HomeMy WebLinkAboutBoard Meeting Agenda Packet 03-14-2024MEETING AGENDA
Date: March 14, 2024 Time: 2:00 PM
Location: Bd of Elections Office, Long Leaf Room Type: Special
Scheduled Attendees:
Derrick R. Miller, Chair Rae Hunter-Havens, Director
James Battle Morgan, Jr. Secretary Caroline Dawkins, Deputy Director
Natalie Hinton-Stalling, Member Noelle Powers, Database & Systems Specialist
Bruce Kemp, Member Joan Geiszler-Ludlum, Administrative Technician
Tom S. Morris, Member Beth Pugh, Elections Specialist
Visitor(s): Tufanna Bradley, Assistant County Manager; Kemp Burpeau, Deputy County Attorney
AGENDA ITEMS
1.Meeting Opening
a.Call to Order
b.Pledge of Allegiance
c.Approval of Agenda
2.Public Comment Period
•2-minute limit
•10-minute limit total
3.New Business
a.Sample Audit Count
b.Review of Provisional Ballot Applications
c.Review of Supplemental Absentee Ballot Applications
d.Supplemental Oath Certificates for Absentee Ballots
4.Closed Session (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-318.11(6))
5.General Discussion
•Other Elections-Related Matters
6.Adjournment
*Agenda packets are sent via email in advance of meetings.
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
Approval of Agenda
Summary:
N/A
Board Action Required:
Staff recommends approval
Item # 1c
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
Public Comment Period
Summary:
This is an opportunity for members of the public to provide comments on elections-related matters.
Each commenter will be limited to two minutes. There is a limit of 10 minutes total for the public
comment period.
Board Action Required:
Discuss as necessary
Item # 2
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
Sample Audit Count (W27 and W31)
Applicable Statutes and/or Rules
N.C. Gen. Stat §§ 163-182.2(a)(2), 163-182.2(b)(2), and 163-182.1 (Modified by Session Law 2023-140
(S747), NCSBOE Numbered Memo 2019-07
Summary:
All county boards of elections in North Carolina must complete a sample audit count after Election Day
and prior to canvass as part of the post-Election Day auditing process that helps ensure the reliability of
elections results tabulated by the voting equipment. The purpose of this audit count is to compare the
machine counts with hand-to-eye counts to ensure that the voting equipment read the voter’s choices
accurately. In accordance with NC Gen. Stat. § 163-182.2, the NC State Board of Elections randomly
chooses a sample of ballots from different voting sites and/or methods. All sites and voting methods are
included for possible selection in the random selection process. Per statute, the ballot item selected for
the sample audit shall be a statewide ballot item.
The random selection process conducted by the NC State Board Elections on Wednesday, March 6,
2024, determined that New Hanover County will conduct a full count of the following precincts.
• W27 – Freeman Elementary School
• W31 – NHC Senior Resource Center
For the March Primary Elections, the Presidential Preference contest on the Democratic, Republican,
and Libertarian ballots for the selected voting sites will be counted. During a sample audit count, a
bipartisan team of election officials will hand count the ballots in a specific precinct or from a specific
voting method. The hand-counted results are compared to the tabulated machine results and any
variances are reported to the State Board.
Document/s Included:
NCSBOE Numbered Memo 2019-07, Rules for Conducting the Sample Audit Count (Provided at Board
Meeting)
Board Action Required:
Discuss as necessary
Item # 3a
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 27255, Ra-leigh, NC 27611
(919) 814-0700 or(866) 522-4723
Fax: (919) 715-0135
Numbered Memo 2019-07
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director
RE: Guidance Regarding What Constitutes a Vote
DATE: November 1, 2019
Pursuant to Section 301 (a)(6) of the Help America Vote Act of 2002, codified as 42 U.S.C. §
15481(a)(6), and N.C.G.S. § 163-182.1(b), this guidance is being provided to county boards of
elections to ensure uniformity in the tabulation of election results and the conduct of hand-to-eye counts, hand-to-eye recounts, and other audits. It updates and supersedes prior guidance on this subject from 2006. This memo also provides guidance on when a vote should be counted in cir-cumstances in which a voting system is unable to determine the voter’s intent with respect to a
marked ballot.
State law sets out clear standards for what constitutes a vote. The purpose of this memo is to explain those standards and provide examples of their application to particular circumstances.
Voting Systems
The State Board of Elections may certify voting systems only if they meet statutory requirements,
including generating either a paper ballot or a paper record by which voters may verify their votes before casting them and which provides a backup means of counting the vote that the voter casts. Voting systems are required to generate a paper record of each individual vote cast. The paper ballot must be maintained in a secure fashion and serves as the backup record for purposes of any
hand-to-eye count, hand-to-eye recount, or other audit. Electronic systems that employ optical
scan technology to count paper ballots are deemed to satisfy the requirement.1
1 G.S. § 163-165.7(a): … The State Board may certify voting systems only if they meet the re-
quirements set forth in this section and only if they generate a paper ballot which provides a backup
means of counting the vote that the voter casts. Those voting systems may include optical scan
and direct record electronic (DRE) voting systems that produce a paper ballot. Among other re-
quirements as set by the State Board of Elections, the certification requirements shall require at
least all of the following elements:
…
(4)With respect to electronic voting systems, that the voting system generate a
paper ballot of each individual vote cast, which paper ballot shall be maintainedin a secure fashion and shall serve as a backup record for purposes of any hand-
2
Regardless of whether the ballot is a standard paper ballot in which all candidates for a ballot item
are printed on the ballot, or whether the ballot is a printout of only the selections the voter made, the voter must have the opportunity to verify his or her intent by confirming that the choices the voter selected are correctly marked on the ballot. The voter is not verifying that the barcodes or coordinates printed on the ballot for tabulation purposes are the voter’s choices; rather, the voter is verifying that the ovals or rectangles are accurately filled in on standard paper ballots or, in the
case of a barcode ballot, the voter is verifying that the names printed on the ballot accurately reflect the voter’s selections. Any hand-to-eye count or other circumstance where a person is hand count-ing a ballot would use the selection that was verified by the voter, not the coordinates or barcodes.
Ballot marking instructions are provided for each ballot. G.S. § 163-165.5(a)(6). Hand-marked
ballots should be marked according to the instructions provided for the ballot using a pen or mark-
ing device provided at the polling place to fill in the oval or rectangle next to the candidate for whom the voter wishes to vote. When a voter’s choice cannot be tabulated by the voting equip-ment, the principles and rules for counting official ballots as contained in G.S. §§ 163-182.1 and 182.2 and 08 NCAC 6B. 0105 shall apply. Ballot marking device (BMD) voting systems do not
allow irregularly marked ballots. The voter should follow instructions on the voting equipment to
ensure the vote is cast and that the voter has received confirmation thereof.
Voter Intent Voter intent is the governing standard in the event questions arise about how to adjudicate the contents of a ballot. Questions about voter intent can arise when a voter hand marks a ballot and
the voting system is unable to determine which choices the voter has made. This could occur if a voter uses an improper marking instrument, marks the ballot in an inappropriate manner, places marks in the wrong location on the ballot, or otherwise acts in a manner that causes the voter’s ballot to be unreadable by the voting system for which the ballot was designed. Questions about voter intent can also arise during a hand-to-eye count.
Official ballots shall be counted according to the principles and rules contained in G.S. § 163-182.1(a):
“(1) Only official ballots shall be counted;
(2)No official ballot shall be rejected because of technical errors in marking it,
unless it is impossible to clearly determine the voter's choice;
(3)If it is impossible to clearly determine a voter's choice in a ballot item, the offi-cial ballot shall not be counted for that ballot item, but shall be counted in allother ballot items in which the voter's choice can be clearly determined;
(4)If an official ballot is marked in a ballot item with more choices than there are
offices to be filled or propositions that may prevail, the official ballot shall not
be counted for that ballot item, but shall be counted in all other ballot items in
to-eye count, hand-to-eye recount, or other audit. Electronic systems that em-
ploy optical scan technology to count paper ballots shall be deemed to satisfy this requirement.
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which there is no overvote and the voter's choice can be clearly determined;
(5)If an official ballot is rejected by a scanner or other counting machine, but hu-
man counters can clearly determine the voter's choice, the official ballot shallbe counted by hand and eye; and
(6)Write-in votes shall not be counted in party primaries or in referenda, but shallbe counted in general elections if all of the following are true:
a.The write-in vote is written by the voter or by a person authorized to
assist the voter pursuant to G.S. 163-166.8;
b.The write-in vote is not cast for a candidate who has failed to qualifyunder G.S. 163-123 as a write-in candidate; and
c. The voter's choice can be clearly determined.”
Examples
The following non-exhaustive guidance provides examples of how to apply the standards in G.S. § 163-182.1(a) to real-world scenarios:
•For the purpose of conducting sample hand-to-eye audits under G.S. § 163-182.1(b)(1),
hand-to-eye recounts under §§ G.S. 163-182.7 and G.S. 163-182.7A, and hand-to-eye counts for any other reason, the printed names must always be used in counting the votes, rather than coordinates or barcodes. This is because the printed name is what the voter used to verify his or her intent.
•If a write-in candidate’s name is misspelled or incomplete, a vote for the candidate should be counted if the board of elections can determine which candidate the voter intended to vote for. Pursuant to G.S. § 163-182.1(a)(3), a ballot should not be rejected due to technical errors unless it is impossible to determine a voter’s intent.
•If a voter votes for a candidate by filling in the oval or rectangle or selecting the name on a BMD and also writes in a candidate’s name, the vote shall be counted one time for that candidate. G.S. § 163-182.1(4) does not apply in this circumstance because it is possible to determine what the voter intended. Similarly, if a voter writes in the same name more than once in a multi-seat contest, a vote shall be counted one time for that candidate. In all
such instances where the voter attempts to use write-ins to vote for the same individual more than once, no more than one vote shall be counted for the candidate and the rest shall simply be reported as miscellaneous.
