as required by 2 the federal Help America Vote Act. 3 § 13. Subdivision 3 of section 8-510 of the election law, as amended 4 by chapter 43 of the laws of 1988, is amended to read as follows: 5 3. The inspectors shall place such completed report, each challenge 6 affidavit and watcher affidavit and each court order, if any, directing 7 that a person be permitted to vote, as well as each affidavit completed 8 pursuant to subdivision three-d of section 8-302 of this article, inside 9 a ledger of registration records or computer generated registration 10 lists between the front cover, and the first registration record and 11 then shall close and seal each ledger of registration records or comput- 12 er generated registration lists, affix their signature to the seal, lock 13 such ledger in the carrying case furnished for that purpose and enclose 14 the keys in a sealed package or seal such list in the envelope provided 15 for that purpose. 16 § 14. Subdivision 1 of section 3-220 of the election law, as amended 17 by chapter 104 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows: 18 1. All registration records, certificates, lists, and inventories 19 referred to in, or required by, this chapter shall be public records and 20 open to public inspection under the immediate supervision of the board 21 of elections or its employees and subject to such reasonable regulations 22 as such board may impose, provided, however, that no data transmitted 23 pursuant to title nine of article five of this chapter shall be consid- 24 ered a public record open to public inspection solely by reason of its 25 transmission and that the following information shall not be released 26 for public inspection: 27 (a) any voter's signature; 28 (b) the personal residence and contact information of any voter for 29 whom any provision of law requires confidentiality; 30 (c) any portion of a voter's driver's license number, [department of31motor vehicle] non-driver [photo ID] identification card number, social 32 security number and facsimile number [shall not be released for public33inspection]; 34 (d) any voter's telephone number; and 35 (e) any voter's email address. No such records shall be handled at 36 any time by any person other than a member of a registration board or 37 board of inspectors of elections or board of elections except as 38 provided by rules imposed by the board of elections. 39 § 15. Subdivisions 9, 11 and 14 of section 5-210 of the election law, 40 subdivision 9 as amended by chapter 44 of the laws of 2016 and subdivi- 41 sions 11 and 14 as amended by chapter 179 of the laws of 2005, are 42 amended to read as follows: 43 9. The county board of elections shall, promptly and in any event, not 44 later than twenty-one days after receipt by it of the application, veri- 45 fy the identity of the applicant, except if such board receives the 46 application within twenty-one days of a special, primary or general 47 election, the board shall verify the identity of the applicant within 48 five days or before such election, whichever shall be sooner. In order 49 to do so, the county board of elections shall utilize the information 50 provided in the application and shall attempt to verify such information 51 with the information provided by the department of motor vehicles, 52 social security administration and any other lawful available informa- 53 tion source. If the county board of elections is unable to verify the 54 identity of the applicant within twenty-one days of the receipt of the 55 application, it shall immediately take steps to confirm that the infor- 56 mation provided by the applicant was accurately utilized by such countyA. 5312 13 1 board of elections, was accurately verified with other information 2 sources and that no data entry error, or other similar type of error, 3 occurred. Following completion of the preceding steps, the county board 4 of elections shall mail (a) a notice of its approval, (b) a notice of 5 its approval which includes an indication that such board has not yet 6 been able to verify the identity of the applicant and a request for more 7 information so that such verification may be completed, or (c) a notice 8 of its rejection of the application to the applicant in a form approved 9 by the state board of elections. Notices of approval, notices of 10 approval with requests for more information or notices of rejection 11 shall be sent by nonforwardable first class or return postage guaranteed 12 mail on which is endorsed such language designated by the state board of 13 elections to ensure postal authorities do not forward such mail but 14 return it to the board of elections with forwarding information, when it 15 cannot be delivered as addressed and which contains a request that any 16 such mail received for persons not residing at the address be dropped 17 back in the mail. The voter's registration and enrollment shall be 18 complete upon receipt of the application by the appropriate county board 19 of elections. The failure of a county board of elections to verify an 20 applicant's identity shall not be the basis for the rejection of a 21 voter's application, provided, however, that such verification failure 22 shall be the basis for requiring county board of elections to take the 23 additional verification steps provided by this chapter. The notice shall 24 also advise the registrant of the date when his registration and enroll- 25 ment is effective, of the date and the hours of the next regularly sche- 26 duled primary or general election in which he will be eligible to vote, 27 of the location of the polling place of the election district in which 28 he is or will be a qualified voter, whether such polling place is acces- 29 sible to physically handicapped voters, an indication that physically 30 handicapped voters or voters who are ill or voters who will be out of 31 the city or county on the day of the primary or general election, may 32 obtain an absentee ballot and the phone number to call for absentee 33 ballot applications, the phone numbers to call for location of polling 34 places, to obtain registration forms and the phone number to call to 35 indicate that the voter is willing to serve on election day as an 36 inspector, poll clerk or interpreter. The notice of approval, notice of 37 approval with request for more information or notice of rejection shall 38 also advise the applicant to notify the board of elections if there is 39 any inaccuracy. The form of such mail notification shall be prescribed 40 by the state board of elections and shall contain such other information 41 and instructions as it may reasonably require to carry out the purposes 42 of this section. The request for more information shall inform the voter 43 that "THE FAILURE TO CONTACT THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS AND CORRECT ANY 44 INACCURACIES IN THE APPLICATION OR PROVIDE REQUESTED ADDITIONAL INFORMA- 45 TION MAY RESULT IN A REQUEST FOR IDENTIFICATION AT THE POLLS IN ORDER TO 46 CAST A VOTE ON A VOTING MACHINE." If such notice is returned undelivered 47 without a new address, the board shall forthwith send such applicant a 48 confirmation notice pursuant to the provisions of section 5-712 of this 49 article and place such applicant in inactive status. The state board of 50 elections shall prepare uniform notices by this section as provided for 51 in subdivision eight of section 3-102 of this chapter. 52 11. If the county board of elections suspects or believes that for any 53 reason the applicant is not entitled to registration and enrollment, it 54 shall make inquiry in reference thereto. If the board of elections shall 55 find that the applicant is not qualified to register and enroll, the 56 application shall be rejected and the applicant notified of suchA. 5312 14 1 rejection and the reason therefor, no later than ten days before the day 2 of the first primary or general election occurring at least [twenty-3five] ten days after the filing of the application, except that if the 4 application was submitted between twenty-five and ten days before the 5 day of the first primary or general election, such board shall notify 6 the applicant at least five days before such election. 7 14. Notwithstanding the entry by the county board of elections on the 8 registration poll record of the information contained on an application 9 form prescribed by this section, such entry shall not preclude the coun- 10 ty board of elections from subsequently rejecting the application if it 11 is not satisfied that the applicant is entitled to register and enroll 12 as provided by this section, provided that the applicant is notified of 13 such rejection and reasons therefor no later than ten days before the 14 day of the first primary or general election occurring at least [twen-15ty-five] ten days after the filing of such application form, except that 16 if the application was submitted between twenty-five and ten days before 17 the day of the first primary or general election, such board shall noti- 18 fy the applicant at least five days before such election. 19 § 16. This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however, that 20 sections one, two, four, five, six, eight, eleven and twelve of this act 21 shall take effect January 1, 2018; provided further that sections three, 22 seven, nine, ten and fifteen of this act shall take effect January 1, 23 2019. Effective immediately, any rules, regulations and agreements 24 necessary to implement the provisions of this act on its effective date 25 are authorized and directed to be completed on or before such date. 26 PART D 27 Section 1. Section 5-210 of the election law is amended by adding a 28 new subdivision 1-a to read as follows: 29 1-a. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this article relating 30 to registration requirements, any qualified person who is not registered 31 in this state may apply personally for registration and enrollment by 32 appearing at the appropriate polling place for the election district in 33 which he or she resides on any day of election, primary, general, or 34 special, during the hours that such polling place is open for voting. To 35 be eligible to register pursuant to this subdivision, a person must 36 provide acceptable forms of identification containing proof of resi- 37 dence, as determined by state law implementing the Help Americans Vote 38 Act of 2002 (Public Law 107-252). Any person who so registers to vote 39 shall execute the following instrument in substantially the following 40 form: 41 "I, (name), do hereby certify, under penalty of perjury, that, to the 42 best of my knowledge, I am a qualified voter, having resided at (place 43 of residence) for at least thirty days immediately preceding this 44 election, that I am not disqualified on any legal grounds from voting, 45 and that I have not already voted at this election." 46 (b) The board of elections shall establish a procedure by which a 47 person who registers pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision may 48 cast his or her vote at the appropriate polling place. 49 (c) If a registrant is unable to provide valid proof of residence as 50 provided for in paragraph (a) of this subdivision, such registrant may 51 be allowed to register for and vote in any election by affidavit ballot. 52 Such affidavit ballot shall not be counted until election officials can 53 determine such registrant's residence and eligibility to vote.A. 5312 15 1 § 2. This act shall take effect on the first of January next succeed- 2 ing the date upon which the people shall approve and ratify amendments 3 to section 5 of article 2 of the constitution by a majority of the elec- 4 tors voting thereon relating to the ten day advance registration 5 requirement. 