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A09612 Summary:

BILL NOA09612
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORWalker
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add §§8-109 & 8-415, amd §§8-406 & 8-407, El L; amd §§500-j, 146, 75, 510 & 137, Cor L
 
Relates to voting rights and access for incarcerated individuals; authorizes polling places to be available at correctional facilities and local facilities; requires such facilities to provide persons detained or confined in such facilities access to register to vote or apply for an absentee ballot; requires voting information to be included in the inmate handbook.
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A09612 Actions:

BILL NOA09612
 
03/26/2024referred to election law
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A09612 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A9612
 
SPONSOR: Walker
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the election law and the correction law, in relation to voting rights and access for incarcerated individuals   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: The purpose of this bill is to codify the right to vote for citizens detained pretrial or for lesser offenses in correctional facilities who have not lost the right to vote, and to provide local officials with authorization and guidance to facilitate timely access to at least one method of effective and secure voter registration and ballot access for all such eligible persons.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1 of the bill adds a new section 8-109 to the Election Law to provide local election officials with the option to deploy a poll site during the final two days of the early voting period for not less than 6 hours at correctional facilities and local correctional facilities with- in their jurisdiction, in lieu of either the residual duties to provide basic voter registration and absentee ballot access under a new Election Law § 8-415, or the bipartisan absentee ballot collection program prescribed for the most populous congregate facilities (e.g. nursing homes) by a revised section 8-407 of the election law. Balloting at such a polling place will be available to confined eligible citizens and facility staff who are voters in the jurisdiction where the facility is located. Voters who are residents of other jurisdictions are guaranteed voter access under a new Election Law § 8-415, discussed below. Section 2 of the bill amends Election law § 8-406 to authorize biparti- san local Board of Elections personnel to deliver absentee ballots via the existing bipartisan absentee ballot collection program (in Election Law § 8-407 as amended by Section 3 of the bill), to citizens detained in correctional facilities and local correctional facilities who have not lost the right to vote. Section 3 of the bill amends Election Law § 8-407 and adds 2 new subdi- visions (16) and (17). The existing § 8-407 bipartisan absentee ballot collection program directs bipartisan teams of election officials to conduct in-person visits to certain congregate residential facilities (e.g., nursing homes), to facilitate absentee voting, if the local board of elections receives 25 absentee ballot requests from a covered facili- ty. Section 3 adds correctional facilities and local correctional facil- ities to the list of covered facilities, with limited changes to reflect the access needs of the eligible correctional population. The § 8-407 program is modified for correctional facilities and local correctional facilities to eliminate the need for election officials to wait for 25 absentee ballot applications from the largest facilities in the most populous counties in the state (including New York City facilities) to coordinate a visit to such facility by a bipartisan team. If the popu- lation threshold in subdivision 16 is triggered, the board of elections shall designate a bipartisan team to schedule a visit to the facility or deploy a poll site as described in section 1 of the bill. The board of elections will also supply materials to conduct voter registration and absentee balloting. This section also enhanc es intergovernmental coop- eration between Elections and Corrections officials and basic record- keeping, to ensure timely, fair, and effective voter access. Section 3 of the bill also adds a new subdivision 16. to Election Law § 8-407, which creates an alternative population-based trigger for the bipartisan absentee ballot collection program at correctional facilities and local correctional facilities. Local boards of elections that serve at least 100,000 registered voters will proactively coordinate visits by bipartisan teams to facilitate registration and voting at any correc- tional facility or local correctional facility with a total census of 75 or more persons. Covered boards of elections must cooperate with facil- ity leadership to identify such facilities, develop written procedures for orderly and secure delivery and retrieval of registration and voting materials. These procedures are reviewed for sufficiency and election integrity by the State Board of Elections. Local election officials have the discretion to decide to deploy bipartisan teams at correctional facilities below the population threshold. The new subdivision 17 provides potential recourse under Article 17 of the election law if the rights and access prescribed by this act are intentionally frustrated. Section 4 of the bill adds a new § 8-415 to the Election Law to improve residual voter registration and absentee ballot access for all eligible citizens detained in correctional facilities and local correctional facilities who have not lost the right to vote, wherever they are being detained. Local election officials coordinate with facility leadership to facilitate access to voting. All such eligible citizens must be provided with effective voter registration and absentee ballot access, regardless of where they are confined in the state, no later than twen- ty-one days prior to election day. The State Board of Elections shall issue non-partisan materials to clarify voter eligibility, voting rights and rules, and voting options. These materials must be publicized and distributed in correctional facilities. Section 5 of the bill amends Corrections Law Article 20 § 500(j) regard- ing who may visit a local correctional facility to authorize visits by bipartisan teams from the board of elections in order to facilitate timely and effective voter access in accordance with this act. Section 6 of the bill amends § 146(1) of the Correction Law regarding who may visit a correctional facility to authorize visits by bipartisan teams from the board of elections in order to facilitate timely and effective voter access in accordance with this act. Section 7 of the bill renames and renumbers § 75 of the Corrections Law and adds new subdivisions 1, 2, and 3 to codify the right to vote for otherwise-eligible American citizens detained in correctional facilities who have not lost the right to vote. This is modeled on the Corrections Law's Freedom of Worship law and protects the opportunity to register to vote and request ballots. Facility leadership has a duty to cooperate with local election officials to facilitate voter access. Section 8 of the bill renames and renumbers § 510 of the Corrections Law and adds new subdivisions 1, 2, and 3 to codify the right to vote for otherwise- eligible American citizens detained in local correctional facilities who have not lost the right to vote. This is modeled on the Corrections Law's Freedom of Worship law and protects the opportunity to register to vote and request ballots. Facility leadership has a duty to cooperate with local election officials to facilitate voter access. Section 9 of the bill amends Corrections Law § 137 to clarify that otherwise-eligible citizens who have not lost the right to vote and are being held in solitary confinement may not be deprived of effective access to voting. Section 10 of the bill sets forth the effective date.   JUSTIFICATION: Thousands of American citizens detained in New York jails each year have not lost their right to vote, yet their access to voting is severely limited, if not obstructed entirely by the circumstances of their confinement. This jeopardizes civil rights and undermines the state's interest in maintaining correctional policies that foster rehabilitation and community reintegration Prison Policy Initiative, Eligible, But Excluded: A Guide to Removing the Barriers to Jail Voting, October 2020, https://bit.ly/44S8D53). This population includes otherwise-eligible citizens who are detained pretrial or for lesser offenses and who have not lost (or did not lose) their right to vote as a consequence for their alleged offenses. These citizens have just one way to vote-by absentee ballot. Yet, they are effectively being disenfranchised because of the absence of a voter access program coordinated and facilitated by elections and corrections officials. Currently, without such a program for this population, the responsibility for voter access is illusory or amorphous at best, fall- ing to local sheriffs, corrections staff, and civic groups, rather than the bipartisan officials who administer local elections. This has led to limited, variable and unpredictable access year-to-year and facility-to- facility. The lack of statewide uniformity leaves an unaccountable void filled by ad hoc arrangements, misinformation about eligibility, and infringed rights. Modern state regulation is needed to adequately and uniformly safeguard these civil rights and ensure the integrity of elections. Notably, people of color are dramatically overrepresented in American jails and prisons. Racial disparities are particularly stark for Black Americans, who make up 38% of the incarcerated population despite representing only 12% of U.S residents (Prison Policy Initiative, Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie 2023, March 2023, https://bit.ly/3HPeZZx). This legislation codifies the right to vote for citizens in correctional facilities and local correctional facilities who have not lost the right to vote (i.e., who are not currently incarcerated for a felony conviction) and provides local officials with authorization and guidance to facilitate timely access to at least one method of effective and secure voter registration and ballot access for all such eligible persons. This policy provides interlocking voter access options for election administrators, who need to serve voters in urban and rural localities, and who are provided with discretion and flexibility to meet local needs with limited resources. The act sets a statewide standard that enhances and clarifies the residual duty on local officials to provide and facil- itate basic voter registration and absentee ballot access for eligible citizens detained in less populous correctional facilities or local correctional facilities and citizens detained outside their home county, reducing the logistical barriers to ballot access that can unjustly suppress these legitimate voters. The Election Law's Bipartisan Absentee Ballot Collection Program (EL § 8-407) for large nursing homes and congregate facilities is extended to apply to the largest correctional facilities and local correctional facilities in New York's most populous counties. Election officials are authorized to proactively coordinate this program with facility leader- ship, who must cooperate to ensure the eligible citizens confined at each covered facility have a fair opportunity to timely register and vote. Alternatively, local election officials have the option to deploy a poll site at the populous facilities in their county, so eligible confined citizens and facility staff can conveniently vote. Finally, this act establishes a partnership of cooperation between elections and corrections officials, clarifying the role of bipartisan election officials in election-related tasks (eligibility, registration, balloting materials) and the role of corrections to facilitate effective voter access for citizens in their custody. This policy rectifies an ongoing injustice and is intended to provide parity of access to civil rights to the extent possible and safeguards for access disparities that account for the circumstances of confinement to assure fair, timely, and secure access to voting for eligible citi- zens in jails.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: New bill.   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: None to the state.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect on the first day of July next succeeding the date on which it shall have become a law. Effective immediately, the state board of elections is authorized and directed to promulgate neces- sary rules, procedures, guidance, and educational materials and the state and local boards of elections are authorized and directed to take all necessary preparatory actions to ensure timely implementation of and compliance with this act. Assemblywoman Latrice M. Walker. March 13, 2024
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A09612 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          9612
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                     March 26, 2024
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced by M. of A. WALKER -- read once and referred to the Committee
          on Election Law
 