•If the voter writes in a name but does not fill in the accompanying oval or rectangle, in a
hand-to-eye count the vote shall be counted for that candidate if it can be determined who the voter intended to vote for.
•If a voter votes for more than one candidate in a vote-for-one contest, the votes in that
contest shall not be counted. This includes if one of the votes is a write-in and the
accompanied oval or rectangle is not filled in. However, if a voter crosses out the
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candidate for whom they overvoted, such that the county board of elections can
determine the voter’s intent, then that vote shall be counted.
Sample Audit Count County boards should immediately report any unexplained discrepancies discovered during a sam-ple audit count or any other hand-to-eye count to the State Board. In the event of a material dis-crepancy between the electronic or mechanical count and a hand-to-eye count, the hand-to-eye
count shall control, and the canvass documents should reflect this, except where paper ballots or
records have been lost or destroyed or where there is another reasonable basis to conclude that the hand-to-eye count is not the true count. G.S. § 163-182.2(b)(2).
In a sample audit count, if the discrepancy between the hand-to-eye count and the mechanical or
electronic count is significant, a complete hand-to-eye count shall be conducted. The sample count
need not be done on election night. G.S. § 163-182.2(b)(2). “Significant” has been interpreted to mean a difference that cannot be explained. It may be appropriate to conduct a second hand-to-eye count of the same ballots if the county board has an indication that human error may account for the difference between the electronic or mechanical count and the first hand-to-eye count.
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
Review of Provisional Ballot Applications
Applicable Statutes and/or Rules
N.C. Gen. Stat §§ 163-166.11 and 163A-182.2(a)(4) (Modified by Session Law 2023-140 (S747), NCSBOE
Numbered Memo 2023-04
Summary:
The Board will be provided with internal research conducted on all provisional applications to assist in
determining whether the applications should be approved or denied. In accordance with N.C. Gen. Stat.
§163-182.2(4), the Board must count all approved provisional ballots prior to the county canvass.
Following the review of provisional ballot applications by the Board, all approved ballots will be scanned
and counted using the central tabulator (DS850).
Document/s Included:
NCSBOE Numbered Memo 2023-04, Provisional Research Report (Provided at Board meeting)
Board Action Required:
Discuss as necessary and action required
Item # 2 Item # 3b
P.O. Box 27255 Raleigh, NC 27611
(866) 522-4723
www.ncsbe.gov
Numbered Memo 2023-04
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director1
RE: Provisional Ballots and Canvass Procedures
DATE: October 12, 2023 (Updated February 26, 2024)2
This Numbered Memo outlines administrative procedures for rendering decisions on provisional
ballots and for canvassing elections, including the procedures for counting votes cast through the
different means for doing so in our elections. Procedures implementing election laws generally
should be uniformly applied throughout North Carolina, and the directives in this memo help
ensure consistency in practices by county boards.
Table of Contents
1. Review of Provisional Ballots ................................................................................................ 3
2. Provisional Review: Voter Eligibility ..................................................................................... 3
2.1 Missing Information on Provisional Application ........................................................... 4
2.2 DMV Provisional Research ............................................................................................ 5
2.2.1 Conducting DMV Provisional Research ........................................................................ 5
2.2.2 Understanding the DMV Research Report .................................................................... 6
2.3 Removed Due to List Maintenance................................................................................. 7
2.4 Unreported Moves .......................................................................................................... 8
2.5 Incorrect Precinct ............................................................................................................ 9
2.6 No Record of Registration .............................................................................................. 9
2.7 Voters Removed Due to Felony Conviction ................................................................. 10
1 This memo is issued under the authority delegated by the State Board to the executive director pursuant
to G.S. § 163-22(p).
2 Much of the guidance in this numbered memo was previously issued as Numbered Memo 2018-05 by
Executive Director Kim Westbrook Strach. This memo replaces that prior memo and includes many
critical updates, including the processes for when a voter casts a provisional ballot for a photo ID-related
reason. This memo was updated on February 26, 2024, to reflect changes in various election laws after the
enactment of N.C. Session Law 2023-140.
2
2.8 Voters Removed Due to Moving Out of County .......................................................... 10
2.9 NCOA Notification ....................................................................................................... 10
2.10 Residency ...................................................................................................................... 11
2.11 Denied Registration ...................................................................................................... 11
2.12 Same-Day Registrant Without Proof of Residence ...................................................... 11
2.13 Incorrect Party ............................................................................................................... 11
2.14 Voted During Extended Hours on Election Day ........................................................... 12
2.15 Already Voted ............................................................................................................... 12
3. Provisional Review: Photo ID .............................................................................................. 13
3.1 When the Voter Has Completed a Photo ID Exception Form ...................................... 13
3.2 When the Voter Brings a Photo ID to the County Board Office After Voting ............. 15
4. Canvass Procedures .............................................................................................................. 16
4.1 All Members Present..................................................................................................... 17
4.2 Public Notice ................................................................................................................. 17
4.3 Reconciliation ............................................................................................................... 17
4.4 Counting of Early Voting Ballots ................................................................................. 18
4.5 Counting of Absentee Ballots on Election Day ............................................................ 19
4.5.1 Documents to be prepared and signed by the county board ........................................ 19
4.6 Counting of Absentee Ballots After Election Day ........................................................ 20
4.6.1 Documents to be prepared and signed by the Board .................................................... 20
4.7 Hearing Absentee Ballot Challenges ............................................................................ 21
4.8 Counting of Write-in Votes .......................................................................................... 22
4.9 Reporting Provisional Ballot Counts ............................................................................ 22
4.10 Counting Provisional Ballots ........................................................................................ 23
4.10.1 Partial-Count Procedures ........................................................................................... 24
4.10.2 Documents to be prepared and signed by the county board ...................................... 25
4.11 Final Canvass Proceedings and Certifying the Election ............................................... 26
3
1. Review of Provisional Ballots
A provisional ballot is used to record a vote when there are questions about an individual’s
eligibility to vote in the contests on the ballot.3 A provisional ballot is also used when a voter
does not or cannot present photo ID when voting in person.4 Different county board processes
are utilized for eligibility-based provisional ballots and photo ID-based provisional ballots, and
as such, each topic is separately discussed below. Provisional voting for any of these reasons,
though, involves an application completed by a voter and a ballot that will count in full, in part,
or not at all, depending on the outcome of the review by the county board.
2. Provisional Review: Voter Eligibility
When a voter votes a provisional ballot due to questions about their eligibility to vote, the county
board staff will conduct research after Election Day on that voter’s eligibility and make a
recommendation whether to approve or disapprove the application. Staff-level provisional
research occurs throughout the canvass period and is not an open meeting. County board
members must ultimately decide whether the applicant was properly registered and eligible to
participate in the contests on their provisional ballot. The county board’s meeting to approve or
reject provisional ballots must be open to the public. All eligible votes—including provisional
votes—must be counted before election results are finally certified. Federal law requires election
officials to offer provisional ballots, and it is the duty of county board members to ensure all
provisional applications are fully reviewed.
In determining whether to count a provisional ballot in full, in part, or not at all, county boards
are guided by the following:
1. The applicant must be a registered voter in the county.5
2. If the applicant’s name was not on the list of registered voters, he or she must have
personally made a valid attempt to register to vote in the county before the
registration deadline. This means either:
a. A Voter Registration Application was received by the county on or before the
registration deadline.6
3 G.S. § 163-166.11.
4 G.S. § 163-166.16.
5 G.S. § 163-82.1.
6 G.S. § 163-82.6(d).
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b. A Voter Registration Application was submitted at a public assistance agency
or the Division of Motor Vehicles (agencies required to offer registration
services under the National Voter Registration Act) on or before the voter
registration deadline.7
3. Contests in which the applicant may be eligible to participate are based on their
residence as of 30 days before Election Day.8
4. Contests in which the applicant may be eligible to participate are based on his or her
party when the voter rolls are closed following the voter registration deadline.9
5. The applicant must meet the requirements for voting under G.S. § 163-166.7(a).
Guidance regarding the requirement to present photo ID when voting in person can be
found in Numbered Memo 2023-03.
6. The applicant was required to execute a written affirmation before an election official
at the voting place, stating that he or she is a registered voter in the jurisdiction
(county) and is eligible to vote in the election.10
An applicant may choose provisional voting for a variety of reasons. The following sections
describe important resources and how best to handle the different scenarios under which
provisional voting occurs. Whatever the circumstances, the county board’s task is to determine
whether the applicant is eligible to participate in the contests on their provisional ballot.
2.1 Missing Information on Provisional Application
If an election official failed to obtain all required information on the Provisional Voting
Application, all reasonable attempts must be made to obtain this information.11 It is acceptable to
contact the election official or the voter for this purpose. Due to the time constraints associated
with canvassing elections, it is important to make an initial review of all provisional
applications as early in the process as possible to allow sufficient time to contact voters.
7 G.S. §§ 163-82.19(a), 163-82.20(h).
8 G.S. § 163-55.
9 G.S. §§ 163-59, 163-82.17(d).
10 G.S. § 163-166.11(2).
11 G.S. § 163-182.2 (“If a voter was properly registered to vote in the election by the county board, no
mistake of an election official in giving the voter a ballot or in failing to comply with G.S. 163-82.15 or
G.S. 163-166.11 shall serve to prevent the counting of the vote on any ballot item the voter was eligible
by registration and qualified by residency to vote.”).
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2.2 DMV Provisional Research
2.2.1 Conducting DMV Provisional Research
DMV provisional research includes in-person transactions and online transactions that occurred
when the person received services. County board staff have access to a DMV Web Match report
and will use it as a reference in conducting DMV research.
If the research shows that the provisional applicant made an attempt to register to vote at the
DMV (or opted for voter registration services using the online system) on or before the voter
registration deadline, the provisional application must be approved as long as there is no
information showing the provisional applicant was registered elsewhere in the state after the date
of the DMV activity.12 The vote must count even if the county board office has not yet received
the signed application as a follow-up to the DMV data indicating a valid registration attempt.