6 PART E 7 Section 1. Subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 8-400 of the election law, 8 subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 63 of the laws of 2010, paragraph 9 (c) of subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 375 of the laws of 2015, the 10 opening paragraph of subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 216 of the laws 11 of 1988, paragraph (a) of subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 263 of the 12 laws of 1991, paragraph (c) of subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 321 13 of the laws of 1988 and paragraph (d) of subdivision 2 as separately 14 amended by chapters 97 and 104 of the laws of 2010, are amended to read 15 as follows: 16 1. A qualified voter may vote as an absentee voter under this chapter 17 if[, on the occurrence of any village election conducted by the board of18elections, primary election, special election, general election or New19York city community school board district or city of Buffalo school20district election, he or she expects to be:21(a) absent from the county of his or her residence, or, if a resident22of the city of New York absent from said city; or23(b) unable to appear personally at the polling place of the election24district in which he or she is a qualified voter because of illness or25physical disability or duties related to the primary care of one or more26individuals who are ill or physically disabled, or because he or she27will be or is a patient in a hospital; or28(c) a resident or patient of a veterans health administration hospi-29tal; or30(d) absent from his or her voting residence because he or she is31detained in jail awaiting action by a grand jury or awaiting trial, or32confined in jail or prison after a conviction for an offense other than33a felony, provided that he or she is qualified to vote in the election34district of his or her residence] he or she requests an application for 35 an absentee ballot on a form to be obtained and filed as provided herein 36 or by letter as provided in paragraph (d) of subdivision two of this 37 section. 38 2. A qualified voter desiring to vote at such election as an absentee 39 voter [for any reason specified in subdivision one hereof] must make 40 application for an absentee ballot on a form to be obtained and filed as 41 provided herein or by letter as provided in paragraph (d) of this subdi- 42 vision. 43 (a) Application forms shall be furnished by and may be obtained from 44 any board of elections at any time until the day before such election, 45 and shall also be available for online completion and submission pursu- 46 ant to section 5-803 of this chapter. Application forms shall also be 47 supplied by the board of inspectors of the election district in which 48 applicant is a qualified voter on all of the days provided for local 49 registration. In addition, application forms shall be supplied upon the 50 request of the person authorized to vote pursuant to this section, any 51 such person's spouse, parent or child, a person residing with the appli- 52 cant as a member of his household, or the applicant's duly authorized 53 agent. Application forms sent outside of the United States to a country 54 other than Canada or Mexico, shall be sent airmail. Any reference toA. 5312 16 1 "board of elections" in the remaining provisions of this section, except 2 with respect to the furnishing and obtaining of applications for absen- 3 tee ballots, means only the board of elections of the county or city in 4 which the applicant is a qualified voter. 5 (b) Applications may be filed either with the board of elections or in 6 person with the board of inspectors of the election district in which 7 the applicant is a qualified voter, on one of the days provided for 8 local registration. 9 (c) [All] Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (a) of this subdi- 10 vision, applications must be mailed to the board of elections not later 11 than the seventh day before the election for which a ballot is first 12 requested or delivered to such board not later than the day before such 13 election. 14 (d) The board of elections shall mail an absentee ballot to every 15 qualified voter otherwise eligible for such a ballot, who requests such 16 an absentee ballot from such board of elections in writing in a letter, 17 telefax indicating the address, phone number and the telefax number from 18 which the writing is sent or other written instrument, which is signed 19 by the voter and received by the board of elections not earlier than the 20 thirtieth day nor later than the seventh day before the election for 21 which the ballot is first requested and which states the address where 22 the voter is registered and the address to which the ballot is to be 23 mailed; provided, however, a military voter may request a military 24 ballot or voter registration application or an absentee ballot applica- 25 tion in a letter as provided in subdivision three of section 10-106 of 26 this chapter; and provided further, a special federal voter may request 27 a special federal ballot or voter registration application or an absen- 28 tee ballot application in a letter as provided in paragraph d of subdi- 29 vision one of section 11-202 of this chapter. The board of elections 30 shall enclose with such ballot a form of application for absentee ballot 31 if the applicant is registered with such board of elections. 32 § 2. Paragraphs (c) and (d) of subdivision 3 and subdivision 4 of 33 section 8-400 of the election law are REPEALED. 34 § 3. This act shall take effect on the first of January next succeed- 35 ing the date upon which the people shall approve and ratify amendments 36 to section 2 of article 2 of the constitution by a majority of electors 37 voting thereon relating to absentee voting. 38 PART F 39 Section 1. Section 4-117 of the election law is amended by adding a 40 new subdivision 4 to read as follows: 41 4. Any person, other than an election officer, who mails or causes to 42 be mailed, between August first and December thirty-first of any calen- 43 dar year, any first class nonforwardable mail, where such person knows 44 or reasonably should know that such nonforwardable mail: (a) is intended 45 to be delivered to a registered voter or voter registration applicant; 46 and (b) may be used by a challenger, other than an election officer, on 47 election day to challenge the qualifications of a voter, shall file 48 within two business days of such mailing, a duplicate copy of such 49 nonforwardable mail, a duplicate copy of names and addresses to which 50 such nonforwardable mail was sent, and a completed form prescribed by 51 the state board of elections. The failure to comply with the provisions 52 of this subdivision shall be punishable as a misdemeanor. 53 § 2. Subdivision 1-a of section 8-104 of the election law, as amended 54 by chapter 164 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:A. 5312 17 1 1-a. The election inspectors shall conspicuously post in the polling 2 place before the opening of the polls, a voter information posting, 3 which shall include: (a) the sample ballot and instructions for the use 4 of ballot scanners and ballot marking devices required pursuant to 5 section 7-118 of this chapter; (b) a statement that "today is election 6 day" and the hours during which polling places will be open; (c) 7 instructions on how to cast an affidavit ballot and a concise statement 8 of a voter's right to such a ballot; (d) instructions relating to 9 requirements for voting on ballot scanners by those registrants who must 10 provide identification pursuant to the federal Help America Vote Act of 11 2002; (e) instructions for first-time voters; (f) a voter's bill of 12 rights describing voter's rights under applicable federal and state law, 13 including the right of accessibility and alternate language accessibil- 14 ity; (g) information pertaining to voting by election day paper ballot, 15 including information about the consequence of casting an overvote, 16 steps to prevent unintentional undervoting and spoiled ballots; (h) 17 instructions on how to contact the appropriate officials if a voter's 18 right to vote or right to otherwise participate in the electoral process 19 has been violated; [and] (i) general information on federal and state 20 laws regarding prohibitions on acts of fraud and misrepresentation; and 21 (j) information about the requirements of a challenge on election day as 22 provided in subdivision three of section 8-502 of this article. The 23 state board of elections shall prescribe the form and content of the 24 voter information posting, which may be comprised of one or more pages, 25 provided each page shall be posted separately. The state board of 26 elections shall prescribe an official version of such voter information 27 posting for every language which appears on any general, primary or 28 special election ballot in any election district in the state and for 29 such other languages as such board, in its opinion, determines is appro- 30 priate. Such posting shall be used in all jurisdictions, and a separate 31 posting shall be made by election inspectors for each language appearing 32 on the ballot and for such additional languages as the board of 33 elections may require. A board of elections may modify or supplement the 34 voter information posting used in its jurisdiction to provide additional 35 or local information; provided, however, any such modification or 36 supplementation shall be submitted to the state board of elections for 37 prior approval. 38 § 3. Section 8-500 of the election law, as amended by chapter 9 of the 39 laws of 1978, subdivisions 1 and 3 as amended by chapter 373 of the laws 40 of 1978, and subdivision 4 as amended by chapter 254 of the laws of 41 2014, is amended to read as follows: 42 § 8-500. Watchers; provision for. 1. At any general, special, town or 43 village election, any party committee or independent body whose candi- 44 dates are upon the ballot, and at any primary election, any two or more 45 candidates and any political committee may have for each election 46 district three watchers at any one time, not more than one of whom may 47 be within the guard rail at any one time. Watchers shall be appointed by 48 the [chairman] chairperson or secretary of any such party, committee or 49 independent body or by the candidates. 50 2. Watchers may be present at the polling place at least fifteen 51 minutes before the unlocking and examination of any voting machine or 52 ballot box at the opening of the polls, until after the signing of the 53 inspectors' returns and proclamation of the result; provided, however, 54 that upon entering any polling place, each watcher shall deliver a 55 completed certificate, issued pursuant to subdivision three of this 56 section, to the appointed or designated chairperson of the electionA. 5312 18 1 inspectors, as provided for in section 3-400 of this chapter, at each 2 election district where such watcher is permitted to serve by such 3 certificate. 4 2-a. The appointed or designated chairperson of the election inspec- 5 tors, as provided for in section 3-400 of this chapter, shall initial 6 each watcher certificate upon delivery. At the close of an election, 7 the inspectors shall place each watcher certificate inside the ledger of 8 registration records or computer generated registration list, as 9 provided for in section 8-510 of this title. 10 3. The appointment of watchers for any election shall be by a certif- 11 icate in writing issued by the [chairman] chairperson or secretary of 12 the political party, party committee or independent body, or the candi- 13 dates. [Such certificate shall be delivered to an inspector at the14election district.] The state board of elections shall prescribe the 15 content and form of watcher certificates for use at any general, 16 special, town or village election and at any primary election. The 17 information provided on such certificate shall include, but not be 18 limited to, the watcher's first and last name, the watcher's residential 19 address, the first and last name of the chairperson or secretary of the 20 political party, committee or independent body, or the candidates that 21 issued such certificate, the signature of such chairperson or secretary 22 of the political party, committee or independent body, and the town or 23 city, ward (if applicable) and election district for which the watcher 24 certificate was issued. 25 4. Each watcher must be a qualified voter of the city or county in 26 which he or she is to serve. No person shall be appointed or act as a 27 watcher who is a candidate for any public office to be voted for by the 28 voters of the election district in the same election in which the watch- 29 er is to serve. Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed as 30 prohibiting any such candidate from visiting a polling place in such 31 district on an election day while the polls are open. 32 § 4. Section 8-502 of the election law, as amended by chapter 373 of 33 the laws of 1978, is amended to read as follows: 34 § 8-502. Challenges; generally. 1. Before his or her vote is cast at 35 an election any person may, in accordance with the provisions of this 36 section, be challenged as to his or her right to vote, or his or her 37 right to vote by absentee, military, special federal or special presi- 38 dential ballot. Such challenge may be made by an inspector or clerk, by 39 any duly appointed watcher, or by any registered voter properly in the 40 polling place. 