        AN  ACT to amend the election law and the correction law, in relation to
          voting rights and access for incarcerated individuals
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section  1.  The election law is amended by adding a new section 8-109
     2  to read as follows:
     3    § 8-109. Polling places at correctional facilities and  local  correc-
     4  tional  facilities.  For purposes of facilitating voting by residents of
     5  correctional facilities and local correctional facilities, as such terms
     6  are defined in section two of the correction law, the board of elections
     7  may establish by majority  vote,  in  lieu  of  the  absentee  balloting
     8  program  set  forth in subdivisions one through fifteen of section 8-407
     9  of this article, a polling place at any such facility for at least three
    10  hours of operation beginning the third day prior to any general,  prima-
    11  ry, run-off primary pursuant to subdivision one of section 6-162 of this
    12  chapter  or    special  election  for  any public or party position, and
    13  ending on and including the second day prior to such  general,  primary,
    14  run-off  primary  or  special  election  for such public office or party
    15  position.  Any such polling place shall  be  established  in  compliance
    16  with  the  early voting provisions of paragraphs (d) and (e) of subdivi-
    17  sion four and subdivisions five through eleven of section 8-600 of  this
    18  article.  Voter  access  to  polling places established pursuant to this
    19  section shall be restricted to  voters  detained  or  confined  at  such
    20  facility  or  related  facilities  and  voters who are employees of such
    21  facilities, who are registered to vote in the county where such facility
    22  is located, or for facilities located in the city of  New  York,  voters
    23  who  are registered to vote in the city of New York.  All other eligible
    24  voters who are detained or confined at such facility or who are  employ-
    25  ees of such facility shall be provided with voter registration forms and
    26  absentee  ballot applications pursuant to section 8-415 of this article.
    27  The establishment of polling places under this section shall be in addi-
    28  tion to, and shall not diminish, the minimum quantity  of  early  voting
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD11137-03-4