If the applicant’s registration activity with the DMV occurred after the voter registration
deadline, and the applicant is not otherwise properly registered, the provisional application must
be disapproved.
In the image below, which shows a portion of what is displayed in the report, Ms. Doe voted
provisionally in Davie County. Her DMV record shows DMV registration activity on
12/23/2011 and at the time, she lived in Rowan County. On 02/23/2016, Ms. Doe selected
voter registration services through the DMV’s online portal. At the time of the recent
transaction, she reported an address in Davie County. However, the activity was after the voter
registration deadline of 2/19/2016. [Example is based on March 15, 2016 election date.]
Remember, the DMV Provisional Research Report is one of the reports on the intranet (not the
internet).
Provisional DMV research must be conducted for all provisional applications that are denied due
to one of the following reasons:
12 G.S. § 163-82.19(a) (“Applications to register to vote accepted at a drivers license office under this
section until the deadline established in G.S. 163-82.6(d)(2) shall be treated as timely made for an
election, and no person who completes an application at that drivers license office shall be denied the vote
in that election for failure to apply earlier than that deadline.”).
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• Not registered;
• Moved out of county more than 30 days; or
• Registered after deadline.
All records checked by 4:45 p.m. each afternoon will be queued for overnight research. You will
see the report by the next morning. This process runs nightly, including weekends. DMV is
generally the greatest single source of voter registration activity in North Carolina, and DMV
research is a vital tool in the county board’s review of provisional applications.
2.2.2 Understanding the DMV Research Report
2.2.2.1 No Record of Registration
County board staff should bear in mind a number of details necessary to properly understand the
DMV research reports.
If there is no date in the DMV Date of Registration field, there is no information that the voter
made an attempt to register to vote at the DMV. Unless staff finds evidence of some other
registration attempt, the provisional application should be disapproved.
In the image below, the person voted provisionally in Union County. Mr. Doe’s DMV record
shows no record of DMV registration activity – there is no date listed in the field.
2.2.2.2 DMV Record of Registration – Wrong County
If there is a date in the DMV Date of Registration field, staff should next look at the county in
which the voter resided at the time of the DMV activity. If the voter was not living in the same
county as the county in which he or she cast the provisional ballot, then the provisional
application should be disapproved (unless there is some other record of timely voter registration
in the county).
In the image below, Ms. Doe voted provisionally in Union County on 3/15/2016. Her DMV
record does show DMV registration activity on 8/27/2014, but the activity occurred when she
was living in Mecklenburg County. Unless Union County is able to find some other timely
voter registration attempt for her, Jane Doe’s provisional application would have to be
disapproved. [Example is based on March 15, 2016 election date.]
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2.2.2.3 DMV Record of Registration – Same County as County of Provisional Vote
Just as before, if there is a date in the DMV Date of Registration field, staff should next look at
the county in which the voter was residing at the time of the DMV activity. If the voter was
residing in the same county as the county in which the provisional ballot was cast, then the
provisional application should be approved, provided that the date of registration was on or
before the voter registration deadline for the current election and the DMV activity date is later
than any other registration activity for the person in another county or state.
In the image below, Mr. Doe voted provisionally in Person County on 3/15/2016. His DMV
record shows DMV registration activity on 8/14/2015 and the activity occurred when he was
living in Person County. If there is no additional evidence or information that Johnny Doe was
domiciled or registered/voted in another jurisdiction (county or state) between 8/14/2015 and
2/14/2016* (30 days prior to the date of the election), then his provisional application should
be approved. [Example is based on March 15, 2016 election date.]
2.3 Removed Due to List Maintenance
A provisional applicant may not appear on the voter rolls because he or she was previously
removed as part of a uniform list maintenance action (e.g., biennial list maintenance). If the voter
has maintained continuous residence in the county, the voter remains eligible to vote. The county
board should verify that there is no evidence within our election systems indicating that the voter
in fact resided elsewhere (ex. move-within-state, move-out-of-county). The voter’s written or
verbal affirmation regarding their continuous residency is sufficient to confirm ongoing
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eligibility, absent evidence in official records to the contrary, and the county board must approve
the provisional application.13
2.4 Unreported Moves
A registered voter who has moved within the same county but had not previously updated their
registration may vote in the new precinct, the old precinct, or a central location designated by the
county board. A voter in this situation may prefer the provisional voting process rather than
transferring to their proper precinct.
If the voter moved within the same county 30 or more days before Election Day, their proper
precinct is the new precinct. A provisional application submitted in the old precinct must be
approved, but the county board must only count votes cast in contests for which the voter is
eligible based on their new residence.14
If the voter moved within the state fewer than 30 days before Election Day, their proper precinct
is the one associated with their old address, because they are not yet qualified to vote in the
jurisdiction associated with their new address. If such a voter moved to a new county and votes at
the new precinct, their provisional ballot cannot be approved. However, if such a voter moved to
a new precinct in the same county and votes at the new precinct, their provisional ballot must be
approved, and the county board should count all votes cast in contests for which the voter is
eligible based on their old residence.15
A provisional application submitted in a new county in which the voter had not timely registered
must be disapproved. Similarly, a provisional application submitted in a voter’s former county
must be disapproved if the voter established residency in a new county 30 or more days before
Election Day.16
13 G.S. § 163-82.14(d)(3) (“Any registrant who is removed from the list of registered voters pursuant to
this subsection shall be reinstated if the voter appears to vote and gives oral or written affirmation that the
voter has not moved out of the county but has maintained residence continuously within the county. That
person shall be allowed to vote as provided in G.S. 163-82.15(f).”).
14 G.S. § 163-82.15(e).
15 G.S. § 163-182.2(a)(4) (2012 version). A court decision, NAACP v. McCrory, 831 F.3d 204 (4th Cir.
2016), invalidated a change to this statutory section made in 2013. As a result, the version of this statute
prior to that change is in effect. That prior version reads, in relevant part: “. . . If the county board finds
that an individual voting a provisional official ballot is not eligible to vote in one or more ballot items on
the official ballot, the board shall not count the official ballot in those ballot items, but shall count the
official ballot in any ballot items for which the individual is eligible to vote. Eligibility shall be
determined by whether the voter is registered in the election district as provided in G.S. 163-82.1 and
whether the voter is qualified by residency to vote in the election district as provided in G.S. 163-55 and
G.S. 163-57. . . .”
16 See G.S. § 163-57 for the rules for determining residency.
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Note: If an election official mistakenly required a provisional application from an inactive
voter who affirmed that there was no change of address, the provisional application must be
approved. Inactive voters should not be required to cast a provisional ballot if there has been
no change to their address or they have moved from one address to another within the same
precinct.17 This is not an Unreported Move.
2.5 Incorrect Precinct
If a voter submits a Provisional Voting Application simply because they presented in a precinct
other than their proper precinct within the same county, the county board must approve the
application and count all votes cast in contests for which the voter is eligible.18
Note: An Incorrect Precinct provisional review is different from an Unreported Move.
2.6 No Record of Registration
If a voter submits a Provisional Ballot Application because their name did not appear on the
voter list or the precinct official could not locate the individual’s name on the voter list, staff
must research the applicant’s eligibility. If it can be determined after Election Day and before the
canvass that the applicant had properly registered or timely attempted to register by submitting
all the required application information before the voter registration deadline, the county board
must approve the application and count all votes cast in contests for which the voter is eligible. If
the applicant timely attempted to register and there is any missing information required to
register the voter, the county board must attempt to contact the voter to get the missing
information to register the voter; if such information is provided by 5 p.m. on the day before
canvass, the county board must approve the application and count all votes cast in contests for
which the voter is eligible.19
In researching voter registration, the county board must look at all available resources, including,
but not limited to the following:
• VoterView (Is the person already registered in the county? Did the election official simply
fail to locate the record? Could the voter be registered in a different name?)
• VoterScan (Is there a record in the Review, Incomplete, or Archive Queue and the
application date is on or before the voter registration deadline?)
• Statewide Voter Lookup (intranet site) (Is the voter registered in another county and if so,
what was the date of the last application in the other county?)
17 G.S. § 163-82.15(d).
18 See footnote 15.
19 G.S. § 163-82.4(f).
10
• DMV Database (Did the person register to vote at the DMV on or before the voter
registration deadline? If so, in which county was the voter residing at the time of his or
her voter registration activity at the DMV?)
• NVRA Agency records (Did the person inform an election official or staff that they
registered to vote at a NVRA agency on or before the voter registration deadline?)
2.7 Voters Removed Due to Felony Conviction
Voters who were previously (and properly) removed due to felony conviction are not
automatically reinstated after completing their felony sentence, at which time their voting rights
are restored. Persons whose voting rights are restored must re-register on or before the voter
registration deadline. There is an exception for those who are restored to citizenship rights after
the voter registration deadline; such voters may register in person and vote on Election Day,
which can be done by completing the Provisional Ballot Application.20
Unless the voter has properly re-registered to vote, the county board must disapprove the
provisional application.
2.8 Voters Removed Due to Moving Out of County
Voters who were previously (and properly) removed because the county received a cancellation
notice from the voter or from another jurisdiction (another county or state) are not eligible unless
the voter timely registers to vote, or timely attempted to register to vote, upon their return to the
county. An application submitted by a provisional voter in this circumstance must be
disapproved.
2.9 NCOA Notification
A National Change of Address (NCOA) Confirmation Card returned by a voter to their former
county of residence confirming a change of address to another county is a proper cancellation
notice in the former county. If the former county transfers the notice to the new county and the
new county sends a courtesy voter registration notice to the voter, the courtesy application shall
not be deemed a voter registration attempt in the new county. After sending a Need Voter
Registration Application incomplete notice, the new county should have archived the incomplete
record in the voter registration database (SEIMS). If the provisional voter did not attempt to
register to vote in a new county of residence by the voter registration deadline, the provisional
application must be disapproved.