41 2. An inspector shall challenge every person offering to vote, whom he 42 or she shall know or suspect is not entitled to vote in the district, 43 and every person whose name appears on the list of persons to be chal- 44 lenged on election day which is furnished by the board of elections. 45 3. Any person, other than an inspector or clerk, may challenge the 46 qualifications of a voter only by completing, executing and delivering 47 to the board of inspectors a challenge affidavit that satisfies the 48 requirements of section 8-503 of this title. 49 § 5. The election law is amended by adding a new section 8-503 to read 50 as follows: 51 § 8-503. Challenge affidavit. 1. The state board of elections shall 52 prescribe the content and form of a challenge affidavit for use at any 53 general, special, town or village election and at any primary election. 54 Such affidavit shall contain the affiant's full name, residence, and 55 business address, the name of his or her employer, the registration 56 serial number of the person challenged and a recital of the reasons andA. 5312 19 1 the facts supporting the affiant's belief that the person challenged 2 lacks one or more of the qualifications for voting prescribed in section 3 5-102 or 5-106 of this chapter and specified in such affidavit. The 4 affidavit shall state if the reasons for challenge are based upon the 5 affiant's personal knowledge, or upon information received from another 6 person. If the affiant's belief is based upon information furnished by 7 another, the affidavit shall recite the name of the person furnishing 8 the information and the basis for his or her information. After the 9 affiant has signed such affidavit, an inspector shall read to him or her 10 and request him or her to sign the following oath, which shall be 11 subscribed by such affiant: "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I am 12 a qualified voter of the city or county in which this affidavit is 13 signed and that the foregoing statement made by me on (insert day, month 14 and year) is a truthful disclosure of the reasons for my good faith 15 belief that the registered voter therein named is not qualified to 16 continue to vote in the election district in which he or she is now 17 registered." If the affiant shall take and sign such oath, an inspector 18 shall sign his or her name as a witness below the affiant's subscription 19 to such oath. Each challenge affidavit may only challenge the quali- 20 fications of one voter. 21 2. The board of elections shall make challenge affidavit forms avail- 22 able to all qualified voters. 23 § 6. Paragraphs (b) and (e) of subdivision 2 of section 8-508 of the 24 election law, as amended by chapter 200 of the laws of 1996, are amended 25 to read as follows: 26 (b) The second section of such report shall be reserved for the board 27 of inspectors to enter the name, address and registration serial number 28 of each person who is challenged on the day of election or an any day in 29 which there is early voting pursuant to section 8-600 of this article, 30 together with the reason for the challenge, the name and address of the 31 person challenging the qualifications of such voter, if such person 32 challenging the qualifications is not an inspector or clerk, and the 33 words "Permitted to Vote" or "Refused to take oath". If no voters are 34 challenged, the board of inspectors shall enter the words "No Chal- 35 lenges" across the space reserved for such names. In lieu of preparing 36 section two of the challenge report, the board of elections may provide, 37 next to the name of each voter on the computer generated registration 38 list, a place for the inspectors of election to record the information 39 required to be entered in such section two, or provide at the end of 40 such computer generated registration list, a place for the inspectors of 41 election to enter such information. 42 (e) At the foot of such report and at the end of any such computer 43 generated registration list shall be printed a certificate that such 44 report contains the names of all persons who were challenged on the day 45 of election, and [that each voter so reported as having been challenged46took the oaths as required] the reason for such challenge and the names 47 and addresses of all challengers who are not inspectors or clerks, that 48 such report contains the names of all voters to whom such board gave or 49 allowed assistance and lists the nature of the disability which required 50 such assistance to be given and the names and family relationship, if 51 any, to the voter of the persons by whom such assistance was rendered; 52 that each such assisted voter informed such board under oath that he or 53 she required such assistance and that each person rendering such assist- 54 ance took the required oath; that such report contains the names of all 55 voters who were permitted to vote although their registration poll 56 records were missing; that the entries made by such board are a true andA. 5312 20 1 accurate record of its proceedings with respect to the persons named in 2 such report. 3 § 7. Subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 17-108 of the election law, as 4 amended by chapter 373 of the laws of 1978, are amended to read as 5 follows: 6 1. Any person who wilfully loses, alters, destroys or mutilates a 7 watcher certificate, the list of voters or registration poll ledgers, a 8 challenge affidavit, or a challenge report in any election district, or 9 a certified copy thereof, is guilty of a misdemeanor. 10 2. An applicant for registration who shall make, incorporate or cause 11 to be incorporated a material false statement in an application for 12 registration, or in any challenge or other affidavit required for or 13 made or filed in connection with registration or voting, and any person 14 who knowingly takes a false oath before a board of inspectors of 15 election, and any person who makes a material false statement in a 16 medical certificate, challenge affidavit or an affidavit filed in 17 connection with an application for registration, is guilty of a misde- 18 meanor. 19 § 8. Section 17-150 of the election law is amended to read as follows: 20 § 17-150. Duress and intimidation of voters. 1. Any person or corpo- 21 ration who directly or indirectly: 22 [1.] (a) Uses or threatens to use any force, violence or restraint, or 23 inflicts or threatens to inflict any injury, damage, harm or loss, or in 24 any other manner practices intimidation upon or against any person in 25 order to induce or compel such person to vote or refrain from voting for 26 or against any particular person or for or against any proposition 27 submitted to voters at such election, or to place or cause to be placed 28 or refrain from placing or causing to be placed his or her name upon a 29 registry of voters, or on account of such person having voted or 30 refrained from voting at such election, or having voted or refrained 31 from voting for or against any particular person or persons, or for or 32 against any proposition submitted to voters at such election, or having 33 registered or refrained from registering as a voter; or, 34 [2.] (b) By abduction, duress or any forcible or fraudulent device or 35 contrivance whatever impedes, prevents or otherwise interferes with the 36 free exercise of the elective franchise by any voter, or compels, 37 induces or prevails upon any voter to give or refrain from giving his or 38 her vote for or against any particular person at any election; or, 39 [3.] (c) Being an employer pays his [employess] or her employees the 40 salary or wages due in "pay envelopes," in which there is enclosed or 41 upon which there is written or printed political motto, device or argu- 42 ment containing threats, express or implied, intended or calculated to 43 influence the political opinions or actions of such employees, or within 44 ninety days of a general election puts or otherwise exhibits in the 45 establishment or place where his or her employees are engaged in labor, 46 any handbill or placard containing any threat, notice or information, 47 that if any particular ticket or candidate is elected or defeated, work 48 in his or her place or establishment will cease, in whole or in part, 49 his or her establishment will be closed up, or the wages of his or her 50 employees reduced, or other threats, express or implied, intended or 51 calculated to influence the political opinions or actions of his or her 52 employees, is guilty of a misdemeanor, and, if a corporation, shall in 53 addition forfeit its charter. 54 2. There shall be a rebuttable presumption that a person has practiced 55 intimidation upon or against another person in order to induce such 56 other person to refrain from voting for or against any particular personA. 5312 21 1 or for or against any proposition, within the meaning of paragraph (a) 2 of subdivision one of this section, where he or she: 3 (a) being other than an inspector or clerk, in the course of a single 4 election, challenges the qualifications of thirty or more voters during 5 such election, and where the board of elections, following an investi- 6 gation pursuant to paragraph (f) of subdivision two of section 8-508 of 7 this chapter, finds at least two-thirds of such challenged voters to be 8 qualified voters; or 9 (b) being other than an inspector or clerk, challenges the qualifica- 10 tions of a voter at any general, primary, special, town or village 11 election and thereafter, without good cause, fails to comply with the 12 requirements of section 8-503 of this chapter. 13 § 9. Subdivision 1 of section 17-154 of the election law is amended to 14 read as follows: 15 1. (a) Intimidate, threaten or coerce, or to attempt to intimidate, 16 threaten or coerce, any other person for the purpose of interfering with 17 the right of such other person to register to vote, to vote, or to vote 18 as he or she may choose, or for the purpose of causing such other person 19 to vote for, or not to vote for, any candidate for the office of gover- 20 nor, lieutenant-governor, attorney-general, comptroller, judge of any 21 court, member of the senate, or member of the assembly at any election 22 held solely or in part for the purpose of selecting a governor, lieuten- 23 ant-governor, attorney-general, comptroller, any judge or any member of 24 the senate or any member of the assembly; [or,] 25 (b) There shall be a rebuttable presumption that a person has violated 26 paragraph (a) of this subdivision when, during any election enumerated 27 in such subdivision, he or she: 28 (i) being other than an inspector or clerk, challenges the qualifica- 29 tions of thirty or more voters during such election, and where the board 30 of elections, following an investigation pursuant to paragraph (f) of 31 subdivision two of section 8-508 of this chapter, finds at least two- 32 thirds of such challenged voters to be qualified voters; or 33 (ii) being other than an inspector or clerk, challenges the qualifica- 34 tions of a voter at any such election and, without good cause, fails to 35 comply with the requirements of section 8-503 of this chapter; or 36 § 10. This act shall take effect one year after it shall have become a 37 law. 38 PART G 39 Section 1. Subdivision 1-a of section 3-412 of the election law, as 40 added by chapter 181 of the laws of 2005, is amended to read as follows: 41 1-a. The state board of elections shall establish a mandatory core 42 curriculum for poll worker training which includes the requirements in 43 subdivision two of this section, [as amended by a chapter of the laws of442005,] and the rights of voters at the polls and obligation of election 45 workers to protect those rights while maintaining the integrity of the 46 franchise, including [assisting] accommodating voters with disabilities 47 or with limited or no proficiency in the English language, handling, 48 processing and entitlement to ballots, including affidavit and emergency 49 ballots, proper identification requirements, procedures to be followed 50 with respect to voters whose names are not on the list of registered 51 voters or whose identities have not been verified, electioneering and 52 other violations of the elective franchise as defined in this chapter, 53 solicitation by individuals and groups at the polling place and proce- 54 dures to be followed after the polls close. Such core curriculum alsoA. 