La Cámara de Representantes de Connecticut aprobó un proyecto de ley que implementa un plan de votación anticipada.
Los elementos del plan incluyen exigir que el secretario de Estado eduque al público sobre la votación anticipada y capacite a los registradores sobre cómo administrarlo. El nuevo proyecto de ley permitiría 14 días de votación anticipada antes de las elecciones primarias o generales.
La aplicación de este plan crearía una carga fiscal para los municipios y el Estado, y Coralys Santana con el Proyecto de Connecticut señala que la financiación será apoyar.
"Esta el CVRS (Connecticut Voter Registration System), que permitirá a registradores y administradores saber quién emitió su voto," dice Santana. "También hay un aspecto de educación publica para que los votantes sepan que existe el voto anticipado, como hacerlo y donde."
Ella dice que hay esperanzas de que el estado ayude a todos los municipios para que la votación anticipada se pueda realizar de manera equitativa y accesible para todos los votantes de Connecticut.
El análisis de la Oficina de Análisis Fiscal del estado encuentra que la votación anticipada costaría a los municipios 900 mil dólares en 2024. El estado incurriría en costos entre $1.8 y $2.3 millones de dólares durante ese mismo año.
Una medida similar para aprobar la votación anticipada se está tomando en el Senado del Estado.
Dado que la primera vez que se utilizará este plan será en las elecciones de 2024, Santana señala que habrá algunos problemas iniciales que deberán abordarse. Pero, dice, los votantes de Connecticut verán los beneficios una vez que se implemente el plan.
"Realmente va a permitir ampliar el acceso," asegura Santana. "En las ciudades la participación es menor porque la gente no puede venir en un día. Y creo que vamos a ver una mayor participación. Veremos colas más cortas el día de las elecciones."
Santana considera que las grandes colas pueden disuadir a los votantes.
Según el U.S. Elections Project, unos 45 millones de personas votaron anticipadamente en las elecciones de mitad de mandato de 2022.
get more stories like this via email
With the election six weeks away, concern is building about attempts to intimidate voters at the polls - so, lawmakers are taking action at the state and federal levels.
On Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the PEACE Act, which makes California the first state in the nation to state explicitly that openly carrying a gun in or near a polling place constitutes illegal harassment.
Sean Morales-Doyle, director of the Voting Rights Program for the nonprofit Brennan Center for Justice, said the measure is important.
"It represents some really commonsense principles. All voters, all election workers, should be able to participate and run our democracy free from intimidation. And visible guns around our elections are intimidating," he said.
A recent survey of election workers from the Brennan Center found that 40% report being subject to threats, abuse, or harassment.
On Wednesday, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., introduced a bill to ban open carry of firearms in polling places nationwide - noting the country has a long history of scare tactics on Election Day.
"There's individuals out there, stoked by partisan rhetoric and false narratives about election fraud, that have taken it upon themselves to either discourage at a minimum, or sometimes outright intimidate people into not letting their voice be heard in the democratic process," Padilla said.
Both political parties plan to have poll watchers present this year. The Brennan Center has set up a hotline at 866-OUR-VOTE for people to report any efforts to intimidate voters or election workers.
get more stories like this via email
Illinois voters have several ways to cast their ballot in the upcoming election, whether by mail, in person or early voting.
The Illinois Policy Institute, a political watchdog, reported 2022's general election produced the second-highest voter turnout in a midterm year in 25 years.
Matt Dietrich, public information officer for the Illinois State Board of Elections, wants voters to observe important deadlines for registering to vote. For unregistered voters, he advised there is still time to change their status.
"Voter registration never closes until the polls close on Election Day," Dietrich pointed out. "You can get registered from now right up through and even on November 5th. The online voter registration stays open until 11:59 pm, October 20th."
Voter inquiries can be answered through an online portal on the board's website, elections.il.gov.
Beginning Oct. 9, unregistered voters wanting in-person voting can do so at any early voting location. Dietrich added they will have to cast their early vote ballot at the time of registration.
Two forms of verifiable identification are needed, one which reflects who you are and the other, your voting residence. If you have recently moved to Illinois from another state, an unexpired out-of-state driver's license is accepted. A piece of government mail sent to your residence, a bank statement, or a pay stub with your voting residence is also sufficient.
Another popular choice among Illinoisans is to vote by mail. There was a "slight uptick of 10%," Dietrich reported, even before the pandemic in 2020. He added 2 million people tried it for the first time and deemed the process as safe, convenient and trackable.
"We and all the local election authorities really pushed voting by mail for safety reasons," Dietrich explained. "In the end, we had one-third of the total votes in 2020, cast by mail, about one-third cast early in person and one-third cast on Election Day in person."
Dietrich said in 2022, voting by mail slightly exceeded the number of voters who were voting early in person. He recommends residents wanting to cast mail-in ballots request their ballot far before the Oct. 31 deadline.
get more stories like this via email
New Mexico volunteers will test the "butterfly effect" this Saturday as they perform small actions meant to produce monumental change.
Civic and nonprofit groups have enlisted volunteers to help plant food for monarch butterflies and other pollinators in the Bosque, a cottonwood forest bordering the Rio Grande. Organizers said the area's lush grass meadows and native milkweeds make it the perfect launchpad to expand pollinator habitat.
Emily Rees, Southwest restoration ecologist at the Institute for Applied Ecology, said teams will plant more than a thousand native perennial plants grown from wild-collected seeds.
"The overall project is 16 sites along a 200-mile stretch of the Rio Grande from north of Taos all the way down to Socorro," Rees outlined. "We are planting seven of those this year, and then we'll do the additional nine next year."
Rees pointed out New Mexico's 300-mile Bosque, which means "woods" or "forest" in Spanish, provides an oasis of valuable resources for animals and plants living in an otherwise arid Southwest habitat. To prepare for the event, the City of Albuquerque has been selectively removing invasive, non-native tree species in the planting area.
Monarch butterfly populations are declining in the U.S. and worldwide because of habitat loss.
Rees believes there is still a lot to learn about the Rio Grande's role in their New Mexico migration.
"It is very charismatic," Rees observed. "People really recognize monarchs but by restoring the habitat for monarchs we're also able to enhance that habitat for other pollinators as well."
Monarchs are not currently on the federal Endangered Species list but by one estimate their numbers declined in 2024 by 30% from the previous year. The Xerces Society said the overwintering population of western monarchs remains at approximately 5% of its size in the 1980s.
get more stories like this via email