20 This is why the election official at the voting site must note on the provisional application that the voter
became qualified after the voter registration deadline, and “if in doubt as to the right of the applicant to
register, may require other evidence satisfactory to that official as to the applicant's qualifications.” G.S. §
163-82.6(f).
11
2.10 Residency
If no record of registration can be found for a voter and the voter provides a residential address
outside of the jurisdiction of the county in which the provisional ballot was cast, the Provisional
Voting Application must be disapproved and the Voter Registration Application must be denied.
2.11 Denied Registration
If a voter’s registration was properly denied because the applicant failed mail verification, the
applicant is not a registered voter. The Provisional Voting Application must be disapproved but
the Voter Registration Application must be processed after canvass, allowing the voter to
participate in future elections.21 However, staff should confirm, when conducting provisional
research, that the failed mail verification was not a result of a data entry error on the part of
county board staff during the voter registration process. If it was, the provisional application
must be approved and the voter should be processed again through VoterScan using the correct
address.
2.12 Same-Day Registrant Without Proof of Residence
During the early voting period, a person seeking to use same-day registration is required to
provide proof of voting residence. (For guidance regarding the same-day registration options and
identification requirements, see Numbered Memo 2023-05). If the registrant did not provide the
proof of residence, and instead submitted a Provisional Voting Application, the applicant must
produce the required proof of residence to the county board office on or before the day preceding
canvass.
If required proof is timely provided, the county board should approve the application and count
all votes cast in contests for which the voter is eligible. If proof is not timely provided, the
Provisional Voting Application must be disapproved but the Voter Registration Application must
be processed after canvass, allowing the voter to participate in future elections.
2.13 Incorrect Party
Sometimes a voter affiliated with one political party submits a Provisional Voting Application to
vote a ballot for a different political party’s primary. Staff should conduct research to confirm the
voter’s affiliation. If the record confirms the voter is registered in the county and the voter has an
eligible ballot for this election, but is affiliated with a different political party than the political
party in whose primary the voter cast a provisional ballot, the county board must count only the
contests in which the voter was eligible to participate (non-partisan contests, if any). In the
provisional module in SEIMS this would be considered a partial vote.
21 See G.S. § 163-82.7.
12
If the county board finds that the voter’s party affiliation was incorrectly listed in their voter
record, then the application must be approved and the ballot must be fully counted.22
2.14 Voted During Extended Hours on Election Day
The State Board may order that one or more voting places remain open after 7:30 p.m. on
Election Day. In that case, all voters arriving after 7:30 p.m. during the extended time that the
polls remain open will be permitted to vote, but they must vote by provisional ballot. In this case,
the provisional process is in place merely to preserve the ability of a court or other tribunal to
consider whether the polls should have remained open. Under statute, provisional applications
submitted solely due to extended voting hours must be approved and the votes counted if no
contrary judicial order has been issued by the time canvass occurs.23
2.15 Already Voted
If the poll book indicates that a voter has already voted, that individual may wish to submit a
Provisional Voting Application and provisional ballot. The county board must then determine
whether the individual had in fact voted previously in the same election. Because no voter is
entitled to vote more than once in an election, the county board must disapprove the application
of any voter who has already voted.
If the poll book inaccurately indicated that the voter had already voted, no administrative error
should act to prevent a qualified voter from participating, and the county board should approve
the application.
Any instances of attempted double voting must be reported immediately to the State Board of
Elections investigators for further review.
* * *
The above scenarios provide guidance on the proper approach for county boards reviewing
provisional applications and the determinations regarding the contests for which a voter may be
eligible. As elections officials are keenly aware, however, multiple reasons may converge in a
single instance of provisional voting (e.g., a voter may try to vote in the wrong party and the
wrong precinct). County boards are encouraged to keep in mind that their core objective is to
research the applicant and ultimately count votes cast in races for which the voter was eligible, if
any.
22 See G.S. § 163-82.17(e).
23 G.S. § 163-166.01.
13
Under any scenario where a provisional ballot is counted, in whole or in part, voter history
should be given to the voter. If any errors are made regarding voter history, amendments to voter
history can still be made after canvass.24
3. Provisional Review: Photo ID
There are two instances when a voter who does not present acceptable photo ID will cast a
provisional ballot while voting in person:25
• The voter completes a Photo ID Exception Form, claiming an exception to the photo ID
requirement, and then votes a provisional ballot.
• The voter votes a provisional ballot and then brings an acceptable photo ID to the county
board office before the close of business on the day before county canvass.
3.1 When the Voter Has Completed a Photo ID Exception Form
If the voter completed a Photo ID Exception Form and is otherwise eligible to vote, staff are
required to recommend approval of the application and the county board is required to count the
provisional ballot, unless the county board unanimously finds that the Form is false.26
If staff are aware of any specific information that may lead the county board to conclude the
Form is false, staff should note this for the county board’s consideration. Staff should not
conduct independent research into the truthfulness of the Form; the General Statutes do not
specifically authorize this activity, and it would be nearly impossible to guarantee the equal
treatment of voters across all 100 counties if such independent investigations were to take place.
Numbered Memo 2023-03 provides guidance on what may be considered when reviewing a
voter’s Photo ID Exception Form.
Before the county board makes a final determination that a Photo ID Exception Form is false,
and as a result disapproves the voter’s provisional ballot, the voter must be given notice and an
opportunity to address the county board on any grounds that the county board is considering
regarding the falsity of the Form. The opportunity to address the county board must be at a
meeting of the county board prior to completion of the canvass, which could include the canvass
meeting. The board should offer the voter the options to address the board in person or, if
24 The State Board is now required to compile an annual report on any revisions made to any voter’s voter
history, other than routine updates, following each election. G.S. § 163-182.15(b1) (see N.C. Session Law
2023-140 § 33, effective January 1, 2024). If county board staff must make a manual change to a voter’s
voter history, then staff should submit a help desk ticket to the State Board. A form will then be provided
for county board staff to identify the reason for the change.
25 G.S. § 163-166.16(c)–(e).
26 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(1).
14
feasible, remotely via videoconference or telephone. Notice must be by U.S. mail and the voter
must be contacted by any email address or phone number that the county board has for the
voter.27
Because of the requirement to give notice and an opportunity to address the board, staff
should group provisional ballots together that were cast with a Photo ID Exception Form,
and prioritize their review at the start of the canvass period so the voter can be timely
informed if the board may be questioning the truth of the voter’s Form.
The notice and opportunity to address the county board must only be offered to those provisional
voters for whom the county board has identified a reason to find that their Form is false. If the
county board lacks specific information regarding a voter’s Form, then that voter should not be
sent a notice letter or otherwise be made to think they must address the county board to have
their ballot counted.
County board members should conduct an initial review of the Photo ID Exception Forms as
early as possible in the canvass period, ideally within two-to-three days after Election Day when
the canvass period is ten days and within one-to-two days when the canvass period is seven days,
so that notice letters can be timely mailed. While the board members’ initial review can occur
during a meeting of the county board, it is not required that all county board members initially
review the Forms at the same time. For instance, county board members could review Photo ID
Exception Forms individually or in pairs, noting for staff their initial determination as to the
truthfulness of the Form.28 Each county board should employ the process that works best for it to
ensure an efficient review of the Forms.
In conducting its final review of a Form at a meeting, the county board should discuss the Form
in an open session, determine whether the voter is in attendance, and confirm whether that voter
wishes to address the board regarding their Form. This opportunity is an opportunity for the voter
to provide any information they think is relevant to the truthfulness of what they wrote on the
Form—it is not an adversarial or quasi-judicial hearing. Once the voter has been given the
opportunity to address the board and present any information relevant to the Form, the county
board should vote on whether to approve the Form. If the county board unanimously finds that
the Form is false, the county board must state those grounds in a written decision. The decision
can be in a written order of the county board or in the official minutes of the meeting, so long as
the minutes are in writing, specifically state the grounds for the county board’s findings, and are
27 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(1).
28 If this is accomplished by email, staff are reminded that board members should be BCC’d to avoid
running afoul of North Carolina’s open meetings law. G.S. § 143-318.10(d) (“‘Official meeting’ means . .
. the simultaneous communication by . . . electronic means of a majority of the members of a public body
for the purpose of conducting hearings, participating in deliberations, or voting upon or otherwise
transacting the public business within the jurisdiction, real or apparent, of the public body.”).
15
approved by the county board. The county board’s decision that a Form is false must be based on
facts, not speculation or personal opinion.
3.2 When the Voter Brings a Photo ID to the County Board Office After Voting
Voters who choose to vote a provisional ballot and then bring their photo ID to the county board
office must do so no later than 5:00 pm on the business day before county canvass. A county
board staff member must examine the photo ID in the same way a check-in official does at the
voting site—determining (1) whether the ID is an acceptable type, (2) whether the photo bears a
reasonable resemblance to the voter, and (3) whether the name is the same as or substantially
similar to the voter’s name in the registration records.29 It is recommended that a staff member
trained to review a voter’s photo ID card be designated to conduct this review.
After examining the photo ID, the staff member must proceed as follows:
• If the staff member determines the photo ID is acceptable, they must recommend
approval of the application if the voter is otherwise eligible to vote.30 Staff should consult
the State Board’s latest Approved Photo IDs List to confirm an ID is an acceptable type.
• If the photo ID is not an acceptable type of photo ID, staff must tell the voter why that is
the case and ask the voter to provide an acceptable photo ID.31
• If the photo ID does not satisfy the photo or name requirements, staff must recommend
disapproval of the application, even if the voter is otherwise eligible to vote.32 If
disapproval is recommended, the voter must be immediately told by staff the reason for
their recommendation of disapproval and when their provisional ballot will be reviewed
and considered by the county board. If the voter appears at that meeting and desires to
address the county board as to whether their photo ID is acceptable, the county board
members must apply the same standards as election officials when reviewing the ID.