5312 22 1 shall include specific training in the proper operation of voting 2 systems used in the election; procedures for expeditiously providing 3 directions to voters about their assigned election district; ensuring 4 polling sites are accessible to voters with disabilities or other 5 specific needs; providing accommodation to persons who are illiterate; 6 the requirements for conducting signature verification of voters; the 7 requirements for individuals seeking to challenge voter eligibility and 8 the process for handling any such challenges; and security procedures 9 for the election. Each board of elections shall augment the core curric- 10 ulum with local procedures not inconsistent with the core curriculum 11 adopted by the state board of elections and which includes procedures 12 relating to proper operation of, and remedying problems with, the voting 13 machine or system in use in that jurisdiction. Each board of elections 14 shall also develop and implement procedures to assist in the recruiting 15 of new poll workers, including by focusing on recruitment of recent high 16 school graduates, students attending orientation proceedings at state 17 and public colleges and universities and newly naturalized citizens at 18 naturalization proceedings. 19 § 2. The election law is amended by adding a new section 3-213 to read 20 as follows: 21 § 3-213. Boards of elections; mandatory training curriculum. 1. 22 Election commissioners and such other board of elections employees as 23 determined by the state board of elections shall within six months after 24 their first appointment complete a course of instruction on the opera- 25 tion of a board of elections which shall be provided by the state board 26 of elections. The curriculum shall be established by the state board of 27 elections in consultation with election commissioners and shall not 28 exceed thirty hours of instruction. 29 2. Annually, election commissioners and other board of elections 30 employees as determined by the state board of elections, shall complete 31 before June first a continuing course of instruction on the operation of 32 a board of elections which shall be provided by the state board of 33 elections. The curriculum shall be established by the state board of 34 elections in consultation with the election commissioners and shall not 35 exceed three hours of instruction. 36 3. The state board of elections shall provide the training required by 37 subdivision two of this section through, in addition to other methods it 38 may choose, a web-based recorded format. 39 4. Upon the failure of a commissioner or other employee to complete 40 the instruction within the time required by this section, the state 41 board of elections shall send a letter to the county legislature or city 42 council and the respective county party chair of the jurisdiction of the 43 commissioner stating the delinquency. 44 § 3. Section 3-412 of the election law is amended by adding three new 45 subdivisions 1-b, 1-c and 1-d to read as follows: 46 1-b. The state board of elections shall establish and host an educa- 47 tion and training institute which shall be responsible for the develop- 48 ment and implementation of a statewide program wherein persons can 49 become certified poll worker trainers. This institute shall also create 50 a train-the-trainer program, in order for county boards of elections to 51 implement an effective training program at their respective local level 52 of program delivery. The state board's trainers shall include in the 53 trainer curriculum to be developed, attention to, inter alia, poll work- 54 er ability to serve a diverse electorate with complete confidence and 55 respect; professionalizing the delivery of all election day services; 56 providing assistance to voters with disabilities and those with limitedA. 5312 23 1 English language proficiency, ensuring the dignity and privacy of such 2 individuals; and to individuals who are members of racial or ethnic 3 minorities, complete familiarity and comfort with all voting systems in 4 use in poll sites, including ballot marking devices or other 5 systems/services available to voters with disabilities; and poll worker 6 ability to recognize and resolve a variety of issues which may arise in 7 poll sites. The state board's trainers and all certified poll worker 8 instructors shall utilize industry-proven training techniques aimed at 9 adult learners including role-based training and hands-on training 10 opportunities using official election day forms and poll site voting 11 systems and may further include a web-based component and companion 12 video. 13 1-c. County boards shall enroll trainers in the program in such quan- 14 tities to ensure that an adequate contingent of fully trained and certi- 15 fied poll worker trainers are available to meet the training needs of 16 such county. Each county board of elections shall enroll not less than 17 two persons designated by the county board on a bipartisan basis, in the 18 state board of elections training institute. Certified trainers must 19 maintain their certification by attending once every two years, a 20 continuing education program, to ensure the professionalism of the poll 21 worker training agenda set by the state board of elections. Enrollees 22 who have successfully completed the state board's training program and 23 been awarded a "certified poll worker instructor" certificate may serve 24 at the county board as a trainer of poll workers as well as a trainer of 25 other bi-partisan designees of the county board, however the conferring 26 of the title "certified poll worker instructor" may be made only by the 27 state board of elections. 28 1-d. The state board of elections shall adopt such rules and regu- 29 lations which may be necessary to create the training institute and 30 associated curricula provided for in subdivisions one-a, one-b and one-c 31 of this section, including a process whereby attendees who successfully 32 complete a state board-sponsored training program shall be awarded a 33 certificate conferring upon him or her, the title of "certified poll 34 worker instructor". 35 § 4. The election law is amended by adding a new section 3-507 to read 36 as follows: 37 § 3-507. Language access. 1. In addition to the requirements set forth 38 in section 3-506 of this title, whenever any county board of elections 39 finds that at least three percent of the voting-age residents of an 40 election district in that county are non-English speaking or limited 41 English proficient pursuant to data made available by the United States 42 Census Bureau, it shall provide in such election district registration 43 or voting notices, forms, instructions, assistance, or other materials 44 or information relating to the electoral process, including ballots, in 45 the language of the applicable minority language group, in a manner that 46 provides the same opportunity for access and participation as for other 47 voters. This provision shall be subject to the requirements of federal 48 law, including section 203 and section 4(f) of the Voting Rights Act of 49 1965, to the extent such laws are applicable. 50 2. As used in this section, the terms "limited English proficient" and 51 "non-English speaking" shall refer to a person whose native speaking 52 language is a language other than English, and who continues to use his 53 or her native language as the primary means of oral and written communi- 54 cation. 55 § 5. This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however, that 56 sections two and three of this act shall take effect on the one hundredA. 5312 24 1 eightieth day after it shall have become a law; provided, however, that 2 effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any rule 3 or regulation necessary for the implementation of this act on its effec- 4 tive date are authorized and directed to be made and completed on or 5 before such effective date. 6 PART H 7 Section 1. Section 3-400 of the election law is amended by adding a 8 new subdivision 9 to read as follows: 9 9. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provisions of this article, 10 election inspectors or poll clerks, if any, at polling places for early 11 voting, shall consist of either board of elections employees who shall 12 be appointed by the commissioners of such board or duly qualified indi- 13 viduals, appointed in the manner set forth in this section. Appointments 14 to the offices of election inspector or poll clerk in each polling place 15 for early voting shall be equally divided between the major political 16 parties. The board of elections shall assign staff and provide the 17 resources they require to ensure wait times at early voting sites do not 18 exceed thirty minutes. 19 § 2. Section 4-117 of the election law is amended by adding a new 20 subdivision 1-a to read as follows: 21 1-a. The notice required by subdivision one of this section shall 22 include the dates, hours and locations of early voting for the general 23 and primary election. The board of elections may satisfy the notice 24 requirement of this subdivision by providing in the notice instructions 25 to obtain the required early voting information from a website of the 26 board of elections and providing a phone number to call for such infor- 27 mation. 28 § 3. Subdivision 2 of section 8-100 of the election law, as amended by 29 chapter 335 of the laws of 2000, is amended to read as follows: 30 2. Polls shall be open for voting during the following hours: a prima- 31 ry election from [twelve o'clock noon until nine o'clock in the evening,32except in the city of New York and the counties of Nassau, Suffolk,33Westchester, Rockland, Orange, Putnam and Erie, and in such city or34county from] six o'clock in the morning until nine o'clock in the even- 35 ing; the general election from six o'clock in the morning until nine 36 o'clock in the evening; a special election called by the governor pursu- 37 ant to the public officers law, and, except as otherwise provided by 38 law, every other election, from six o'clock in the morning until nine 39 o'clock in the evening; early voting hours shall be as provided in 40 section 8-600 of this article. 41 § 4. Subdivision 1 of section 8-102 of the election law is amended by 42 adding a new paragraph (k) to read as follows: 43 (k) Voting at each polling place for early voting shall be conducted 44 in a manner consistent with the provisions of this article, with the 45 exception of the tabulation and proclamation of election results which 46 shall be completed according to subdivisions eight and nine of section 47 8-600 of this article. 48 § 5. Section 8-104 of the election law is amended by adding a new 49 subdivision 7 to read as follows: 50 7. This section shall apply on all early voting days as provided for 51 in section 8-600 of this article. 52 § 6. Article 8 of the election law is amended by adding a new title 6 53 to read as follows:A. 5312 25 1 TITLE VI 2 EARLY VOTING 3 Section 8-600. Early voting. 4 8-602. State board of elections; powers and duties for early 5 voting. 6 § 8-600. Early voting. 1. Beginning the fourteenth day prior to any 7 general, primary or special election for any public or party office, and 8 ending on and including the second day prior to such general, primary or 9 special election for such public or party office, persons duly regis- 10 tered and eligible to vote at such election shall be permitted to vote 11 as provided in this title. The board of elections of each county and 12 the city of New York shall establish procedures, subject to approval of 13 the state board of elections, to ensure that persons who vote during the 14 early voting period shall not be permitted to vote subsequently in the 15 same election. 16 2. (a) The board of elections of each county or the city of New York 17 shall designate polling places for early voting in each county, which 18 may include the offices of the board of elections, for persons to vote 19 early pursuant to this section. There shall be so designated at least 20 one early voting polling place for every full increment of fifty thou- 21 sand registered voters in each county; provided, however, the number of 22 early voting polling places in a county shall not be required to be 23 greater than seven, and a county with fewer than fifty thousand voters 24 shall have at least one early voting polling place. 25 (b) The board of elections of each county or the city of New York may 26 establish additional polling places for early voting in excess of the 27 minimum number required by this subdivision for the convenience of 28 eligible voters wishing to vote during the early voting period. 