        A. 9612                             2
 
     1  locations  required by subdivision two of section 8-600 of this article,
     2  nor shall the fact of such establishment alter or prejudice the applica-
     3  tion of the equitable siting factors therein.  The  board  of  elections
     4  shall  establish  procedures  or  apply procedures established for early
     5  voting, subject to approval of the state board of elections,  to  ensure
     6  that  persons  who  vote  during  the  early  voting period shall not be
     7  permitted to vote subsequently in the same election.
     8    § 2. Subdivision 1 of section 8-406 of the election law, as amended by
     9  section 2 of part HH of chapter 55 of the laws of 2022,  is  amended  to
    10  read as follows:
    11    1.  If the board shall find that the applicant is a qualified voter of
    12  the election district containing  [his]  the  applicant's  residence  as
    13  stated in [his] the applicant's statement and that [his] the applicant's
    14  statement is sufficient, it shall, as soon as practicable after it shall
    15  have  determined  [his] the applicant's right thereto, mail to [him] the
    16  applicant at an address designated by [him] the applicant, or deliver to
    17  [him] the applicant, or to any person designated  for  such  purpose  in
    18  writing  by  [him]  the  applicant,  at the office of the board, such an
    19  absentee voter's ballot or set of ballots and an envelope  therefor.  If
    20  the  ballot  or ballots are to be sent outside of the United States to a
    21  country other than Canada or Mexico, such ballot  or  ballots  shall  be
    22  sent  by  air  mail.    However,  if an applicant who is eligible for an
    23  absentee ballot is a resident of a facility operated or licensed by,  or
    24  under  the jurisdiction of, the department of mental hygiene, or a resi-
    25  dent of a facility defined as a nursing home or residential health  care
    26  facility  pursuant to subdivisions two and three of section two thousand
    27  eight hundred one of the public health law, or a resident of a  hospital
    28  or other facility operated by the Veteran's Administration of the United
    29  States,  or  a person detained or confined at a correctional facility or
    30  local correctional facility, as such terms are defined in section two of
    31  the correction law, such absentee ballot need not be so mailed or deliv-
    32  ered to any such applicant but, may be delivered to  the  voter  in  the
    33  manner  prescribed  by  section  8-407  of  this [chapter] title if such
    34  facility is located in the county or city in which such voter is  eligi-
    35  ble to vote.
    36    § 3. Section 8-407 of the election law, as added by chapter 296 of the
    37  laws of 1988, subdivisions 1, 3  and 15 as amended by chapter 195 of the
    38  laws of 2001, and subdivision 6 as amended by chapter 326 of the laws of
    39  1989, is amended to read as follows:
    40    § 8-407. Voting by residents of nursing homes, residential health care
    41  facilities,  facilities  operated or licensed, or under the jurisdiction
    42  of, the department of mental hygiene  or  hospitals  [or],    facilities
    43  operated  by  the  Veteran's  Administration of the United States, or by
    44  persons detained  or  confined  at  correctional  facilities  and  local
    45  correctional  facilities.  1. The board of elections of a county or city
    46  in which there is located at least one facility operated or licensed, or
    47  under the jurisdiction of, the department of mental hygiene, or a facil-
    48  ity defined as a nursing home or residential health care facility pursu-
    49  ant to subdivisions two and three of section two thousand eight  hundred
    50  one  of  the  public health law or an adult care facility subject to the
    51  provisions of title two of article seven of  the  social  services  law,
    52  [or]  a  hospital  or  other facility operated by the Veteran's Adminis-
    53  tration of the United  States,  or  a  correctional  facility  or  local
    54  correctional  facility  shall,  subject  to  subdivision sixteen of this
    55  section and section 8-109 of this article, provide and ensure that resi-
    56  dents of, or persons detained or confined at,  each  such  facility  for