If the voter does not bring an acceptable photo ID to the county board office by 5pm on the day
before canvass, staff must recommend disapproval of the application even if the voter is
otherwise eligible to vote.
If the voter timely brings a photo ID that is an acceptable type of photo ID and is otherwise
eligible to vote, the county board must count the provisional ballot unless the county board
29 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(2).
30 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(2)(A).
31 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(2)(B).
32 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(2)(C).
16
unanimously decides the photo ID presented does not satisfy the photo and name requirements,
and records in writing the grounds for its decision.33
4. Canvass Procedures
Canvass is the board’s responsibility. The members of the county board are responsible for
ensuring the accuracy and integrity of election results in the county. Canvass is a key part of
carrying out that duty.
By law, canvass is:
[T]he entire process of determining that the votes have been counted and
tabulated correctly, culminating in the authentication of the official
election results.34
In support of this process, a board of elections conducting canvass has the authority to send for
papers and persons, and to examine such documents or question such persons for the purpose of
making determinations as to the legality of disputed ballots.
The county canvass date and time are set by statute: at 11:00 a.m. on the 10th day after every
election.35 At that meeting the board’s purpose is:
[T]o complete the canvass of votes cast and to authenticate the count in
every ballot item in the county by determining that the votes have been
counted and tabulated correctly. If, despite due diligence by election
officials, the initial counting of all the votes has not been completed by
that time, the county board may hold the canvass meeting a reasonable
time thereafter. The canvass meeting shall be at the county board of
elections office, unless the county board, by unanimous vote of all its
members, designates another site within the county. The county board
shall examine the returns from precincts, from absentee official ballots,
from the sample hand‑to‑eye paper ballot counts, and from provisional
official ballots and shall conduct the canvass.36
Ensuring the integrity of every election is our primary responsibility as elections administrators.
County board members have a critical role in this process. Ultimately, county board members
33 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(2).
34 G.S. § 163-182.5(a).
35 G.S. § 163-182.5(b). However, canvass is seven days after the municipal primaries and elections in
September and October in odd-numbered years. See Numbered Memo 2023-01.
36 G.S. § 163-182.5(b).
17
will sign the certification documents that authenticate and certify that the election results are true
and accurate.
The items that follow must occur as part of every election canvass:
4.1 All Members Present
All county board members must be present37 for canvass under G.S. § 163-89: “All members of
the board shall attend the canvass and all members shall be present for the hearing of challenges
to absentee ballots.”
4.2 Public Notice
County boards of elections members may take no action outside a meeting for which there has
not been proper public notice.38
The county board must issue public notice of any meeting involving the counting of ballots. In
addition to being posted in public, the notice lists for a canvass meeting shall include all
individuals and institutions that usually receive notice of meetings. It is best practice to notify
leadership of any recognized political parties with a presence in the county.
Any voter of the county or other member of the public must be permitted to attend the meeting
and be allowed to observe the counting process, provided that no one shall interfere with the
election officials as they count the ballots or are engaged in the discharge of their other duties. If
media or the public are filming or photographing proceedings, the county board should remind
those present that state law forbids anyone from taking an image of a voted ballot, and no one
but election officials may have access to and review voted ballots.39
4.3 Reconciliation
One of the most important tasks conducted during the canvass process is reconciliation. Many
levels of reconciliation take place before the final certification of results are concluded and
involve comparing data against inventories of voting supplies (such as ballots and data storage
cards), and total ballots cast (including provisional and absentee ballots). The process begins
with the start of absentee-by-mail voting and continues through early voting and precinct
reconciliation and until final canvass.
37 See Numbered Memo 2022-08 regarding physical and virtual presence at canvass.
38 See G.S. §§ 143-318.10, 143-318.12(b).
39 G.S. §§ 163-165.1, 163-166.3.
18
If any issues are identified in a county board’s efforts to reconcile, those issues must be
addressed immediately. If you do not address reconciliation issues initially, problems may carry
forward and affect your broader canvass process. The State Board Office conducts a number of
audits to assist counties in identifying issues throughout the canvassing process, but there are
certain reconciliation processes that are not captured in electronic data and that county staff must
vigilantly review. For example, the State Board Office does not have data that captures the
physical number of provisional ballots you receive from the polling location, and it is imperative
county reconciliation processes includes comparing the physical number of provisional ballots to
the provisional module application within SEIMS and any poll book information. If there is a
discrepancy, you must investigate, identify, and document the reason for the discrepancy.
Any staff reconciliation process that is conducted must include documentation that is signed by
two staff members. This documentation must be maintained and available for county board
members during their canvassing meetings. The two-staffer requirement is to combat inadvertent
errors and potential misconduct.
4.4 Counting of Early Voting Ballots40
If ballots cast during early voting are counted electronically, that count is required to occur “at
the time the polls close” on Election Day. This means that elections officials cannot “close the
polls” on early voting machines until 7:30 P.M. on Election Day. Because this is a count of the
ballots that will occur at the county board office, it must be in the presence or under the
supervision of board members of all political parties then present. As with the counting of ballots
at any precinct at the close of the polls, any member of the public wishing to witness the vote
count must be allowed to do so, but no witness shall interfere with the orderly counting of the
official ballots, nor may any witness participate in the official counting of official ballots.41
There is no longer a requirement to formally accept early voting applications during an absentee
meeting. Instead, the voter signs the early voting application and it is treated the same as an
authorization to vote (ATV) for election day voters—i.e., as a record of the voter’s check-in, not
as a document the county board must later approve at a meeting.
40 G.S. § 163-182.2(a). Early voting is no longer a form of absentee voting. See N.C. Sess. Laws 2023-
140. As such, the counting of early voting ballots is no longer guided by the statutes governing the
processes for approving absentee envelopes (i.e., absentee applications) and counting absentee ballots.
Instead, the initial counting of early voting ballots is now guided by G.S. § 163-182.2(a) (“The initial
counting of official ballots cast on election day and under Part 5 of Article 14A of this Chapter shall be
conducted according to the following principles . . .”).
41 G.S. § 163-182.2(a)(3) (“Any member of the public wishing to witness the vote count at any level shall
be allowed to do so.”).
19
4.5 Counting of Absentee Ballots on Election Day42
County boards meet at 5 p.m. on Election Day (or earlier if a resolution is adopted at least two
weeks before the date of the election) in the board office or other public location for the purpose
of counting all absentee ballots, except those:
• Challenged before 5 p.m. on Election Day, or
• Received on or after Election Day.
The counting of absentee ballots shall be continuous until completed and the members shall not
separate or leave the counting place except for unavoidable necessity. As each ballot envelope is
opened, the board shall check off the name of the absentee voter. For the preservation of secrecy,
the ballots shall be placed in the appropriate ballot box or container for tabulation. After all
ballots have been placed in the boxes, the counting process shall begin.
At each of the absentee meetings prior to Election Day, it is permissible for the Board, after
approval of each absentee ballot, to cause staff to take preparatory steps and remove those ballots
from their envelopes and have them read by an optical scanning machine, without printing the
totals.
4.5.1 Documents to be prepared and signed by the county board
The following documents shall be prepared for the county board’s review and signatures:
1. The poll book of absentee voters. As soon as the absentee ballots have been counted on
Election Day, the board members and assistants employed to count the absentee ballots
shall each sign the poll book of absentee voters, with the signature to be affixed
immediately beneath the last absentee voter's name. The county board shall be
responsible for the safekeeping of the poll book of absentee voters.
2. The results tapes of electronic absentee ballot count. When absentee ballots are
counted electronically, the members of the board present shall sign the results tape, which
shall be retained for purposes of review and examination at the official county canvass
proceeding.
3. The absentee abstract. The board members shall cause the results of the tally to be
entered on the absentee abstract. The abstract shall be signed by the members of the
board in attendance and shall then be scanned and uploaded electronically to the State
Board.
42 G.S. § 163-234.
20
4. The chain of custody report(s). Voted ballots shall be properly secured and a
documented chain of custody shall be maintained for the ballots, tapes, poll book and
other documentation/media related to tabulation.
4.6 Counting of Absentee Ballots After Election Day43
County boards of election must have an additional meeting following the day of the election and
prior to the date of the county canvass to review and approve absentee ballot
envelopes/applications received on Election Day by the close of polls, and any military and
overseas ballot envelopes/applications received timely after Election Day. Civilian absentee
ballots are timely if received by 7:30 p.m. on Election Day.44 Military and overseas ballots that
are received after Election Day are timely if they were submitted for mailing, electronic
transmission, or other authorized means of delivery not later than 12:01 a.m., at the place where
the voter completes the ballot, on Election Day and are received no later than 5 p.m. on the last
business day prior to the county canvass.45 If the ballot was mailed and is timely received, it may
not be rejected on the basis that it has a late postmark, an unreadable postmark, or no postmark.46
The counting of absentee ballots received on Election Day is required to take place before or on
the day of the county canvass. Military and overseas ballots that are received by mail after the
close of the polls on Election Day must be counted by the county board of elections on the day of
canvass (unless a resolution is adopted at least two weeks before the date of the election to count
them during the canvass period).47
A quorum, with at least one board member of each political party, shall be present for the
counting of absentee ballots. This fact shall be publicly declared and entered in the official
minutes of the absentee board meeting. The county may use assistants in the counting of the
official ballots, but the county board members are responsible for observing and supervising the
opening and tallying of the ballots.
4.6.1 Documents to be prepared and signed by the Board
The following documents shall be prepared for the county board’s review and signatures:
1. The results tape for electronically counted absentee ballots. When absentee ballots are
counted electronically, the members of the board present at the canvass meeting shall
43 G.S. § 163-232 and G.S. § 163-234.
44 G.S. § 163-230.1(b)(1).
45 G.S. §§ 163-258.10 and -258.12(a).
46 G.S. § 163-258.12(b).
47 G.S. § 163-234(11).
21
sign the results tape, which shall be retained for purposes of review and examination at
the official county canvass proceeding, along with the Election Day absentee results tape.