29 (c) Polling places for early voting shall be located to ensure, to the 30 extent practicable, that eligible voters have adequate equitable access, 31 taking into consideration population density, travel time to the polling 32 place, proximity to other locations or commonly used transportation 33 routes and such other factors the board of elections of the county or 34 the city of New York deems appropriate. The provisions of section 4-104 35 of this chapter, except subdivisions four and five of such section, 36 shall apply to the designation of polling places for early voting except 37 to the extent such provisions are inconsistent with this section. 38 3. Any person permitted to vote early may do so at any polling place 39 for early voting established pursuant to subdivision two of this section 40 in the county where such voter is registered to vote. Provided, however, 41 (a) if it is impractical to provide each polling place for early voting 42 all appropriate ballots for each election to be voted on in the county, 43 or (b) if permitting such persons to vote early at any polling place 44 established for early voting would make it impractical to ensure that 45 such voter has not previously voted early during such election, the 46 board of elections may designate each polling place for early voting 47 only for those voters registered to vote in a portion of the county to 48 be served by such polling place for early voting, provided that all 49 voters in each county shall have one or more polling places at which 50 they are eligible to vote throughout the early voting period on a 51 substantially equal basis. 52 4. (a) Polls shall be open for early voting for at least eight hours 53 between six o'clock in the morning and nine o'clock in the evening each 54 week day during the early voting period. 55 (b) At least one polling place for early voting shall remain open 56 until nine o'clock in the evening on at least two week days in eachA. 5312 26 1 calendar week during the early voting period. If polling places for 2 early voting are limited to voters from certain areas pursuant to subdi- 3 vision three of this section, polling places that remain open until nine 4 o'clock shall be designated such that any person entitled to vote early 5 may vote until nine o'clock in the evening on at least two week days 6 during the early voting period. 7 (c) Polls shall be open for early voting for at least five hours 8 between nine o'clock in the morning and six o'clock in the evening on 9 each Saturday, Sunday and legal holiday during the early voting period. 10 (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit any board 11 of elections from establishing a greater number of hours for voting 12 during the early voting period beyond the number of hours required in 13 this subdivision. 14 (e) Early voting polling places and their hours of operation for early 15 voting at a general election shall be designated by May first of each 16 year pursuant to subdivision one of section 4-104 of this chapter. 17 Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision one of section 4-104 of 18 this chapter requiring poll site designation by May first, early voting 19 polling places and their hours of operation for early voting for a 20 primary or special election shall be made not later than forty-five days 21 before such primary or special election. 22 5. Each board of elections shall create a communication plan to inform 23 eligible voters of the opportunity to vote early. Such plan may utilize 24 any and all media outlets, including social media, and shall publicize: 25 the location and dates and hours of operation of all polling places for 26 early voting; an indication of whether each polling place is accessible 27 to voters with physical disabilities; a clear and unambiguous notice to 28 voters that if they cast a ballot during the early voting period they 29 will not be allowed to vote election day; and if polling places for 30 early voting are limited to voters from certain areas pursuant to subdi- 31 vision three of this section, the location of the polling places for 32 early voting serving the voters of each particular city, town or other 33 political subdivision. 34 6. The form of paper ballots used in early voting shall comply with 35 the provisions of article seven of this chapter that are applicable to 36 voting by paper ballot on election day and such ballot shall be cast in 37 the same manner as provided for in section 8-312 of this article, 38 provided, however, that ballots cast during the early voting period 39 shall be secured in the manner of voted ballots cast on election day and 40 such ballots shall not be canvassed or examined until after the close of 41 the polls on election day, and no unofficial tabulations of election 42 results shall be printed or viewed in any manner until after the close 43 of polls on election day. 44 7. Voters casting ballots pursuant to this title shall be subject to 45 challenge as provided in sections 8-500, 8-502, 8-503 and 8-504 of this 46 article. 47 8. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, at the end of 48 each day of early voting, any early voting ballots that have not been 49 scanned because a ballot scanner was not available or because the ballot 50 has been abandoned by the voter at the ballot scanner shall be cast in a 51 manner consistent with section 9-110 of this chapter, except that such 52 ballots which cannot then be cast on a ballot scanner shall be held 53 inviolate and unexamined and shall be duly secured until after the close 54 of polls on election day when such ballots shall be examined and 55 canvassed in a manner consistent with subdivision two of section 9-110 56 of this chapter.A. 5312 27 1 9. The board of elections shall secure all ballots and scanners used 2 for early voting from the beginning of the early voting period through 3 the close of the polls on election day; provided, however, the state 4 board of elections may by regulation duly adopted by a majority of such 5 board establish a procedure whereby ballot scanners used for early 6 voting may also be used on election day if the portable memory devices 7 used during early voting containing the early voting election informa- 8 tion and vote tabulations are properly secured apart from the scanners, 9 and the results therefrom shall be duly canvassed after the close of 10 polls on election day. 11 10. After the close of polls on election day, inspectors or board of 12 elections employees appointed to canvass ballots cast during early 13 voting shall follow all relevant provisions of article nine of this 14 chapter that are not inconsistent with this section, for canvassing, 15 processing, recording, and announcing results of voting at polling plac- 16 es for early voting, and securing ballots, scanners, and other election 17 materials. Such canvass may occur at the offices of the board of 18 elections, at the early voting polling place or such other location 19 designated by the board of elections. 20 11. Notwithstanding the requirements of this title requiring the 21 canvass of ballots cast during early voting after the close of polls on 22 election day, such canvass may begin one hour before the scheduled close 23 of polls on election day provided the board of elections adopts proce- 24 dures to prevent the public release of election results prior to the 25 close of polls on election day and such procedures shall be consistent 26 with the regulations of the state board of elections and shall be filed 27 with the state board of elections at least thirty days before they shall 28 be effective. 29 § 8-602. State board of elections; powers and duties for early voting. 30 Any rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of the 31 provisions of this title shall be promulgated by the state board of 32 elections provided that such rules and regulations shall include 33 provisions to ensure that ballots cast early, by any method allowed 34 under law, are counted and canvassed as if cast on election day. The 35 state board of elections shall promulgate any other rules and regu- 36 lations necessary to ensure an efficient and fair early voting process 37 that respects the privacy of the voter. Provided, further, that such 38 rules and regulations shall require that the voting history record for 39 each voter be continually updated to reflect each instance of early 40 voting by such voter. 41 § 7. This act shall take effect on the first of January next succeed- 42 ing the date on which it shall have become a law and shall apply to any 43 election held 120 days or more after it shall have taken effect. 44 PART I 45 Section 1. Subdivision 2 of section 5-106 of the election law, as 46 amended by chapter 373 of the laws of 1978, is amended to read as 47 follows: 48 2. No person who has been convicted of a felony and sentenced to a 49 period of imprisonment for such felony pursuant to the laws of this 50 state, shall have the right to register for or vote at any election 51 unless he [shall have been pardoned or restored to the rights of citi-52zenship by the governor, or his maximum sentence of imprisonment has53expired, or he has been discharged from parole. The governor, however,54may attach as a condition to any such pardon a provision that any suchA. 5312 28 1person shall not have the right of suffrage until it shall have been2separately restored to him] or she has been released from incarceration 3 for such felony or released from serving a time assessment pursuant to 4 subparagraph (x) of paragraph (f) of subdivision three of section two 5 hundred fifty-nine-i of the executive law. 6 § 2. Subdivision 3 of section 5-106 of the election law is amended to 7 read as follows: 8 3. No person who has been convicted in a federal court, of a felony, 9 or a crime or offense which would constitute a felony under the laws of 10 this state, and sentenced to a period of imprisonment for such felony, 11 shall have the right to register for or vote at any election unless he 12 [shall have been pardoned or restored to the rights of citizenship by13the president of the United States, or his maximum sentence of imprison-14ment has expired, or he has been discharged from parole] or she has been 15 released from incarceration for such felony or released from serving a 16 time assessment pursuant to a violation of parole supervision under 17 federal jurisdiction. 18 § 3. Subdivision 4 of section 5-106 of the election law is amended to 19 read as follows: 20 4. No person who has been convicted in another state for a crime or 21 offense which would constitute a felony under the laws of this state and 22 sentenced to a period of imprisonment for such felony, shall have the 23 right to register for or vote at any election in this state unless he 24 shall have been pardoned or restored to the rights of citizenship by the 25 governor or other appropriate authority of such other state, or his or 26 her maximum sentence has expired, or he [has been discharged from27parole] or she has been released from incarceration for such felony or 28 released from serving a time assessment for a violation of parole super- 29 vision under the jurisdiction of courts, paroling authorities, 30 corrections or other criminal justice agencies. 31 § 4. Section 75 of the correction law, as amended by section 18 of 32 subpart A of part C of chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, is amended to 33 read as follows: 34 § 75. Notice of voting rights. Upon the [discharge] release from a 35 correctional facility of any person [whose maximum sentence of imprison-36ment has expired or upon a person's discharge from community super-37vision,] the department shall notify such person of his or her right to 38 vote and provide such person with a form of application for voter regis- 39 tration together with written information distributed by the board of 40 elections on the importance and the mechanics of voting. 41 § 5. The correction law is amended by adding a new section 510 to read 42 as follows: 43 § 510. Voting upon release. Upon the release from a local correctional 44 facility of any person convicted of a felony the chief administrative 45 officer shall notify such person of his or her right to vote and provide 46 such person with a form of application for voter registration together 47 with written information distributed by the board of elections on the 48 importance and the mechanics of voting. 