        A. 9612                             3
 
     1  which  such  board  has  received  twenty-five  or more applications for
     2  absentee ballots from voters who are eligible to vote by absentee ballot
     3  in such city or county at such election, may  vote  by  absentee  ballot
     4  [only]  in  the  manner provided for in this section. Such board may, in
     5  its discretion, provide that the procedure described in this subdivision
     6  shall be applicable to all such facilities in such county or city  with-
     7  out  regard  to the number of absentee ballot applications received from
     8  the residents of any such facility.
     9    2. Such a board of elections shall appoint,  in  the  same  manner  as
    10  other  inspectors,  one  or  more bi-partisan boards of inspectors, each
    11  composed of two such inspectors. Such inspectors may be regular  employ-
    12  ees  of  such board of elections or persons qualified in accordance with
    13  subdivision six  of  section  3-400  of  this  chapter.  All  inspectors
    14  appointed  pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall  undergo the requisite
    15  training and subscribe to  the  oath  required  of  election  inspectors
    16  pursuant to sections 3-412 and 3-414 of this chapter.
    17    3.  Not  earlier  than [thirteen] twenty-one days before or later than
    18  the day before such an  election  such  a  board  of  inspectors  shall,
    19  between  the  hours  of  [nine]  seven o'clock in the morning and [five]
    20  eight o'clock in the evening on one or more days, attend  at  each  such
    21  facility  for  the residents of which the board of elections has custody
    22  of twenty-five or more absentee ballots  or  which  otherwise  qualifies
    23  pursuant  to  subdivision  sixteen  of  this section or, if the board of
    24  elections has so provided, each such facility for which  the  board  has
    25  custody of one or more such absentee ballots, pursuant to the provisions
    26  of this chapter.
    27    4. Each such board of inspectors may attend at more than one facility,
    28  provided, however, that no such board of inspectors shall be assigned to
    29  attend at more facilities than it reasonably can be expected to complete
    30  within the time specified by this section.
    31    5.  The  board  of elections shall deliver to each board of inspectors
    32  voter registration forms, paper absentee ballot  applications  or  tools
    33  capable of providing eligible persons with access to complete and submit
    34  or  save  such applications through the electronic voter registration or
    35  absentee ballot application transmittal system and sufficient  equipment
    36  for  the  printing  and issuance of absentee ballots or all the absentee
    37  ballots in the custody of such board of elections which are addressed to
    38  [residents of] voters at the facilities which such board  of  inspectors
    39  is  appointed for or assigned to attend, together with one or more port-
    40  able voting booths of a type approved by the state  board  of  elections
    41  and  such other supplies, including assistive devices and any reasonable
    42  accommodations for persons with disabilities and interpretive  resources
    43  and personnel for those in need of language assistance, as such board of
    44  inspectors  will require to discharge its duties properly. Any completed
    45  voter registration forms collected by such board of inspectors shall  be
    46  processed  pursuant  to  sections  5-208  and  5-210 of this chapter, as
    47  applicable. Any completed absentee ballot application forms collected by
    48  such board of inspectors shall be treated as applications for an  absen-
    49  tee ballot delivered in person at the board of elections to the voter or
    50  to an agent of the voter in accordance with paragraph (c) of subdivision
    51  two  of  section  8-400  of this title and processed pursuant to section
    52  8-402 of this title.
    53    6. The board of elections, at least [twenty]  forty-five  days  before
    54  each  such  election,  or,  for  facilities not set forth in subdivision
    55  sixteen of this section, on the day after it  shall  have  received  the
    56  requisite number of applications for absentee ballots from the residents

        A. 9612                             4
 
     1  of  any  such  facility,  whichever is later, shall communicate with the
     2  superintendent, administrator or director of each such facility or their
     3  designated democracy officer or agent to  arrange  the  [day]  days  and
     4  [time]  times when the board of inspectors will attend at such facility.
     5  The board of elections shall keep a list  of  (a)  the  [day]  days  and
     6  [time]  times  at which the board of inspectors will attend at each such
     7  facility, (b) the number of applications for absentee  ballots  received
     8  from  any such facility, and (c) the number of absentee ballots returned
     9  by voters at any such facility pursuant to this section  as  [a]  public
    10  [record] records at its office and deliver a copy of such records to the
    11  state  board  of elections within seven days after certification of each
    12  primary, general or special election.
    13    7. It shall be the duty of each such superintendent, administrator  or
    14  director,  or their designated democracy officer or agent, to assist the
    15  board of inspectors attending or serving such facility in the  discharge
    16  of  its  duties,  including, but not limited to making available to such
    17  board of inspectors space  and  reasonable  accommodations  within  such
    18  facility suitable for the discharge of its duties.
    19    8.  The  board  of  inspectors  shall  deliver  each  absentee  ballot
    20  addressed to a [resident of] voter located at each such facility to such
    21  [resident] voter.  If such [resident] voter is physically  disabled  the
    22  inspectors  shall,  if  necessary,  deliver  the ballot to such voter at
    23  [his] their bedside.
    24    9. The board of inspectors shall arrange the portable voting booth  or
    25  booths  provided  and  effect  such  safeguards  as  may be necessary to
    26  provide secrecy for the votes cast by such [residents] voters.
    27    10. If such a [resident] voter is unable to mark [his]  their  ballot,
    28  [he]  they  may be assisted in marking such ballot by the two members of
    29  the board of inspectors or such other person as [he] they may select. If
    30  a voter is unable to mark the ballot and unable to communicate  how  [he
    31  wishes]  they wish such ballot marked, such ballot shall not be cast. No
    32  person who assists a voter to mark [his] their ballot  pursuant  to  the
    33  provisions  of  this section, shall disclose to any other person how any
    34  such ballot was marked.
    35    11. Except as otherwise provided in this  section,  all  ballots  cast
    36  pursuant  to  this  section shall be cast in the manner provided by this
    37  chapter for the casting of absentee ballots.
    38    12. After such ballots have been cast and sealed  in  the  appropriate
    39  envelopes, they shall be returned to such inspectors.
    40    13.  Upon  completion  of  its  duties,  the board of inspectors shall
    41  forthwith return all such ballots to the board of elections.
    42    14. Any person, political committee or independent  body  entitled  to
    43  appoint watchers for the election district in which any such facility is
    44  located  at the election for which such absentee ballots are cast, shall
    45  be entitled to appoint a watcher to attend such board of  inspectors  at
    46  such facility.
    47    15.  All ballots cast pursuant to the provisions of this section which
    48  are received before the close of the polls on election day by the  board
    49  of  elections  charged  with  the  duty  of  casting and canvassing such
    50  ballots, may be delivered to the inspectors of election  in  the  manner
    51  prescribed  by  this  chapter  or retained at the board of elections and
    52  cast and canvassed pursuant to the provisions of section 9-209  of  this
    53  chapter  as  such  board shall, in its discretion, determine pursuant to
    54  the provisions of subdivision one of this section.
    55    16. With respect to correctional  facilities  and  local  correctional
    56  facilities,  as  such terms are defined in section two of the correction