2. The civilian and military-overseas certified lists of executed absentee ballots
returned on or after Election Day.48 The county board staff shall prepare these lists in
triplicate and the board shall sign all three originals of each list. One signed original of
each list shall be electronically uploaded to the State Board.
3. The supplemental absentee abstract. The county board members shall cause the results
of the tally to be entered on the supplemental absentee abstract. The abstract shall be
signed by the members of the board in attendance and the original Election Day absentee
abstract and the supplemental absentee abstract shall be mailed immediately to the State
Board.
4. The poll book of absentee voters. The board shall sign the final poll book of absentee
voters at this time.
5. The chain of custody report(s). Voted ballots shall be properly secured and a
documented chain of custody shall be maintained for the ballots, tapes, poll book and
other documentation/media related to tabulation.
4.7 Hearing Absentee Ballot Challenges49
The following must be heard by the county board on the day of the county canvass:
• Any challenge to an absentee ballot that was properly brought by 5:00 P.M. on the fifth
business day after the primary or general election; and
• Any challenge to a military or overseas ballot that was timely received after Election
Day, and was properly challenged no later than the time set by statute.
Notice must be provided to all challenged voters. All members of the board of elections shall
attend the canvass and must be present for the hearing of the challenges to an absentee ballot
under G.S. § 163-89.
Note: Challenges to absentee ballots may not be heard any sooner than the day and time set for
the county canvass.
48 G.S. § 163-232.1(a) provides that this list includes the ballots that “have not been included on the
certified list prepared pursuant to G.S. 163‑232.” Because the list prepared pursuant to G.S. § 163-232(a)
includes only those ballots “which have been received as of 5:00 P.M. on the day before the election,” the
list for ballots received on Election Day must also include any ballots received after 5:00 P.M. on the day
before the election.
49 G.S. § 163-89.
22
Also Note: Absentee ballot challenges may only be used for absentee voting, not early voting
ballots. Previously, early voting was a type of absentee voting, but that is no longer the case.50
The State Board’s Voter Challenge Procedures Guide contains additional information and
guidance regarding absentee ballot challenges.
4.8 Counting of Write-in Votes51
If write-in votes are not counted at the precinct after the close of polls, any write-in votes
counted at the county board office shall be counted in the presence or under the supervision of
the bipartisan county board.
Write-in votes shall be recorded on a write-in tally sheet, which shall be signed by the members
of the county board.
4.9 Reporting Provisional Ballot Counts52
No later than 12:00 P.M. two days after the close of the polls, the county board of elections shall
publish the number of provisional ballots cast for the following voting methods:
• Election Day
• Early Voting
• Absentee by-mail received as of election day
• Military and Overseas Absentee Ballots
To comply with this requirement, the State Board sends out a survey to all county boards the day
after Election Day and uses the information gathered from the survey to report provisional
ballots for all counties. County boards must complete this survey by the morning of the second
day after Election Day. In the survey, if no provisional ballots were cast for a specific category,
the county board should enter zero.
50 See N.C. Session Law 2023-140, secs. 1(a)–(c), 27(b).
51 G.S. § 163-182.2(a)(2); see also Numbered Memo 2019-07 for guidance in applying the standards for
determining voter intent for write-in votes.
52 G.S. § 163-166.11(5).
23
4.10 Counting Provisional Ballots53
The county board shall meet between Election Day and canvass to make a determination as to
each provisional ballot. A meeting before canvass may include a meeting on the day of canvass,
but such a meeting must occur before 11 a.m.
Under no circumstances shall any county board staff open a provisional envelope or tabulate
results before the county board members have made their official determination on the
provisional ballot application. In making its determination, the county board may rely on the
provisional research conducted by county board staff, but county board members may make
additional inquiries of staff as they see fit. When a voter casts a provisional ballot for one or
more eligibility-related reasons and a photo ID-related reason, staff should make
recommendations on all reasons the voter cast a provisional ballot. Approval of a provisional
application for a photo ID-related reason will not override a determination that the voter was
otherwise ineligible to vote.
Please refer to the “Review of Provisional Ballots” section in this Numbered Memo
regarding the proper review processes necessary to make decisions on Provisional Voting
Applications and the counting of votes in eligible contests.
When conducting provisional research, county board staff shall, at a minimum, follow the
instructions in this Memo and review the following resources:
• the voter’s provisional voting application
• the county’s voter registration database (active, inactive, removed and denied voters)
• pending voter registration applications, including applications in the incomplete, review,
or archive queue
• the non-public access to statewide voter registration information (intranet site)
• DMV provisional research results
Every effort must be made by county boards of elections to correct administrative errors well
before the board meets to consider and count the provisional ballots. If a voter was properly
registered to vote in the election by the county board, no mistake of an election official shall
serve to prevent the counting of the vote on any ballot item for which the voter was eligible by
registration and qualified by residency to vote.54 A county board shall never reject a voter’s
provisional application due solely to an administrative error by an election official.
Staff must review provisional voting applications soon after Election Day to determine if more
information is needed from a provisional voter to assist the county board in making the proper
53 G.S. § 163-182.2(a)(4).
54 G.S. § 163-182.2(a)(4).
24
determination as to whether to count a person’s ballot. Such administrative efforts may include,
for example, following up with a voter to:
• Have the voter sign the provisional voting application, if it was not signed.
• Have a voter who claims to have registered at the NCDMV, but for whom no record of
registration was found, provide his or her driver license number if it was not provided on
the provisional voting application.
If, in the course of reviewing provisional applications, a staff member suspects that improper
instructions were given by an election official or finds that information is missing on the
application, the staff member shall make every effort to ensure that the voter is given the
opportunity to provide the required information.
It is essential that the process for handling provisional ballots is followed. County boards should
be making decisions as to the disposition of provisional ballots based on information presented
from staff research, rather than from unofficial or unverified sources of information.
Again, no provisional envelopes shall be opened and tabulated prior to the county board voting
on the disposition of a provisional ballot. The opening and tabulation of approved ballots shall be
done in the presence and under the supervision of board members. [Note: The correct PCT
(where the voter should have voted) shall be written on the ballot before it is tabulated, so that
the ballot can be sorted into the correct precinct during the 30-day sort process.]
4.10.1 Partial-Count Procedures
With respect to ballots that must be partially counted,55 the county board shall have a process to
count the contests for which the voter is eligible. The county board shall select one of the
following processes to count eligible contests:
• Ballot duplication – Either the county board members or a bipartisan team shall
assemble to duplicate the original provisional ballot. Until certain auditing improvements
are made to SEIMS and in light of the 30-day precinct sort, it is within the county board’s
discretion to duplicate the partially counted ballots either onto a ballot of the same style
as that cast by the provisional voter or on a ballot of the proper style assigned to the
voter, but using the ballot of the proper style is the recommended method. The team shall
mark the blank ballot for all contests which the voter is eligible to vote. The board shall
annotate the blank ballot by some indication or marking that the ballot is a duplicate of
the original ballot, minus the contests in which the voter was ineligible to participate.
When using this method, one team member shall call out the voter’s ballot choice and the
55 When a voter casts a provisional ballot solely for a photo ID-related reason, there is no partial counting
of ballots—the voter’s ballot is counted in full or not at all.
25
other team member shall mark the blank ballot. Ideally, a third person will then review
and compare the original ballot to the duplicated ballot, or, in the absence of a third
person, the two-person team can switch ballots and roles and permit the caller to review
the ballot marked by the first person, and vice versa. The duplicated ballot shall then be
tabulated along with fully counted provisional ballots.
• Hand-tally – Either the county board or a bipartisan team of election officials shall
assemble to hand-tally the votes cast for all eligible contests and ballot choices. When
using this method, one team member shall call out the voter’s ballot choice and the other
team member shall mark a tally sheet. A third person shall observe the team’s actions of
calling and marking the tally sheet. Tally sheets should be organized by precinct, in light
of the 30-day precinct sort.
Once the county board has made a final determination as to the provisional ballots for the
election, the county board staff shall prepare a final disposition report for the board of elections
members to review and sign. Once signed, the ballots that are to be counted (fully or partially
approved) shall be tabulated. Regardless of whether the ballots are electronically tabulated with
the use of certified and tested voting equipment, or are instead hand-tallied, the results of the
tabulation shall be signed by the county board members or the bipartisan team of election
officials who participated in the count.
The final disposition report and the counted official provisional ballots shall be sealed together
and maintained as part of the official documentation of the election. The signed results tapes
shall be retained for purposes of review and examination at the official county canvass
proceeding.
4.10.2 Documents to be prepared and signed by the county board
The following documents shall be prepared for the county board’s review and signatures:
1. The report of “provisional voters by precinct voted.”
2. The results tapes. When provisional ballots are counted electronically, the results tape
must be signed by the members of the board present at the meeting. Board members
shall sign the tape before the tabulation begins (the “zero tape”) and then again after
the tabulation is complete. These signed results tapes shall be retained for purposes of
review and examination at the official county canvass proceeding.
3. Chain of custody report(s). Voted ballots shall be properly secured and a documented
chain of custody must be maintained for the ballots, tapes, poll book and other
documentation/media related to tabulation.
26
4.11 Final Canvass Proceedings and Certifying the Election
To complete the canvass of votes cast and to authenticate the count in every ballot item in the
county by determining that the votes have been counted and tabulated correctly, the county board
must:
• examine the returns from all Early Voting sites and Election Day precincts,
• examine the returns from absentee official ballots,
• examine the sample hand-to-eye paper ballot counts, and
• examine the returns from provisional ballots.
After examining the returns, the board shall conduct the canvass and sign the official abstract of
results.
The county board is required by law to authenticate the election results at the conclusion of
canvass in the form of an official abstract of the vote totals.56 This event may only be delayed
when there is an election protest pending and that protest concerns the manner in which votes
were counted or results tabulated.57 There is no other legal basis for a county board member to
withhold authentication of the election results in the form of an official abstract.58 Moreover,
federal law does not permit election officials to decline to count or report eligible voters’
ballots.59 Canvassing and certifying election results is the way, under North Carolina law, that
county boards count and report the votes of their county’s voters.
