If you have already voted by Mail in Ballot in the Presidential/General Election in Pennsylvania for 2024, you can skip this column and move on to next week’s column in your local paper. If you have not yet voted and have delayed or have felt uncertain since there have been so many reports regarding how mail-in ballots should be perfectly completed then this column is for you. Also, there are a few tips regarding in-person voting if you decide to forego the Mail-In and go directly to the polling place on November 5.
What You Need to Know. First, you do not need to be afraid. This might seem to be an unusual statement since voting, especially for those who have been voting by mail before, should seem to be an almost routine process. However, with questions being raised for even the slightest discrepancies and Pennsylvania being constantly described as a “battleground” state it is worth a refresher even for experienced voters. If you are voting by mail, here are some basic points.
On receipt, the receipt of your ballot will be noted on the tracking website previously indicated above. Mail-In ballots are not officially counted until Election Day.
Arranging for Return. Mail-in ballot designation includes mailing by U.S. Mail and also hand delivery by you to an authorized ballot box in your County or hand delivery by you to your Voter Services/Board of Elections office in your County. Locations and available dates and times for your County’s ballot boxes should be posted on the Internet. Important. If delivering a completed mail-in ballot you must deliver it yourself. You cannot give it to someone else to deliver. The exception is for persons disabled under the Americans With Disabilities Act
when, where the person is unable to deliver himself/herself a “Designated Agent” form must be used. Both the person indicating use of a Designated Agent and the Designated Agent must sign the form. It is best even if there is a disability, if at all possible, to deliver the
Ballot envelope/package to the designated ballot box or Voter Services/Board of Elections office by yourself and not to use a Designated Agent.
Voting At the Polls on Election Day. If you are voting in person on Election Day at the polls you want to be sure of the current location. Polling places can sometimes change. If you may have recently moved you want to know where you should go. Have you changed your address for voting purposes? Your polling place will have a Judge of Elections and workers who can help. You might receive a provisional ballot where there are questions. If you requested a mail-in ballot but did not complete it bring the entire packet (not just the ballot) with you to the polls or Voter Services/Board of Elections in your County and you will receive instructions.
With all that said, you should be fine. Voting matters.
Esquire, Colliton Law Associates, P.C. Janet Colliton has practiced law for over 38 years, 37 of them in Chester County, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. Her practice, Colliton Law Associates, PC, is limited to elder law, Medicaid, including advice, applications and appeals, and other benefits planning including Veterans benefits, life care and special needs planning, guardianships, retirement, and estate planning and administration.