        A. 9612                             5
 
     1  law, the board of elections in counties with at least one hundred  thou-
     2  sand  registered voters shall provide that the eligible persons detained
     3  or confined at any such facility in such  county  with  seventy-five  or
     4  more  persons  detained  or  confined  may  vote  by  absentee ballot as
     5  provided for in this section, without regard to the number  of  absentee
     6  ballot  applications received from eligible voters at any such facility.
     7  With respect to eligible persons detained at such facility who  are  not
     8  residents  of the county in which such facility is located, the residen-
     9  tial duty to facilitate timely voter registration  and  absentee  ballot
    10  access  pursuant to section 8-415 of this title shall still apply.  Each
    11  board of elections subject  to  this  subdivision  shall  adopt  written
    12  procedures  to  ensure  orderly administration of the absentee balloting
    13  program at each such facility.  Such procedures shall include,  but  not
    14  be  limited  to,  the delivery and retrieval of voter registration forms
    15  and absentee ballots, shall be counter signed by the  facility's  super-
    16  intendent,  administrator  or  director,  or  their designated democracy
    17  officer or agent, and shall be public records.  All procedures shall  be
    18  submitted  to  the  state  board  of elections no later than ninety days
    19  prior to the first election day in which a facility located within  such
    20  a  county  shall  participate in this program, and approved by the state
    21  board of elections with any amendments prescribed by the state board  of
    22  elections  no  later  than seventy-five days prior to such election day.
    23  All other correctional facilities and local correctional  facilities  in
    24  such  a  county  shall  be subject to the provisions of section 8-415 of
    25  this title; provided, however, that a board  of  elections  may  provide
    26  absentee  balloting access in accordance with this subdivision to voters
    27  detained or confined at such other  correctional  facilities  and  local
    28  correctional  facilities in lieu of such board of elections' obligations
    29  prescribed by section 8-415 of this title. This  subdivision  shall  not
    30  apply  to  any  facility  where the persons detained or confined at such
    31  facility are exclusively under the age of eighteen.
    32    17. Nothing in this section shall prejudice or limit the rights  under
    33  state  and federal law of any voter who votes pursuant to the methods in
    34  this section, including the rights and remedies provided for under title
    35  two of article seventeen of this chapter.
    36    § 4. The election law is amended by adding a new section 8-415 to read
    37  as follows:
    38    § 8-415. Absentee voting; application and registration drive for citi-
    39  zens detained or confined at correctional facilities and  local  correc-
    40  tional  facilities. 1. This section applies to any correctional facility
    41  or local correctional facility, as such terms are defined in section two
    42  of the correction law, for which  absentee  balloting  is  not  provided
    43  pursuant  to  section  8-407 of this title, except for any such facility
    44  where the persons detained or confined at such facility are  exclusively
    45  under  the  age  of  eighteen.  For  each  such  facility,  the board of
    46  elections  shall  coordinate  with  the  superintendent,  administrator,
    47  director,  designated  democracy  officer  or  agent to facilitate voter
    48  access by ensuring that all eligible citizens are provided with a  voter
    49  registration  form,  which shall be processed pursuant to sections 5-208
    50  and 5-210 of this chapter, as applicable, and that all  eligible  voters
    51  are  provided  with an absentee ballot application no later than twenty-
    52  one days prior to election day. It shall be the duty of each such super-
    53  intendent, administrator,  director,  designated  democracy  officer  or
    54  agent  to  assist  the  board in the discharge of its duties pursuant to
    55  this subdivision, including, but not limited to making  available  suit-
    56  able space and reasonable accommodations within such facility.

        A. 9612                             6
 
     1    2.  The  state board of elections shall promulgate non-partisan educa-
     2  tional materials in plain language about the voting rights  of  individ-
     3  uals  currently  incarcerated and formerly incarcerated for inclusion in
     4  the inmate handbook or similar materials and reentry resources.  Nothing
     5  in  this  subdivision  shall  prohibit  the inclusion or distribution of
     6  non-partisan educational materials in additional resources  provided  to
     7  or made available to incarcerated or formerly incarcerated individuals.
     8    § 5. Section 500-j of the correction law, as amended by chapter 291 of
     9  the laws of 2009, is amended to read as follows:
    10    §  500-j.  Who  may visit local correctional facilities. The following
    11  persons may visit at pleasure all  local  correctional  facilities:  The
    12  governor  and  lieutenant-governor,  secretary of state, comptroller and
    13  attorney-general, members of the legislature, judges  of  the  court  of
    14  appeals,  justices  of  the  supreme  court  and county judges, district
    15  attorneys [and], every clergyman or minister, as such terms are  defined
    16  in  section  two  of  the religious corporations law, having charge of a
    17  congregation in the county  in  which  such  facility  is  located,  and
    18  bi-partisan board of elections officials and inspectors appointed by the
    19  board  of elections in the county where any such facility is situated or
    20  the board of elections in the city of New York, in  order  to  discharge
    21  their  duties  under  sections  8-407  and 8-415 of the election law. No
    22  other person not otherwise authorized by law shall be permitted to enter
    23  the rooms of  a  local  correctional  facility  in  which  convicts  are
    24  confined, unless under such regulations as the sheriff of the county, or
    25  in  counties within the city of New York, the commissioner of correction
    26  of such city, or in the  county  of  Westchester,  the  commissioner  of
    27  correction of such county shall prescribe.
    28    § 6. Subdivision 1 of section 146 of the correction law, as amended by
    29  chapter 274 of the laws of 2019, is amended to read as follows:
    30    1.  The following persons shall be authorized to visit at pleasure all
    31  correctional facilities: The governor and  lieutenant-governor,  commis-
    32  sioner  of  general services, secretary of state, comptroller and attor-
    33  ney-general, members of the commission of  correction,  members  of  the
    34  legislature and their accompanying staff and any employee of the depart-
    35  ment  as  requested  by  the  member  of  the  legislature if the member
    36  requests to be so accompanied,  provided  that  such  request  does  not
    37  impact  upon  the  department's ability to supervise, manage and control
    38  its facilities as determined by the commissioner, judges of the court of
    39  appeals, supreme court and  county  judges,  district  attorneys  [and],
    40  every clergyman or minister, as such terms are defined in section two of
    41  the  religious  corporations law, having charge of a congregation in the
    42  county wherein any such facility is situated, and bi-partisan boards  of
    43  elections  officials  and inspectors appointed by the board of elections
    44  in the county where any such  facility  is  situated  or  the  board  of
    45  elections  in  the  city of New York, in order to discharge their duties
    46  under sections 8-407 and 8-415 of the election law. No other person  not
    47  otherwise  authorized  by law shall be permitted to enter a correctional
    48  facility except by authority of the  commissioner  of  correction  under
    49  such regulations as the commissioner shall prescribe.
    50    §  7.  Section  75 of the correction law, as amended by chapter 103 of
    51  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    52    § 75. [Notice of voting] Voting rights.    1.  Freedom  to  vote.  All
    53  persons  who  may have been or may hereafter be detained or confined at,
    54  or committed to or taken charge of by any correctional facility, who are
    55  qualified to register for and vote at any election pursuant  to  section
    56  5-102  of the election law and not subject to exclusion by section 5-106

