Landmark Settlement Secures Fair Voting Maps in Nassau County
Civil Liberties Union
“Federal court precedent prohibits election officials from denying college students the right to register to vote in the communities where they attend school,” says Arthur Eisenberg, Legal Director of the NYCLU. “Students, like all other voters, must be permitted to vote in the communities in which they have their greatest immediate contacts. For most students, that community is their college town.”
The Oneida County Board of Elections has sent a form letter to college students who have attempted to register to vote where they are attending college. The letter basically tells college students to vote as residents of their parental home. In a letter cosigned by the Brennan Center and NYPIRG, the NYCLU cites three precedents ignored by the Board of Elections.
College students carry out the daily activities of their lives in their college towns and often take part-time jobs there as they study, eat and sleep in those communities. These students no longer live in their parental home and most have no intention of returning there. For these students, the appropriate voting residence is in the community where they attend school.
The letter calls on the Oneida Board of Elections to rescind its form letter and to comply with constitutional standards governing the right of college students to vote. “At a time when voter turnout for young people has reached catastrophically low rates, it is critically important that Oneida County remove all legal and administrative barriers to student voting," says Jennifer Weiser, Associate Counsel of the Brennan Center for Justice. "If young people are unable to register the first time they attempt to vote, they are unlikely to participate in our democracy in the future."
“Oneida County can’t have it both ways, welcoming students with open arms because colleges underpin the local economy and then slamming the door to the polling place shut when students want to vote in the communities where they live,” said NYPIRG Senior Staff Counsel Russ Haven. “This is an ultimate ‘dis’ to students and blatantly illegal.”
Click here to read the NYCLU's letter.