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Maryland‘s Experience with the MOVE Act Linda H. Lamone State Administrator Maryland State Board of Elections.

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Presentation on theme: "Maryland‘s Experience with the MOVE Act Linda H. Lamone State Administrator Maryland State Board of Elections."— Presentation transcript:

1 Maryland‘s Experience with the MOVE Act Linda H. Lamone State Administrator Maryland State Board of Elections

2 Maryland Before the MOVE Act Accepted Federal Write-in Absentee Ballots for all elections Provided absentee information via voter look-up website No notary or paper or envelope requirements Transmitted blank ballots electronically

3 Implementing MOVE in Maryland State was in good shape to implement MOVE Adopted regulations to address majority of technical election administration issues Opted to use website to deliver absentee ballots electronically

4 Electronic Delivery of Absentee Ballots Once ballots are available, send email to each voter that his/her ballot was ready Use unique ballot tracking number to access ballot, instructions, etc. Voter prints ballot, instructions, oath, and envelope Voter must mail voted ballot and oath

5 2010 General Election – Statistics 37% of UOCAVA voters received ballot electronically Twice as many domestic, civilian voters received ballots electronically than UOCAVA voters

6 2010 General Election – Statistics Return rate for UOCAVA (25.4%) significantly lower than the rate for domestic, civilian voters (79.6%) but... Return rate higher for UOCAVA voters who received ballot electronically (28.6%) than those who received by mail (23.5%)

7 Challenges with the MOVE Act 45 day deadline for transmitting ballots to UOCAVA voters Duplicating electronically issued ballots State policymakers – not election officials – control election calendar

8 Meeting the 45-day Requirement 2010 General Election Calendar – Primary ElectionSeptember 14 th – 45 th daySeptember 18 th – Final canvassSeptember 22 nd

9 Meeting the 45-day Requirement Submitted request for waiver but continued to identify compliant solutions Withdrew request with DOJ and FVAP-approved solution – send federal only ballots by 45 th day before election Sent federal only ballots by 45 th day and sent full State ballot when completed

10 Meeting the 45-day Requirement – in the Future Change Maryland’s election calendar – Move presidential primary election – Move gubernatorial primary election Encourage national parties to nominate presidential candidates earlier – Impacts ability of all states to meet requirement

11 Duplicating Electronically Issued Ballots Ballots printed on off-the shelf printers cannot be read by current optical scanners During canvass, all of these ballots must be duplicated onto readable ballots

12 Recommendations for Improvements Electronic delivery – Encourage voting system vendors to develop optical scanners that can read ballots printed by off-the-shelf printers – without a corresponding trade-off of accuracy

13 45-day mailing requirement – Encourage national parties to nominate presidential candidates earlier – Encourage UOCAVA voters to support state efforts to adjust election calendar Recommendations for Improvements


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