        A. 9612                             7
 
     1  of the election law, are hereby declared to  be  entitled  to  the  free
     2  exercise  and enjoyment of the elective franchise without discrimination
     3  or preference.
     4    2.  Opportunity to register to vote and request ballots. The rules and
     5  regulations established for the government of any correctional  facility
     6  shall  recognize  the right of detained or incarcerated individuals, who
     7  are qualified to register for and  vote  at  any  election  pursuant  to
     8  section  5-102  of  the  election  law  and  not subject to exclusion by
     9  section 5-106 of the election law, to the free exercise of  their  right
    10  to  vote  in  accordance with the provisions of the constitution and, to
    11  effectuate such end, shall allow for access by the eligible  individuals
    12  to  electronic  personal  voter  registration  or  voter registration by
    13  application pursuant to article five of the election law and  to  access
    14  absentee  balloting  services  through  the  electronic  absentee ballot
    15  application transmittal system or by paper application pursuant to title
    16  four of article eight of the election law, in such manner  as  may  best
    17  carry  into effect the spirit and intent of this section and be consist-
    18  ent with the proper discipline and management of the correctional facil-
    19  ity.  Such services shall be made  available  within  the  buildings  or
    20  grounds,  whenever possible, where the detained or incarcerated individ-
    21  uals are required by law to be confined, in  such  manner  and  at  such
    22  hours  as  will be in harmony with the rules and regulations of both the
    23  facility and the board of elections, and such facilities shall secure to
    24  such individuals the free exercise of their right to vote in  accordance
    25  with  the  provisions  of this section. In case of a violation of any of
    26  the provisions of this section, any person feeling  himself  or  herself
    27  aggrieved  thereby  may  exercise  any  rights and remedies provided for
    28  under state and federal law, including by instituting proceedings in the
    29  supreme court of the district where such facility is situated, which  is
    30  hereby  authorized  and  empowered  to  enforce  the  provisions of this
    31  section.
    32    3. Duty to cooperate. Pursuant to sections 8-406, 8-407, and 8-415  of
    33  the election law, the superintendent of each correctional facility shall
    34  cooperate  with  the board of elections in developing and implementing a
    35  plan to facilitate at least one method of voter access for  all  persons
    36  eligible  to  vote  who  are detained or confined at each such facility,
    37  including, but not limited to making available to such board  space  and
    38  reasonable  accommodations within such facility for the discharge of its
    39  duties. The department  shall  issue  regulations  directing  each  such
    40  facility  to  ensure  the  timely delivery, and to facilitate the timely
    41  return if applicable, of all official election mail, forms,  notices  or
    42  communications  to  any individual detained or confined at such facility
    43  and that non-partisan plain language  educational  materials  about  the
    44  voting  rights of individuals currently incarcerated and formerly incar-
    45  cerated are included in the inmate handbook  or  similar  materials  and
    46  reentry resources. Nothing in this subdivision shall prohibit the inclu-
    47  sion or distribution of non-partisan educational materials in additional
    48  resources  provided  to  or  made  available to incarcerated or formerly
    49  incarcerated  individuals.  Without  limiting  any  rights  or  remedies
    50  provided  to  voters  under  the  law, there shall be a presumption of a
    51  violation of subdivision one of section 17-212 of the election law  when
    52  any superintendent, employee, or agent of such correctional facility, by
    53  commission  or  omission,  intentionally frustrates the purposes of this
    54  section.
    55    4. Rights restoration upon release  and  registration.  Prior  to  the
    56  release  from a correctional facility of any person the department shall

