LANSING — Voters in Michigan who requested absentee ballots can expect them to arrive in their mailboxes soon. The state’s Secretary of State office announced that clerks will begin mailing them on Thursday, June 25, for the August 4 primary elections.
A constitutional amendment passed by voters in 2018 requires ballot mailing begin no later than 40 days prior to elections.
This year, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, voters have numerous options to vote safely, including absentee by mail, absentee at a ballot dropbox, in-person absentee at their local clerk’s office or satellite office, or at a polling location on Election Day.
“No one should be forced to choose between their health and their right to vote, and in Michigan no one has to,” said Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson. “We have been hard at work to ensure even in the midst of a pandemic voters have the full range of options for how to cast their ballot and can be assured no matter how they choose to do so it will be safe and secure.”
To ensure all options are available and safe, the Michigan Bureau of Elections is:
- Providing local jurisdictions with personalized protective equipment (PPE), including masks, gloves, hand sanitizer and cleaning supplies, to protect elections workers and ensure polling locations and clean and safe for voters.
- Providing ballot drop boxes, automatic letter openers, envelope folders and additional supplies for local jurisdictions to help them prepare for the increase in absent voter ballots and in-person voting with social distancing. Clerks can also use funding to purchase other materials to help set up polling locations with social distancing, such as sneeze guards, pens, signs and tape.
- Providing grant funding for a 50 percent match to jurisdictions to purchase additional ballot tabulators, high-speed scanners (high-speed tabulators) and high-speed tabulation software to more quickly tabulate an expected increase in absent voter ballots.
The Michigan Department of State continues to recruit election workers to support local clerks on and before Election Day through the Democracy MVP campaign. More information on how to become an election worker can be found at Michigan.gov/DemocracyMVP
The department said this assistance is especially needed during the COVID-19 pandemic, as older residents who often serve as election workers are more susceptible to the disease.
1 Comment
George
June 25, 2020 at 7:04 pmThis should read that they are mailing absentee voting applications; NOT BALLOTS. No ballots are sent unless an application is sent to the local clerk and processed at that local office. The local clerks send out absentee ballots, never the state.