The issuance of a certificate of nomination or election to the winner of an election contest occurs
six days after the election results are certified via the abstract at canvass. The county board is
required by law to issue such a certificate, based on the official results determined at canvass and
as reported in the abstract. Only a pending election protest may delay or prevent the issuance of a
certificate of nomination or election, and only as provided for in state law.60 If there is a
56 G.S. §§ 163-182.5(b), 163-182.6.
57 See G.S. § 163-182.10(a)(2). The county board should attempt to resolve such a protest before the
canvass is completed. If necessary to provide time to resolve the protest, the county board may recess the
canvass meeting, but shall not delay the completion of the canvass for more than three days unless
approved by the State Board of Elections. At the conclusion of the protest proceedings, the county board
must supplement the abstract with the results for the ballot item that is the subject of the protest.
Resolution of the protest shall not delay the canvass of ballot items unaffected by the protest.
58 See Order, In Re Complaint of Bob Hall, State Bd. of Elections (March 30, 2023).
59 The federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 makes it illegal to willfully decline to count or report a lawful
vote. 52 U.S.C. § 10307(a) (“No person acting under color of law shall fail or refuse to permit any person
to vote who is entitled to vote under any provision of chapters 103 to 107 of this title or is otherwise
qualified to vote, or willfully fail or refuse to tabulate, count, and report such person’s vote.”).
60 See G.S. § 163-182.15.
27
pending protest, no certificate should be issued until the time set in G.S. § 163-182.15
following the resolution of the protest.
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
Review of Supplemental Absentee Ballot Applications
Applicable Statutes and/or Rules
N.C. Gen. Stat §§ 163-229(b), 163-230.1(f), 163-234(11), and 163-231(b)(2) (Modified by Session Law
2023-140 (S747), NCSBOE Numbered Memos 2021-03, 2020-23, 2020-25, 2022-11, 2021-07, 2020-29,
and 2023-03
Summary:
The statutory deadline for the return of civilian ballots was 7:30 pm on Election Day. The portal for
UOCAVA voters to access, mark, and submit their ballot closed at 7:30 p.m. on Election Day. The mail
return deadline for UOCAVA ballots is the end of business (5:00 pm) on the day before canvass.
All absentee ballot applications for the 2024 Primary Election must include the following:
1. The voter’s certification of eligibility to vote the enclosed ballot.
2. A copy of an acceptable form of Photo ID or completed Photo ID Exception Form.
3. The certification of two witnesses, to include their residence address, or one public notary.
4. The certification, to include residence address, of any individual that assisted a voter in
accordance with N.C. Gen. Stat. §163-226.3 (Modified by Session Law 2023-140).
Since the board has delegated so much of the administrative detail of the election functions, duties, and
work of the Elections Director, the Director and staff are responsible for completing many of the
administrative duties associated with by-mail voting. In addition, the board authorized staff to complete
the following preparatory steps by resolution approved on October 10, 2023:
1. Prior to each Absentee Review Meeting, a bipartisan team shall duplicate all UOCAVA
ballots received by the Board.
2. Prior to each weekly Special Meeting held pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-230(e)-(f), and
prior to any meeting held pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-234 at which absentee ballot
applications/container-return envelopes are to be passed upon, the Director or staff shall
inspect each absentee ballot application/container-return envelope to evaluate whether it:
a. Complies with all the requirements such that it should be recommended for
approval,
b. Is defective but can be cured,
c. Is defective but cannot be cured, or
d. has a status that needs to be evaluated by the Board.
3. At each Absentee Review Meeting and any meeting under N.C. Gen. Stat.§ 163-234, once
the Board has approved absentee ballot applications/container-return envelopes, the
Director and staff shall “remove th[e) ballots from th[ose] envelopes and have them read by
Item # 3c
an optical scanning machine, without printing the totals on the scanner."
The review of certain types of absentee ballot applications cannot be delegated to staff members.
Specifically, county boards are required to individually review the following types of applications:
• Have been recommended for disapproval by staff
• Have a cure certification associated with the ballot application
• Have a Photo ID Exception Form where staff has indicated that available information may
lead the board to conclude that the Form is false
• Where staff need further guidance from the board as to whether the application was
properly executed.
The board by majority vote may accept staff’s recommendations for approval without reviewing all
absentee applications that do not specifically require board review (Numbered Memo 2020-25).
However, this delegation must include a process for the board to spot-check the ballot envelopes to
ensure accuracy and consistency. County boards are authorized to use two bipartisan teams of board
members to conduct this type of review.
There are three main types of deficiencies that are managed by staff: 1) Return Deficiencies, 2) Ballot
Application Deficiencies, and 3) Photo ID Documentation Deficiencies (Numbered Memo 2021-03).
1) Return Deficiencies – These deficiencies are associated with the actual envelopes, not the ballot
application. The ballot envelope is returned to the county board of elections office in an outer return
envelope to ensure the privacy of the accompanying photo ID documentation. These return deficiencies
require that the ballot be spoiled and reissued to the voter:
• The ballot envelope is unsealed or appears to have been opened and resealed and the
return envelope is not sealed or appears to have been opened and resealed.
• Someone other than the voter returns a ballot envelope that is not sealed and the return
envelope is also unsealed or there is no return envelope. Even if the person is authorized to
return the ballot, they cannot seal the ballot envelope without the voter being present. The
voter must direct that the ballot envelope be sealed in their presence.
• The return or ballot envelope indicates the voter is requesting a replacement ballot.
Other anomalies do not require that the ballot be spoiled and reissued. In these situations, the ballot is
received in a sealed envelope but there is an anomaly with one or both envelopes. These anomalies
include the following:
• Ballot envelope is unsealed or appears to have been opened and resealed but is received in
a sealed return envelope. In this case, staff will make the following notation on the return
envelope “sealed in return envelope” so that county board can open the return envelope
and review that ballot at its next absentee board meeting.
• Ballot is placed inside the clear sleeve on the outside of the ballot envelope used for photo
ID documentation but the return envelope is sealed. Staff will make the following notation
on the return envelope “sealed in return envelope” so that county board can open the
return envelope and review that ballot at its next absentee board meeting.
• Return envelope is not sealed or appears to have been opened and resealed but the ballot
appears to be sealed in the ballot envelope. No special action is required before reviewing
the ballot application.
• A voter returns their ballot in person in an unsealed ballot envelope to our office or a one-
stop site. In this case, staff will instruct the voter to seal the ballot envelope. No special
action is required before reviewing the ballot application.
The purpose of the return envelope is to protect the voter’s confidential information during mail transit.
If a person hand delivers a sealed ballot envelope without a return envelope, staff will place the ballot
envelope in a new return envelope for storage purposes.
2) Ballot Application Deficiencies - Some ballot application deficiencies can be cured with a certification
by the voter while other deficiencies require that the ballot be spoiled.
Deficiencies that can be cured with a cure certification:
• Missing voter signature
• Voter signed in the wrong place
Deficiencies that require the ballot to be spoiled:
• A witness or assistant did not print name (If the witness or assistant’s signature is legible
such that the name can be determined, the absentee ballot application is not deficient
and the ballot should not be spoiled, absent any other deficiency)
• A witness or assistant did not print address (Failure to print witness zip code does not
invalidate the application. Failure to include the city or state in the address does not
invalidate the application if the correct address can be determined)
• Missing witness or assistant signature
• Witness or assistant signed in place of voter signature (However, if all witness or
assistant information is present on the application but not on the designated lines, then
it is not deficient, and the ballot should not be spoiled absent another deficiency)
• If a voter’s witness is a notary, two errors in the notarial certification require that the
ballot be spoiled and reissued: the notary signature is missing, or the notarial seal is
missing altogether or contains missing information
3) Photo ID Documentation Deficiencies – These deficiencies are curable since the cure documentation
comes from the voter. In addition, the failure to include any photo ID documentation is a deficiency that
can be cured by the voter. There are two categories of Photo ID Documentation deficiencies:
Photocopy of Photo ID Deficiencies:
• The ID type is not acceptable for voting purposes
• The ID does not meet the expiration requirements, if applicable
• The photocopy is not readable, which means that the name on ID cannot be read and/or
photograph does not depict a person but only a shadow or outline of a person.
• Name on the ID is not the same or substantially equivalent to the voter’s name in their
voter record
Photo ID Exception Form Deficiencies:
• The voter did not print their name on the form, unless the voter’s signature appears to
be made by the voter and appears to be the name of the voter. Elections staff and
board members must presume that the voter’s signature is that of the voter (even if
illegible), unless there is clear evidence to rebut that presumption.
• The voter did not check a box for at least one claimed exception or failed to identify
their specific reasonable impediment
• The voter failed to provide their NC Driver’s License Number or last four digits of their
Social Security Number when the reasonable impediment selected was that the voter is
unable to make a photocopy of their ID to include with the ballot. However, if the voter
checked an additional box indicating another reasonable impediment, the form cannot
be found deficient for the missing identification information.
• The voter failed to sign the Exception Form. If a voter is physically unable to sign or
make their mark due to a disability, a person of the voter’s choice should write
“Disabled-cannot sign” in the signature line and complete the Voter Assistance
Certification on the back of the ballot envelope (Numbered Memo 2022-11).
Upon notification of a deficiency with their photo ID documentation, if a voter informs staff that their
photo ID documentation in inside the ballot envelope, staff will defer the review of the photo ID
documentation until the next board meeting unless there are other deficiencies that require the ballot
to be spoiled and reissued.
Elections staff review of photo ID documentation is for completeness, not falsity. A board’s finding of
falsity must be unanimous and based on the board’s review of other specific information before the
board that led it to conclude that the affidavit on the Photo ID Exception form is false. This decision
must be based on facts, not on speculation. A finding of falsity may not be based on the personal
opinion as to whether the voter’s asserted reason is good enough for being excepted from the photo ID
requirement. This decision can only be made after the board provides the voter notice and opportunity
to be heard on any grounds that the board is considering regarding a finding of falsity.