        A. 9612                             8
 
     1  notify such person verbally and in  writing,  that  [his  or  her]  such
     2  voting rights will be restored upon release and provide such person with
     3  a  form  of  application  for voter registration and a declination form,
     4  offer  such  person  assistance in filling out the appropriate form, and
     5  provide such person written information  distributed  by  the  board  of
     6  elections  on  the importance and the mechanics of voting. Upon release,
     7  such person may choose to either submit  [his  or  her]  such  completed
     8  application to the state board or county board where such person resides
     9  or  have the department transmit it on [his or her] the person's behalf.
    10  Where such person chooses to have the department transmit  the  applica-
    11  tion,  the department shall transmit the completed application upon such
    12  person's release to the state board or county board  where  such  person
    13  resides.
    14    § 8. Section 510 of the correction law, as added by chapter 103 of the
    15  laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    16    §  510. Voting [upon release]. 1. Freedom to vote. All persons who may
    17  have been or may hereafter be detained or confined at, or  committed  to
    18  or taken charge of by any local correctional facility, who are qualified
    19  to  register  for  and vote at any election pursuant to section 5-102 of
    20  the election law and not subject to exclusion by section  5-106  of  the
    21  election  law,  are  hereby declared to be entitled to the free exercise
    22  and enjoyment of the elective franchise without discrimination or  pref-
    23  erence.
    24    2.  Opportunity to register to vote and request ballots. The rules and
    25  regulations established for the government of local correctional facili-
    26  ties shall recognize the right of detained or incarcerated  individuals,
    27  who  are  qualified to register for and vote at any election pursuant to
    28  section 5-102 of the election  law  and  not  subject  to  exclusion  by
    29  section  5-106  of the election law, to the free exercise of their right
    30  to vote in accordance with the provisions of the  constitution  and,  to
    31  effectuate  such end, shall allow for access by the eligible individuals
    32  to electronic personal  voter  registration  or  voter  registration  by
    33  application  pursuant  to article five of the election law and to access
    34  absentee balloting  services  through  the  electronic  absentee  ballot
    35  application transmittal system or by paper application pursuant to title
    36  four  of  article  eight of the election law, in such manner as may best
    37  carry into effect the spirit and intent of this section and be  consist-
    38  ent with the proper discipline and management of the correctional facil-
    39  ity.    Such  services  shall  be made available within the buildings or
    40  grounds, whenever possible, where the detained or incarcerated  individ-
    41  uals  are  required  by  law  to be confined, in such manner and at such
    42  hours as will be in harmony with the rules and regulations of  both  the
    43  facility  and the board of elections, and secure to such individuals the
    44  free exercise of their right to vote in accordance with  the  provisions
    45  of this section. In case of a violation of any of the provisions of this
    46  section,  any  person  feeling  himself or herself aggrieved thereby may
    47  exercise any rights and remedies provided for under  state  and  federal
    48  law,  including  by  instituting proceedings in the supreme court of the
    49  district where such facility is situated, which is hereby authorized and
    50  empowered to enforce the provisions of this section.
    51    3. Duty to cooperate. Pursuant to sections 8-406, 8-407, and 8-415  of
    52  the election law, the superintendent of each local correctional facility
    53  shall cooperate with the board of elections in developing and implement-
    54  ing  a  plan  to  facilitate at least one method of voter access for all
    55  persons eligible to vote who are  detained  or  confined  at  each  such
    56  facility,  including,  but not limited to making available to such board

        A. 9612                             9

     1  space  and  reasonable  accommodations  within  such  facility  for  the
     2  discharge of its duties.  The department shall issue regulations direct-
     3  ing  each such facility to ensure the timely delivery, and to facilitate
     4  the  timely  return if applicable, of all official election mail, forms,
     5  notices or communications to any individual detained or confined at such
     6  facility and that  non-partisan  plain  language  educational  materials
     7  about  the  voting  rights  of  individuals  currently  incarcerated and
     8  formerly incarcerated are included in the  inmate  handbook  or  similar
     9  materials  and  reentry  resources.  Nothing  in  this subdivision shall
    10  prohibit the inclusion or distribution of non-partisan educational mate-
    11  rials in additional resources provided to or made available to incarcer-
    12  ated or formerly incarcerated individuals.  Without limiting any  rights
    13  or  remedies provided to voters under the law, there shall be a presump-
    14  tion of a violation of subdivision one of section 17-212 of the election
    15  law when any superintendent, employee, or agent of  such  local  correc-
    16  tional facility, by commission or omission, intentionally frustrates the
    17  purposes of this section. This subdivision shall not apply to any facil-
    18  ity  where  the persons detained or confined at such facility are exclu-
    19  sively under the age of eighteen.
    20    4. Rights restoration upon release  and  registration.  Prior  to  the
    21  release  from a local correctional facility of any person convicted of a
    22  felony the chief administrative officer shall notify such person verbal-
    23  ly and in writing that his or her voting rights will  be  restored  upon
    24  release  and  provide  such  person with a form of application for voter
    25  registration and a declination form, offer  such  person  assistance  in
    26  filling out the appropriate form, and provide such person written infor-
    27  mation  distributed  by the board of elections on the importance and the
    28  mechanics of voting. Upon release, such  person  may  choose  to  either
    29  submit  his  or  her  completed application to the state board or county
    30  board where such person resides or have the department  transmit  it  on
    31  his  or  her  behalf.  Where  such person chooses to have the department
    32  transmit the application, the chief administrative officer shall  trans-
    33  mit  the  completed  application upon such person's release to the state
    34  board or county board where such person resides.
    35    § 8-a. Section 510 of the correction law, as  amended by chapter   473
    36  of the laws of 2023, is amended to read as follows:
    37    § 510. Voting [upon release]. 1. Freedom to vote.  All persons who may
    38  have  been or may hereafter be detained or confined at, or committed  to
    39  or taken charge of by any local correctional facility, who are qualified
    40  to register for and vote at any election pursuant to  section  5-102  of
    41  the  election  law  and not subject to exclusion by section 5-106 of the
    42  election law, are hereby declared to be entitled to  the  free  exercise
    43  and  enjoyment of the elective franchise without discrimination or pref-
    44  erence.
    45    2. Opportunity to register to vote and request ballots. The rules  and
    46  regulations established for the government of local correctional facili-
    47  ties  shall recognize the right of detained or incarcerated individuals,
    48  who are  qualified to register for and vote at any election pursuant  to
    49  section  5-102  of  the  election  law  and  not subject to exclusion by
    50  section 5-106 of the election law, to the free exercise of  their  right
    51  to  vote  in  accordance with the provisions of the constitution and, to
    52  effectuate such end, shall allow for access by the eligible  individuals
    53  to  electronic  personal  voter  registration   or voter registration by
    54  application pursuant to article five of the election law and  to  access
    55  absentee  balloting  services  through  the  electronic  absentee ballot
    56  application transmittal system or by paper application pursuant to title