49 § 6. The department of corrections and community supervision shall 50 notify each person serving a period of community supervision on the 51 effective date of this act of his or her right to vote and provide such 52 person with a form of application for voter registration together with 53 written information distributed by the board of elections on the impor- 54 tance and the mechanics of voting.A. 5312 29 1 § 7. This act shall take effect immediately, provided, however, that 2 sections four, five, and six of this act shall take effect on the one 3 hundred twentieth day after it shall have become a law. 4 PART J 5 Section 1. Section 3-108 of the election law, subdivision 5 as added 6 by chapter 394 of the laws of 2008, is amended to read as follows: 7 § 3-108. Disaster; additional day for voting. 1. A county board of 8 elections, or the state board of elections with respect to an election 9 conducted in a district in the jurisdiction of more than one county 10 board of elections, may determine that, as the direct consequence of a 11 fire, earthquake, tornado, explosion, power failure, act of sabotage, 12 enemy attack or other disaster[, less than twenty-five per centum of the13registered voters of any city, town or village, or if the city of New14York, or any county therein, actually voted in any general election] or 15 state of emergency, the ability of voters to vote has become, or will 16 imminently become, impossible and such impossibility cannot be mitigated 17 during the scheduled course of voting. Such a determination by a county 18 board of elections shall be subject to approval by the state board of 19 elections. If the state board of elections makes such a determination, 20 it shall notify the [board] boards of elections having jurisdiction [in21that county] over that election that an additional day of election shall 22 be held, which notice shall show: the nature of the disaster; the coun- 23 ty, city, town or village affected thereby; the number of persons duly 24 registered to vote therein at such [general] election; and the number of 25 persons who voted therein at such [general] election. 26 2. The county board of elections, or the state board of elections, as 27 applicable, shall thereafter set a date for an additional day for voting 28 in the county, city, town or village affected by the statement, which 29 shall not be more than twenty days after the original date of the 30 [general] election and shall determine the hours during which the polls 31 shall remain open on such additional day for voting; provided, however, 32 that in any event the polls shall remain open for not less than eleven 33 hours. [The] Each county board of elections having jurisdiction over 34 such election shall [publish notice thereof not less than twice in each35week preceding the date for the additional day for voting, in] notify 36 newspapers as designated in this chapter[, and] in the week preceding 37 the date of the additional day of voting. Such notice shall be provided 38 to all media outlets and county, town, city and village clerks and 39 municipal attorneys not less than one week preceding the date of the 40 additional day of voting and shall be posted on the board's website as 41 soon as possible. To the extent practicable, the board shall notify all 42 registered voters by mail. Such notice shall also direct attention to 43 any change of polling places and shall contain such other and additional 44 information as in the judgment of the board of elections shall be neces- 45 sary and proper. 46 3. Official ballots shall be provided at public expense at each poll- 47 ing place for such additional day of election. In any election district 48 in which voting machines were used upon the original day of voting, they 49 shall be used for the additional day for voting. The [original seal] 50 security seals on such machines shall not be removed nor shall the 51 machines be unlocked until the opening of the polls on the additional 52 day for voting and the board of elections shall provide [an] additional 53 [seal] security seals to be used as soon as the polls are closed on such 54 day.A. 5312 30 1 4. Only those persons duly registered to vote upon the original date 2 of the [general] election who did not vote on such date shall be enti- 3 tled to vote on the additional day for voting. Voting on the additional 4 day provided for in this section shall be accomplished solely by phys- 5 ically appearing at the polling place and nothing contained in this 6 section shall be construed to extend the time set by law for casting or 7 canvassing a special, military, absentee, special federal or special 8 presidential ballot; provided, however, that nothing contained herein 9 shall be deemed to invalidate any special, military, absentee, [mili-10tary] special federal or special presidential ballot duly received on 11 the original date of the [general] election. 12 5. (a) A county board of elections, or the state board of elections 13 with respect to an election conducted in a political subdivision in the 14 jurisdiction of more than one county board of elections, may determine 15 that, as the direct consequence of a fire, earthquake, tornado, explo- 16 sion, power failure, act of sabotage, enemy attack or other disaster or 17 state of emergency, the ability to make a filing with respect to any 18 provision of this chapter was substantially impaired. Upon making such a 19 finding, a county board of elections, or the state board of elections 20 shall extend for a reasonable time the period for making such filing. An 21 extension granted pursuant to this subdivision [granted by a county22board of elections] shall not be [subject to the approval of the state23board of elections if such extension is] longer than [one] two business 24 [day] days. 25 (b) A county board of elections, or the state board of elections with 26 respect to an election conducted in a political subdivision in the 27 jurisdiction of more than one county board of elections, may determine 28 that, as the direct consequence of a fire, earthquake, tornado, explo- 29 sion, power failure, act of sabotage, enemy attack or other disaster or 30 state of emergency, the ability to convene a party caucus on the date 31 scheduled for such caucus and make the required filings for the purpose 32 of nominating one or more candidates was substantially impaired. Upon 33 making such a finding, a county board of elections, or the state board 34 of elections, shall postpone for a reasonable time the date of said 35 party caucus and required filings. An extension granted pursuant to this 36 subdivision shall not be longer than one week from the date of the 37 originally-scheduled party caucus. 38 (c) If an extension is granted pursuant to this subdivision by the 39 state board of elections, such board shall notify the respective county 40 boards of elections of such extension and post such notice on its 41 website. 42 (d) The county board of elections shall immediately notify media 43 outlets of the extensions provided pursuant to this section, post such 44 notice to its website and, to the extent practicable for the extension 45 of a party caucus, post such notice at the location of the originally- 46 scheduled caucus. The county board of elections shall also provide writ- 47 ten notice to all appropriate county, town, city and village clerks and 48 municipal attorneys. 49 § 2. This act shall take effect immediately. 50 PART K 51 Section 1. Subdivision 1 of section 1-106 of the election law, as 52 amended by chapter 700 of the laws of 1977, is amended to read as 53 follows:A. 5312 31 1 1. All papers required to be filed pursuant to the provisions of this 2 chapter shall, unless otherwise provided, be filed between the hours of 3 nine A.M. and five P.M. If the last day for filing shall fall on a 4 Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday, the next business day shall become 5 the last day for filing. All papers sent by mail in an envelope post- 6 marked prior to midnight of the last day of filing shall be deemed time- 7 ly filed and accepted for filing when received, except that all certif- 8 icates and petitions of designation or nomination, certificates of 9 acceptance or declination of such designations or nominations, certif- 10 icates of authorization for such designations or nominations, certif- 11 icates of disqualification, certificates of substitution for such desig- 12 nations or nominations and objections and specifications of objections 13 to such certificates and petitions required to be filed with the state 14 board of elections or a board of elections outside of the city of New 15 York shall be deemed timely filed and accepted for filing if sent by 16 mail or designated delivery service permitted by subdivision three of 17 this section, in an envelope postmarked prior to midnight of the last 18 day of filing and received no later than two business days after the 19 last day to file such certificates, petitions, objections or specifica- 20 tions. Failure of the post office or any other person or entity to 21 deliver any such petition, certificate or objection to such board of 22 elections outside the city of New York no later than two business days 23 after the last day to file such certificates, petitions, objections or 24 specifications shall be a fatal defect. Excepted further that all 25 certificates and petitions of designation or nomination, certificates of 26 acceptance or declination of such designations and nominations, certif- 27 icates of substitution for such designations or nominations and 28 objections and specifications of objections to such certificates and 29 petitions required to be filed with the board of elections of the city 30 of New York must be actually received by such city board of elections on 31 or before the last day to file any such petition, certificate or 32 objection and such office shall be open for the receipt of such 33 petitions, certificates and objections until midnight on the last day to 34 file any such petition, certificate or objection. Failure of the post 35 office or any other person or entity to deliver any such petition, 36 certificate or objection to such city board of elections on or before 37 such last day shall be a fatal defect. 38 § 2. Subdivision 1 of section 4-104 of the election law, as amended by 39 chapter 180 of the laws of 2005, is amended to read as follows: 40 1. Every board of elections shall, in consultation with each city, 41 town and village, designate the polling places in each election district 42 in which the meetings for the registration of voters, and for any 43 election may be held. The board of trustees of each village in which 44 general and special village elections conducted by the board of 45 elections are held at a time other than the time of a general election 46 shall submit such a list of polling places for such village elections to 47 the board of elections. A polling place may be located in a building 48 owned by a religious organization or used by it as a place of worship. 49 If such a building is designated as a polling place, it shall not be 50 required to be open for voter registration on any Saturday if this is 51 contrary to the religious beliefs of the religious organization. In such 52 a situation, the board of elections shall designate an alternate 53 location to be used for voter registration. Such polling places must be 54 designated by [May first] March fifteenth, of each year, and shall be 55 effective for one year thereafter. Such a list required to be submitted 56 by a village board of trustees must be submitted at least four monthsA. 5312 32 1 before each general village election and shall be effective until four 2 months before the subsequent general village election. No place in which 3 a business licensed to sell alcoholic beverages for on premises consump- 4 tion is conducted on any day of local registration or of voting shall be 5 so designated. If, within the discretion of the board of elections a 6 particular polling place so designated is subsequently found to be 7 unsuitable or unsafe or should circumstances arise that make a desig- 8 nated polling place unsuitable or unsafe, then the board of elections is 9 empowered to select an alternative meeting place. In the city of New 10 York, the board of elections shall designate such polling places and 11 alternate registration places if the polling place cannot be used for 12 voter registration on Saturdays. 