VOTING BY MAIL FROM FEBRUARY 4 TO FEBRUARY 26
HOW:
Eligible registered voters may apply
for a ballot to be sent to them by either of the following means:
·
By mail sent to Santa Cruz County Elections Department, 701 Ocean
St., Room 210, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
·
By FAX (831) 454-2445, or
·
In person at the above address.
INFORMATION
NEEDED:
The following information is needed in
order to process a request for a vote-by-mail ballot:
·
the election for which
a ballot is being requested;
·
the voter’s name;
·
the address where the
voter lives;
·
the address where the
voter wants his/her ballot mailed (if different from the address where the
voter lives);
·
the voter’s signature.
APPLICATION
METHODS:
Application may be made by either of
the following methods:
·
Complete the online application
for a vote-by-mail in English or espanol and return by
FAX, mail or in person;
·
Complete the application
for a vote-by-mail ballot on the back cover of the Santa Cruz County Sample
Ballot & Voter’s Information Pamphlet mailed to voters by
mid-February. This method provides the
County Elections Department’s return address and the voter information is
bar-coded for quick processing;
·
Send or FAX a note to
the Elections Department with the information required (please see above);
·
Complete an absentee
ballot application provided by a political campaign. Voters have the legal
right to mail or deliver the applications directly to the Santa Cruz County
Elections Department rather than the political campaign. Returning
vote-by-mail ballot applications to anyone other than the elections official
may case a delay that could interfere with the YOUR right to vote.
DELIVERY BY SPOUSE OR PARENT:
Section 3009(b) of the Elections Code allows the
elections official to deliver the ballot to the applicant’s spouse or parent if
the applicant is unmarried ONLY if the spouse or parent signs a statement attested
to under penalty of perjury that provides the name of the applicant, his or her
relationship to the applicant, and affirms that he or she is
authorized by the applicant to deliver the absentee ballot.
PLEASE NO
REQUESTS BY PHONE OR E-MAIL:
County
elections officials are precluded by law from sending a vote-by-mail based on a
telephone or e-mail request. VOTERS MUST REQUEST A VOTE-BY-MAIL BALLOT
IN WRITING.
WHEN:
Applications
may be submitted prior to February 4; however, ballots may not be obtained
until February 4. If due to special
circumstances, a voter will not be able
to receive a ballot during the absentee ballot period, please refer to the
section on "Special Absentee
Voting."
Ballots will be mailed to voters upon
written request from February 4 to 26.
After
February 26, voters may request a ballot under the “Late Absentee Voting” provisions.
Under
a new law, any voter may apply for Permanent
Vote-by-Mail Voter status.
RETURN:
Vote-by-mail ballots may be mailed by the voter to Santa
Cruz County Elections Department or dropped off at any polling place in Santa
Cruz County on Election Day. Ballots
may also be dropped off at the county Elections Department during business
hours until 8 p.m. on Election Day, March 5, 2002.
If the voter mails his/her ballot to the county Elections
Department, it must be received by 8 p.m. on Election Day, March 7. Postmark
is not acceptable. Therefore,
voters are encouraged to utilize personal delivery rather than mail during the
week prior to Election Day.
A vote-by-mail voter who, because of illness or other
physical disability, is unable to return the ballot, may designate on the back
side of the vote-by-mail ballot return envelope, his or her spouse, child,
parent, grandparent, brother or sister, or person residing in the same
household to return the ballot to the Elections Department or any polling place
in Santa Cruz County on election day.
(Elections Code §3017)
VOTE-BY-MAIL BALLOT RETURN ENVELOPE MUST BE SIGNED AND COMPLETED:
It is
extremely important for voters to SIGN
their absentee ballot return envelope and write
in the address where they live in the space provided.
Unfortunately, if there is no signature or if the signature on the vote-by-mail return envelope does not compare to the voter’s signature on his or her voter registration card, the ballot cannot be counted. In addition, absence of the voter’s residence address may prohibit the ballot from being counted.