        A. 9612                            10
 
     1  four of article eight of the election law, in such manner  as  may  best
     2  carry into effect the spirit and intent of this section and be  consist-
     3  ent with the proper discipline and management of the correctional facil-
     4  ity.    Such  services  shall  be made available within the buildings or
     5  grounds, whenever possible, where the detained or incarcerated  individ-
     6  uals  are  required  by  law  to be confined, in such manner and at such
     7  hours as will be in harmony with the rules and regulations of  both  the
     8  facility  and the board of elections, and secure to such individuals the
     9  free exercise of their right to vote in accordance with  the  provisions
    10  of this section. In case of a violation of any of the provisions of this
    11  section,  any  person  feeling aggrieved thereby may exercise any rights
    12  and remedies provided for under  state  and  federal law,  including  by
    13  instituting proceedings in the supreme court of the district where  such
    14  facility  is  situated,  which  is  hereby  authorized  and empowered to
    15  enforce the provisions of this section.
    16    3. Duty to cooperate. Pursuant to sections 8-406, 8-407, and 8-415  of
    17  the election law, the superintendent of each local correctional facility
    18  shall cooperate with the board of elections in developing and implement-
    19  ing  a  plan  to  facilitate at least one method of voter access for all
    20  persons eligible to vote who are  detained  or  confined  at  each  such
    21  facility,  including,  but not limited to making available to such board
    22  space  and  reasonable  accommodations  within  such  facility  for  the
    23  discharge  of its duties. The department shall issue regulations direct-
    24  ing each such facility to ensure the timely delivery, and to  facilitate
    25  the  timely  return if applicable, of all official election mail, forms,
    26  notices or communications to any individual detained or confined at such
    27  facility and that  non-partisan  plain   language educational  materials
    28  about  the  voting  rights   of individuals currently   incarcerated and
    29  formerly  incarcerated are included in the inmate  handbook  or  similar
    30  materials  and  reentry  resources. Nothing in  this  subdivision  shall
    31  prohibit the inclusion or distribution of non-partisan educational mate-
    32  rials in additional resources provided to or made available to incarcer-
    33  ated  or formerly incarcerated individuals.  Without limiting any rights
    34  or remedies provided to voters under the law, there shall be a  presump-
    35  tion of a violation of subdivision one of section 17-212 of the election
    36  law  when  any  superintendent, employee, or agent of such local correc-
    37  tional facility, by commission or omission, intentionally frustrates the
    38  purposes of this section. This subdivision shall not apply to any facil-
    39  ity where the persons detained or confined at such facility  are  exclu-
    40  sively under the age of eighteen.
    41    4. Rights restoration upon release  and  registration.  Prior  to  the
    42  release  from a local correctional facility of any person convicted of a
    43  felony the chief administrative officer shall notify such person verbal-
    44  ly and in writing that [his or her] such person's voting rights will  be
    45  restored upon release and provide such person with a form of application
    46  for voter registration and a declination form, offer such person assist-
    47  ance  in filling out the appropriate form, and provide such person writ-
    48  ten information distributed by the board of elections on the  importance
    49  and  the  mechanics  of  voting. Upon release, such person may choose to
    50  either submit [his or her] a completed application to the state board or
    51  county board where such person resides or have the  department  transmit
    52  it  on  his or her behalf. Where such person chooses to have the depart-
    53  ment transmit the application, the chief  administrative  officer  shall
    54  transmit  the  completed  application  upon such person's release to the
    55  state board or county board where such person resides.

        A. 9612                            11
 
     1    [2.] 5. Upon discharge or release from the custody of a local  correc-
     2  tional  facility,  the  chief  administrative  officer  of such facility
     3  shall, in consultation with the county board of elections, distribute to
     4  every person eighteen years of age or older  a  written  notice  on  the
     5  voting  rights of such person in the state of New York, including infor-
     6  mation on the importance and mechanics of voting, when such person is or
     7  may become eligible to vote, and offer to  every  such  person  a  voter
     8  registration  form; provided that, if an individual declines to accept a
     9  voter registration form, the chief administrative officer shall maintain
    10  a written record of such declination. Notice is not required  for  those
    11  individuals  being transferred to a different local correctional facili-
    12  ty, individuals being transferred or released to the custody of a  state
    13  correctional  facility  or institution, or individuals being released to
    14  the custody of a hospital or mental health institution for treatment.
    15    § 9. Subdivision 6 of section 137 of the correction law is amended  by
    16  adding a new paragraph (p) to read as follows:
    17    (p) Any incarcerated individual confined in a cell or room, apart from
    18  the  accommodations  provided  for  individuals who are participating in
    19  programs of the facility, or any incarcerated individual held in  segre-
    20  gated  confinement who is eligible to vote shall be entitled to register
    21  to vote and vote as set  forth  in  sections  8-407  and  8-415  of  the
    22  election law.
    23    §  10. This act shall take effect on the first of July next succeeding
    24  the date on which it shall have become a law;  provided,  however,  that
    25  the  amendments to section 510 of the correction law made by section 8-a
    26  of this act shall take effect on the same date and in the same manner as
    27  chapter 473 of the laws of 2023 takes effect.    Effective  immediately,
    28  the  addition,  amendment and/or repeal of any rule or regulation neces-
    29  sary for the implementation of  this  act  on  its  effective  date  are
    30  authorized to be made and completed on or before such effective date.
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