13 § 3. Subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 4-106 of the election law, subdi- 14 vision 2 as amended by chapter 635 of the laws of 1990, are amended to 15 read as follows: 16 1. The state board of elections shall, [at least eight months before17each] by February first in the year of each general election, make and 18 transmit to the board of elections of each county, a certificate stating 19 each office, except county, city, village and town offices to be voted 20 for at such election in such county. 21 2. Each county, city, village and town clerk, [at least eight months22before each] by February first in the year of each general election, 23 shall make and transmit to the board of elections a certificate stating 24 each county, city, village or town office, respectively to be voted for 25 at each such election. Each village clerk, at least five months before 26 each general village election conducted by the board of elections, shall 27 make, and transmit to such board, a certificate stating each village 28 office to be filled at such election. 29 § 4. Paragraph b of subdivision 1 of section 4-108 of the election 30 law, as amended by chapter 117 of the laws of 1985, is amended to read 31 as follows: 32 b. Whenever any proposal, proposition or referendum as provided by law 33 is to be submitted to a vote of the people of a county, city, town, 34 village or special district, at an election conducted by the board of 35 elections, the clerk of such political subdivision, at least [thirty-six36days] three months prior to the general election at which such proposal, 37 proposition or referendum is to be submitted, shall transmit to each 38 board of elections a certified copy of the text of such proposal, propo- 39 sition or referendum and a statement of the form in which it is to be 40 submitted. If a special election is to be held, such transmittal shall 41 also give the date of such election. 42 § 5. Section 4-110 of the election law, as amended by chapter 434 of 43 the laws of 1984, is amended to read as follows: 44 § 4-110. Certification of primary election candidates; state board of 45 elections. The state board of elections not later than [thirty-six] 46 fifty-five days before a primary election, shall certify to each county 47 board of elections: The name and residence of each candidate to be voted 48 for within the political subdivision of such board for whom a desig- 49 nation has been filed with the state board; the title of the office or 50 position for which the candidate is designated; the name of the party 51 upon whose primary ballot his or her name is to be placed; and the order 52 in which the names of the candidates are to be printed as determined by 53 the state board. Where an office or position is uncontested, such 54 certification shall state such fact. 55 § 6. Subdivision 1 of section 4-112 of the election law, as amended by 56 chapter 4 of the laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows:A. 5312 33 1 1. The state board of elections, not later than [thirty-six] fifty- 2 five days before a general election, or fifty-three days before a 3 special election, shall certify to each county board of elections the 4 name and residence of each candidate nominated in any valid certificate 5 filed with it or by the returns canvassed by it, the title of the office 6 for which nominated; the name of the party or body specified of which he 7 or she is a candidate; the emblem chosen to distinguish the candidates 8 of the party or body; and a notation as to whether or not any litigation 9 is pending concerning the candidacy. Upon the completion of any such 10 litigation, the state board of elections shall forthwith notify the 11 appropriate county boards of elections of the results of such liti- 12 gation. 13 § 7. Section 4-114 of the election law, as amended by chapter 4 of 14 the laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows: 15 § 4-114. Determination of candidates and questions; county board of 16 elections. The county board of elections, not later than the [thirty-17fifth] fifty-fourth day before the day of a primary or general election, 18 or the fifty-third day before a special election, shall determine the 19 candidates duly nominated for public office and the questions that shall 20 appear on the ballot within the jurisdiction of that board of elections. 21 § 8. Subdivision 1 of section 5-604 of the election law, as amended by 22 chapter 28 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows: 23 1. The board of elections shall also cause to be published for each 24 election district a complete list of the registered voters of each 25 election district. Such list shall, in addition to the information 26 required for registration lists, include the party enrollment of each 27 voter. At least as many copies of such list shall be prepared as the 28 required minimum number of registration lists. 29 Lists for all the election districts in a ward or assembly district 30 may be bound together in one volume. The board of elections shall also 31 cause to be published a complete list of names and residence addresses 32 of the registered voters, including the party enrollment of each voter, 33 for each town and city over which the board has jurisdiction. The names 34 for each town and city may be arranged according to street and number or 35 alphabetically. Such lists shall be published before the first day of 36 [April] February. The board shall keep at least five copies for public 37 inspection at each main office or branch office of the board. Surplus 38 copies of the lists shall be sold at a charge not exceeding the cost of 39 publication. 40 § 9. Paragraph a of subdivision 5 of section 5-708 of the election 41 law, as added by chapter 659 of the laws of 1994, is amended to read as 42 follows: 43 a. At least once each year during the month of [May] February, each 44 board of elections shall obtain through the National Change of Address 45 System, the forwarding address for every voter registered with such 46 board of elections for whom the United States Postal Service has such a 47 forwarding address together with the name of each such voter whom the 48 Postal Service records indicate has moved from the address at which he 49 is registered without leaving a forwarding address. 50 § 10. Subdivision 1 of section 6-108 of the election law, as amended 51 by chapter 160 of the laws of 1996, is amended to read as follows: 52 1. In any town in a county having a population of over seven hundred 53 fifty thousand inhabitants, as shown by the latest federal decennial or 54 special population census, party nominations of candidates for town 55 offices shall be made at the primary preceding the election. In any 56 other town, nominations of candidates for town offices shall be made byA. 5312 34 1 caucus or primary election as the rules of the county committee shall 2 provide, except that the members of the county committee from a town may 3 adopt by a two-thirds vote, a rule providing that the party candidates 4 for town offices shall be nominated at the primary election. If a rule 5 adopted by the county committee of a political party or by the members 6 of the county committee from a town, provides that party candidates for 7 town offices, shall be nominated at a primary election, such rule shall 8 not apply to nor affect a primary held less than four months after a 9 certified copy of the rule shall have been filed with the board of 10 elections. After the filing of such a rule, the rule shall continue in 11 force until a certified copy of a rule revoking the same shall have been 12 filed with such board at least four months before a subsequent primary. 13 Such a caucus shall be held no earlier than the first day on which 14 designating petitions for the [fall] primary election may be signed. 15 § 11. Subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 6-147 of the election law, as 16 amended by chapter 434 of the laws of 1984, are amended to read as 17 follows: 18 1. The name of a person designated on more than one petition as a 19 candidate for a party position to be filled by two or more persons shall 20 be printed on the ballot with the group of candidates designated by the 21 petition first filed unless such person, in a certificate duly acknowl- 22 edged by him or her and filed with the board of elections not later than 23 the [eighth] tenth Tuesday preceding the primary election or five days 24 after the board of elections mails such person notice of his or her 25 designation in more than one group, whichever is later, specifies anoth- 26 er group in which his or her name shall be printed. 27 2. A person designated as a candidate for the position of member of 28 the county committee in more than one election district shall be deemed 29 to have been designated in the lowest numbered election district unless 30 such person, in a certificate duly acknowledged by him or her, and filed 31 with the board of elections not later than the [eighth] tenth Tuesday 32 preceding the primary election or five days after the board of elections 33 mails such person notice of his or her designation in more than one 34 election district whichever is later, specifies that he or she wishes to 35 be deemed designated in a different election district. 36 § 12. Subdivisions 1, 4, 5, 9, 11, 12 and 14 of section 6-158 of the 37 election law, subdivisions 1, 4, 11 and 12 as amended by chapter 434 of 38 the laws of 1984 and subdivision 9 as amended by chapter 517 of the laws 39 of 1986, are amended to read as follows: 40 1. A designating petition shall be filed not earlier than the [tenth] 41 thirteenth Monday before, and not later than the [ninth] twelfth Thurs- 42 day preceding the primary election. 43 4. A petition of enrolled members of a party requesting an opportunity 44 to write in the name of an undesignated candidate for a public office or 45 party position at a primary election shall be filed not later than the 46 [eighth] eleventh Thursday preceding the primary election. However, 47 where a designating petition has been filed and the person named therein 48 has declined such designation and another person has been designated to 49 fill the vacancy, then in that event, a petition for an opportunity to 50 ballot in a primary election shall be filed not later than the [seventh] 51 tenth Thursday preceding such primary election. 52 5. A judicial district convention shall be held not earlier than [the53Tuesday following the third Monday in September preceding the general54election and not later than the fourth Monday in September preceding55such election] ten days following the deadline pursuant to section twen- 56 ty-one of article VI of the state constitution for the vacancy in theA. 5312 35 1 office of the supreme court to occur and still be filled at the next 2 general election and not later than six days after such earliest date to 3 hold such convention. 4 9. A petition for an independent nomination for an office to be filled 5 at the time of a general election shall be filed not earlier than 6 [twelve] twenty-three weeks and not later than [eleven] twenty-two weeks 7 preceding such election. A petition for an independent nomination for an 8 office to be filled at a special election shall be filed not later than 9 twelve days following the issuance of a proclamation of such election. 10 [A petition for trustee of the Long Island Power Authority shall be11filed not earlier than seven weeks and not later than six weeks preced-12ing the day of the election of such trustees.] 13 11. A certificate of acceptance or declination of an independent nomi- 14 nation for an office to be filled at the time of a general election 15 shall be filed not later than the third day after the [eleventh] twen- 16 ty-second Tuesday preceding such election except that a candidate who 17 files such a certificate of acceptance for an office for which there 18 have been filed certificates or petitions designating more than one 19 candidate for the nomination of any party, may thereafter file a certif- 20 icate of declination not later than the third day after the primary 21 election. A certificate of acceptance or declination of an independent 22 nomination for an office to be filled at a special election shall be 23 filed not later than fourteen days following the issuance of a proclama- 24 tion of such election. 25 12. A certificate to fill a vacancy caused by a declination of an 26 independent nomination for an office to be filled at the time of a 27 general election shall be filed not later than the sixth day after the 28 [eleventh] twenty-second Tuesday preceding such election. A certificate 29 to fill a vacancy caused by a declination of an independent nomination 30 for an office to be filled at a special election shall be filed not 31 later than sixteen days following the issuance of a proclamation of such 32 election. 