- The New York State General Election is Tuesday, November 7, 2006.
- Polling places will be open from 6 a.m. until 9 p.m. You have the right to vote if you are in line or in your polling place when the polls close.
- To vote, you must meet all of the following qualifications: (1) you are a United States citizen; (2) you will be at least 18 years old on Election Day; (3) on Election Day, you will have lived for at least 30 days in the county, city, or village in which you will vote; (4) you have not been declared mentally incompetent by a court; (5) you do not claim the right to vote elsewhere; and (6) you are not in jail or on parole for a felony conviction.
- But in order to vote, you must have registered by completing a voter registration form in advance of election day.
- Yes, if you regard your school community as your primary residence. If so, and if your school is in a different city or county than where you registered to vote, you must have already re-registered in the city or county where your school is. If your school is in the same city or county as where you are registered, you should notify your city or county Board of Elections of your new address.
- If you regard another community, such as the community in which you lived with your parents, as your primary residence, you should vote there in person or by absentee ballot.
- If you moved outside the city or county where you are registered to vote, you must have already re-registered in your new city or county.
- If you moved within the same city or county, you do not have to re-register. However, you should inform your city or county Board of Elections of your new address. On Election Day, go to your new polling site to vote. You will be voting on an affidavit ballot, not on the machine.
- You may have gotten a card in the mail telling you where your polling place is. You may vote even if you do not get this card or do not have it with you on Election Day.
- To find your polling place or Election District, contact your county board of elections. You can find the phone number in the government pages of your phone book or online at www.elections.state.ny.us. If you live in New York City, you can find your poll site at gis.nyc.gov/vote/ps/index.htmor contact the New York City Board of Elections at (866) VOTE-NYC.
- At your polling place, vote in the Election District in which you live. A poll worker should be able to tell you your Election District if you do not know it.
- Yes. If on Election Day you will be out of the county where you live or will be unable to go to the polls because of illness or physical disability, you may vote by absentee ballot.
- You may also vote by absentee ballot if you are a patient or inmate in a Veterans’ Administration Hospital, if you are a pre-trial detainee, or if you are confined in prison after conviction for a non-felony offense.
- You must complete an absentee ballot application and absentee ballot.
- The deadline to request an absentee ballot application has already passed.
- Your completed absentee ballot must be postmarked by Monday, November 6 or delivered in person by November 7.
- If you cannot pick up your ballot, or will not be able to receive it through the mail, you have the right to designate someone to pick it up for you.
- You can vote on a paper ballot, called an affidavit ballot, at your polling site.
- You also have the right to get a Certificate to Obtain a Court Order. This allows you to go to a judge and get a court order stating that you have the right to vote on the voting machine. This is time-consuming.
- First, ask the poll worker to check the list again and to confirm that you are at the right polling place.
- If that fails, ask for an affidavit ballot. You have the right to vote by affidavit ballot or get a Certificate to Obtain a Court Order even if your name is not on the voter list.
- If you need help in the voting booth because of a physical disability or because you cannot read the ballot, tell a poll worker. You have the right to have anyone you choose help you in the voting booth, including a poll worker or inspector, as long as the person is not your employer, an agent of your employer, or an officer or agent of your union.
- Language interpreters present at your polling site are allowed to go into the poll booth with you. In addition, ballots and other written materials at the polling site may be available in languages besides English. The particular languages of the interpreters and written materials vary based on geography; contact your local Board of Elections for information on what language assistance will be available to you.
- Vote early in the day to avoid the last-minute rush.
- Bring some form of identification, even if it may not be required.
- Ask for help if you need it.
- Read all instructions carefully.
- Take your time. You can take up to 3 minutes in a voting machine and 5 minutes in a voting booth.
- New York State Board of Elections: (800) 367-8683
- New York City Board of Elections: (212) VOTE-NYC or (866) VOTE-NYC
- U.S. Department of Justice: (888) 305-3228
- ACLU Voting Rights Project: (877) 523-2792
- New York Civil Liberties Union: (212) 607-3300
- New York Public Interest Research Group/Common Cause Election Day Hotline: (212) 822-0282