33 14. A vacancy occurring three months before [September twentieth of] 34 the general election in any year in any office authorized to be filled 35 at a general election, except in the offices of governor, lieutenant- 36 governor, or United States senator shall be filled at the general 37 election held next thereafter, unless otherwise provided by the consti- 38 tution, or unless previously filled at a special election. 39 § 13. Subdivision 6 of section 6-158 of the election law, as amended 40 by chapter 79 of the laws of 1992, is amended to read as follows: 41 6. (a) A certificate of a party nomination made other than at the 42 primary election for an office to be filled at the time of a general 43 election shall be filed not later than [seven] thirty days after the 44 fall primary election, (b) except that a certificate of nomination for 45 an office which becomes vacant after the seventh day preceding such 46 primary election shall be filed not later than [fourteen] thirty days 47 after the primary election or ten days after the creation of such vacan- 48 cy, whichever is later, and (c) except, further, that a certificate of 49 party nomination of candidates for elector of president and vice-presi- 50 dent of the United States shall be filed not later than [fourteen] sixty 51 days [after the fall primary] before the general election, and (d) 52 except still further that a certificate of party nomination made at a 53 judicial district convention shall be filed not later than the day after 54 the last day to hold such convention and the minutes of such convention, 55 duly certified by the chairman and secretary, shall be filed within 56 seventy-two hours after adjournment of the convention. A certificate ofA. 5312 36 1 party nomination for an office to be filled at a special election shall 2 be filed not later than ten days following the issuance of a proclama- 3 tion of such election. 4 § 14. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 8-100 of the election 5 law, as amended by chapter 17 of the laws of 2007, is amended to read as 6 follows: 7 (a) A primary election[, to be known as the fall primary,] shall be 8 held on the [first] fourth Tuesday [after the second Monday] in [Septem-9ber] June before every general election unless otherwise changed by an 10 act of the legislature. Members of the state and county committees and 11 assembly district leaders and associate district leaders and all other 12 party positions to be elected shall be elected at such primary and all 13 nominations for public office required to be made at a primary election 14 in such year shall be made at such primary. In each year in which elec- 15 tors of president and vice president of the United States are to be 16 elected an additional primary election, to be known as the spring prima- 17 ry, shall be held on the first Tuesday in February unless otherwise 18 changed by an act of the legislature, for the purpose of electing deleg- 19 ates to the national convention[, members of state and county committees20and assembly district leaders and associate assembly district leaders]. 21 § 15. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 10-108 of the 22 election law, as amended by chapter 4 of the laws of 2011, is amended to 23 read as follows: 24 (a) Ballots for military voters shall be mailed or otherwise distrib- 25 uted by the board of elections, in accordance with the preferred method 26 of transmission designated by the voter pursuant to section 10-107 of 27 this article, as soon as practicable but in any event not later than 28 [thirty-two] forty-six days before a primary or general election[; twen-29ty-five days before], a New York city community school board district or 30 city of Buffalo school district election; fourteen days before a village 31 election conducted by the board of elections; and forty-five days before 32 a special election. A voter who submits a military ballot application 33 shall be entitled to a military ballot thereafter for each subsequent 34 election through and including the next two regularly scheduled general 35 elections held in even numbered years, including any run-offs which may 36 occur; provided, however, such application shall not be valid for any 37 election held within seven days after its receipt. Ballots shall also 38 be mailed to any qualified military voter who is already registered and 39 who requests such military ballot from such board of elections in a 40 letter, which is signed by the voter and received by the board of 41 elections not later than the seventh day before the election for which 42 the ballot is requested and which states the address where the voter is 43 registered and the address to which the ballot is to be mailed. The 44 board of elections shall enclose with such ballot a form of application 45 for military ballot. In the case of a primary election, the board shall 46 deliver only the ballot of the party with which the military voter is 47 enrolled according to the military voter's registration records. In the 48 event a primary election is uncontested in the military voter's election 49 district for all offices or positions except the party position of 50 member of the ward, town, city or county committee, no ballot shall be 51 delivered to such military voter for such election; and the military 52 voter shall be advised of the reason why he or she will not receive a 53 ballot. 54 § 16. Subdivision 4 of section 11-204 of the election law, as amended 55 by chapter 4 of the laws of 2011, is amended to read as follows:A. 5312 37 1 4. If the board of elections shall determine that the applicant making 2 the application provided for in this section is qualified to receive and 3 vote a special federal ballot, it shall, as soon as practicable after it 4 shall have so determined, or not later than [thirty-two] forty-six days 5 before each general or primary election [and forty-five days before6each] or special election in which such applicant is qualified to vote, 7 or three days after receipt of such an application, whichever is later, 8 mail to him or her at the residence address outside the United States 9 shown in his or her application, a special federal ballot, an inner 10 affirmation envelope and an outer envelope, or otherwise distribute same 11 to the voter in accordance with the preferred method of transmission 12 designated by the voter pursuant to section 11-203 of this title. The 13 board of elections shall also mail, or otherwise distribute in accord- 14 ance with the preferred method of transmission designated by the voter 15 pursuant to section 11-203 of this title, a special federal ballot to 16 every qualified special federal voter who is already registered and who 17 requests such special federal ballot from such board of elections in a 18 letter, which is signed by the voter and received by the board of 19 elections not later than the seventh day before the election for which 20 the ballot is first requested and which states the address where the 21 voter is registered and the address to which the ballot is to be mailed. 22 The board of elections shall enclose with such ballot a form of applica- 23 tion for a special federal ballot. 24 § 17. Subdivisions 1 and 4 of section 42 of the public officers law, 25 subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 878 of the laws of 1946 and subdivi- 26 sion 4 as amended by chapter 317 of the laws of 1954, are amended to 27 read as follows: 28 1. A vacancy occurring three months before [September twentieth of] 29 the general election in any year in any office authorized to be filled 30 at a general election, except in the offices of governor or lieutenant- 31 governor, shall be filled at the general election held next thereafter, 32 unless otherwise provided by the constitution, or unless previously 33 filled at a special election. 34 4. A special election shall not be held to fill a vacancy in the 35 office of a representative in congress unless such vacancy occurs on or 36 before the first day of July of the last year of the term of office, or 37 unless it occurs thereafter and a special session of congress is called 38 to meet before the next general election, or be called after [September39nineteenth of] three months before the general election in such year; 40 nor to fill a vacancy in the office of state senator or in the office of 41 member of assembly, unless the vacancy occurs before the first day of 42 April of the last year of the term of office, or unless the vacancy 43 occurs in either such office of senator or member of assembly after such 44 first day of April and a special session of the legislature be called to 45 meet between such first day of April and the next general election or be 46 called after three months before the next general election [or be called47after September nineteenth] in such year. If a special election to fill 48 an office shall not be held as required by law, the office shall be 49 filled at the next general election. 50 § 18. This act shall take effect immediately. 51 PART L 52 Section 1. The election law is amended by adding a new section 3-112 53 to read as follows:A. 5312 38 1 § 3-112. State reimbursement for additional expenses relating to early 2 voting, enhanced language access and expanded primary hours. 1. The 3 state shall reimburse counties and the city of New York for additional 4 costs directly associated with the implementation and administration of: 5 (a) early voting pursuant to title six of article eight of this chap- 6 ter; and 7 (b) enhanced language access for certain limited English proficient 8 and non-English speaking residents of such counties or city pursuant to 9 section 3-507 of this chapter. 10 2. The state also shall reimburse affected counties for additional 11 costs directly associated with the implementation and administration of 12 that portion of section three of part H of a chapter of the laws of two 13 thousand seventeen entitled the "New York votes act" that amended subdi- 14 vision two of section 8-100 of this chapter to expand hours for primary 15 elections held in such counties. 16 3. Reimbursement of expenses by the state pursuant to subdivisions one 17 and two of this section shall be made only upon written application of 18 such counties or the city of New York filed with the state board of 19 elections. Such application shall, at a minimum, include a detailed 20 description and itemization of the additional costs and expenses for 21 which reimbursement is sought and such other information as the state 22 board of elections may require. To the extent applicable, such reimburs- 23 able costs may include additional clerical costs, maintenance and opera- 24 tion costs, as well as salaries of local board of elections personnel, 25 poll inspectors, ballot and sample ballot production and such other 26 additional costs that may accrue in fulfilling the statutory require- 27 ments referenced in subdivisions one and two of this section. 28 4. The state board of elections shall approve such reimbursement 29 provided it conforms to standards relating to the administration of 30 elections. 31 5. State aid shall be granted to the city of New York and the respec- 32 tive counties outside the city of New York pursuant to this section only 33 to the extent of reimbursing one hundred per centum of the additional 34 expenditures incurred by the county or city in complying with the statu- 35 tory requirements referenced in subdivisions one and two of this 36 section. 37 6. The state board of elections shall promulgate rules and regulations 38 in furtherance of these provisions in accordance with section 3-102 of 39 this title. 40 § 2. This act shall take effect immediately. 41 § 3. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivi- 42 sion, section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of 43 competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgement shall not affect, 44 impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in 45 its operation to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section 46 or part thereof directly involved in the controversy in which such 47 judgement shall have been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the 48 intent of the legislature that this act would have been enacted even if 49 such invalid provisions had not been included herein. 50 § 4. This act shall take effect immediately provided, however, that 51 the applicable effective date of Parts A through L of this act shall be 52 as specifically set forth in the last section of such Parts.