Certain types of deficiencies will only be discovered if the ballot envelope is opened during a board
meeting. If the ballot envelope does not contain a ballot or contains more than one ballot, then the
ballot(s) need to be spoiled and reissued. If two voters switch their ballots and ballot envelopes based
on the absentee number, then the county board will need to review the circumstances. If the voters in
question received their ballots at the same address and there are no other deficiencies, then the ballot
applications should not be spoiled.
At the end of each absentee meeting, all applications and ballots should be reconciled with the number
of applications approved by the board equal in number to the number of ballots scanned on the DS850.
Document/s Included:
NCSBOE Numbered Memos 2022-11, 2021-07, 2021-03, 2020-29, 2020-25, 2020-23, and 2023-03,
Absentee Poll Book and Reconciliation Log Sheet (Provided at meeting)
Board Action Required:
Discuss as necessary and action required
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 27255 Raleigh, NC 27611
(919) 814-0700 or
(866)522-4723
Fax: (919) 715-0135
Numbered Memo 2021-03
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director1
RE: Absentee Container-Return Envelope Deficiencies
DATE: June 11, 2021 (updated September 25, 2023; January 19, 2024)2
The State Board is required to provide a cure process for voters whose absentee ballot envelopes
contain certain deficiencies.3 In general, the cure process for absentee-by-mail deficiencies is
guided by G.S. § 163-230.1(e), as amended by Session Law 2023-140 (SB 747), and this
numbered memo. The cure process for photo ID documentation containing deficiencies, when
that documentation is submitted with an absentee ballot, is provided through G.S. § 163-
230.1(e), as amended by Session Law 2023-140, an administrative rule adopted by the State
Board4, and is guided by this numbered memo. County boards of elections must ensure that the
votes of all eligible voters are counted using the same standards, regardless of the county in
which the voter resides.
The ballot container-return envelope (ballot envelope) and the accompanying photocopy of the
voter’s photo ID or completed Photo ID Exception Form (photo ID documentation) are
transmitted to the county board in an outer return envelope. This numbered memo directs the
procedure county boards must use to address deficiencies in the envelopes and photo ID
1 This memo is issued under the authority delegated by the State Board to the executive director pursuant
to G.S. § 163-22(p).
2 This numbered memo replaces Numbered Memo 2020-19, which was first issued on August 21, 2020
and subsequently revised and reissued on September 22, 2020, and October 17, 2020. This numbered
memo was updated on September 25, 2023, and again on January 19, 2024, to include processes related to
photo ID requirements for absentee-by-mail voting.
3 See G.S. § 163-230.1(e), revised by N.C. Session Law 2023-140 § 35, to provide a cure process for
deficiencies associated with returned absentee-by-mail ballots. See also Democracy NC v. State Board of
Elections, 476 F.Supp.3d 158 (M.D.N.C. Aug. 4, 2020) (explaining that due process requires such a cure
opportunity).
4 08 NCAC 17 .0109(b).
2
documentation, to ensure that a voter is provided every opportunity to correct certain
deficiencies, while also recognizing that processes must be manageable for county boards to
timely complete required tasks.
No Signature Verification5
Verification of the voter’s identity is completed through the witness requirement. The voter’s
signature on the envelope shall not be compared with the voter’s signature in their registration
record, on their request form, or on their photocopy of photo ID or Photo ID Exception Form
submitted with their ballot, because this is not a requirement for the approval of an absentee
ballot under North Carolina law.6 County boards shall accept the voter’s signature on the ballot
envelope if it appears to be made by the voter, meaning the signature on the envelope appears to
be the name of the voter and not some other person. Absent clear evidence to the contrary, the
county board shall presume that the voter’s signature is that of the voter, even if the signature is
illegible. A voter may sign their signature or make their mark.
Types of Deficiencies
Trained county board staff shall review each return envelope, executed ballot envelope, and
photo ID documentation the office receives to determine if there are any deficiencies. County
board staff shall, to the extent possible, regularly review these absentee ballot materials on each
business day, to ensure that voters have every opportunity to timely correct deficiencies.7 Review
for deficiencies occurs after intake. The initial review is conducted by staff to expedite
processing of the envelopes in advance of a county board absentee meeting.8
5 Session Law 2023-140 § 48 provides for a signature verification pilot program to be conducted during
the 2024 primary election. As stated in Section 48.(c), however, “[i]n implementing the pilot program
established in this section, no executed mail-in absentee ballot shall be rejected by the county board of
elections for failing any signature verification. All executed mail-in absentee ballots that are otherwise
eligible to be counted in accordance with Chapter 163 of the General Statutes shall be counted.”
6 See In re: Request for Declaratory Ruling on Signature Matching for Absentee Ballot Requests and
Ballot Envelopes, N.C. State Bd. of Elections (July 22, 2022). See also Numbered Memo 2020-15, which
explains that signature comparison is not permissible for absentee request forms.
7 Specifically for ballot application deficiencies and photo ID documentation deficiencies, discussed
below, G.S. § 163-230.1(e) requires that the county board “promptly notify the voter of the deficiency and
the manner in which the voter may cure the deficiency.”
8 See Numbered Memo 2020-25 regarding preparatory steps for absentee meetings.
3
There are three categories of deficiencies: 1) return deficiencies, 2) ballot application
deficiencies, and 3) photo ID documentation deficiencies.
1. Return Deficiencies
Previously, a voter transmitted their absentee-by-mail ballot to the county board in a single ballot
container-return envelope. However, with the implementation of photo ID requirements starting
with the 2023 municipal elections, the ballot envelope is now transmitted to the county board in
an outer return envelope to ensure the privacy of the accompanying photo ID documentation. As
a result, there may be certain instances where the return of the absentee ballot requires the ballot
to be spoiled and the absentee package reissued to the voter.
Deficiencies that Require the Ballot to Be Spoiled (Civilian)
• Ballot is inside the ballot envelope, which is not sealed or which appears to have been
opened and re-sealed, and the ballot envelope is received in a return envelope which is
not sealed or which appears to have been opened and re-sealed.9
• Ballot is inside the executed ballot envelope, which is not sealed, and someone other than
the voter hand delivers the ballot envelope to an early voting site or the county board
office, and the return envelope is also unsealed or there is no return envelope. Even if the
person is authorized to return this ballot, they cannot seal the ballot without the voter
being present. The voter must direct that the ballot be sealed “in the voter’s presence.”10
• The return or ballot envelope indicates the voter is requesting a replacement ballot.
If a county board identifies one of these deficiencies, county board staff shall spoil the returned
ballot and reissue a ballot, as long as the new ballot is issued before Election Day, along with a
notice explaining the county board office’s action, in accordance with this numbered memo.
Anomalies that Are Not Deficiencies (Civilian)11
• Ballot is inside the executed ballot envelope, which is not sealed or which appears to
have been opened and re-sealed, but the ballot envelope is received in a sealed return
9 Ballots must be “sealed in the container-return envelope.” G.S. § 163-230.1(d); see also G.S. § 163-
231(a)(3).
10 G.S. § 163-231(a)(3).
11 With all ballot mistakes or anomalies, elections officials must be guided by the clear instruction in the
federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 to not allow an error on ballot materials to lead to a ballot’s rejection
when that error is immaterial to determining a voter’s eligibility to cast the ballot: “No person acting
under color of law shall . . . deny the right of any individual to vote in any election because of an error or
omission on any record or paper relating to any application, registration, or other act requisite to voting, if
4
envelope. Immediately upon opening the return envelope and noticing this situation, staff
should re-seal the return envelope with a notation of “sealed in return envelope.” The
county board should open the return envelope and address that ballot at its next absentee
meeting.12
• Ballot is not inside the ballot envelope or has been placed inside the clear sleeve on the
ballot envelope used for including the photo ID documentation, but the return envelope is
sealed. Immediately upon opening the return envelope and noticing this situation, staff
should re-seal the return envelope with a notation of “sealed in return envelope.” The
county board should open the return envelope and address that ballot at its next absentee
meeting.13
• Ballot is received in a return envelope that is not sealed or appears to have been opened
and re-sealed, but the ballot is inside the executed ballot envelope that is sealed. This
situation does not require any special action to document the anomaly before presenting
the ballot envelope to the county board.
• Ballot is inside the executed ballot envelope, which is not sealed, and the voter hand
delivers the ballot envelope to an early voting site or the county board office. Before
taking receipt of the envelope, staff should request that the voter first seal the ballot
envelope.
In all of the above situations, the ballot was received in a sealed envelope and is therefore not
deficient.14
A person hand-delivering the absentee ballot, whether it is the voter or someone authorized to
return the voter’s ballot, is not required to deliver the ballot envelope inside the return envelope
for the absentee application to be approved. The return envelope is designed to protect the
voter’s confidential identifying information during mail transit. If the person hand-delivers only
the sealed ballot envelope, staff should follow their usual storage practices and keep the ballot
such error or omission is not material in determining whether such individual is qualified under State law
to vote in such election.” 52 U.S.C. § 10101(a)(2)(B).
12 In this situation, for the purposes of staff's initial review of photo ID documentation pursuant to 08
NCAC 17 .0109(b), the ballot application is not “received” until the return envelope is opened at the
absentee meeting.
13 In this situation, for the purposes of staff's initial review of photo ID documentation pursuant to 08
NCAC 17 .0109(b), the ballot application is not “received” until the return envelope is opened at the
absentee meeting.
14 G.S. §§ 163-230.1(d), 163-231(a)(3).
5
envelope in a secure location, which may include placing the ballot envelope in a new return
envelope for storage purposes.
2. Ballot Application Deficiencies
The ballot application is the form on the ballot envelope that is completed by the voter, their
witnesses or notary, and assistant (if applicable).15 Ballot application deficiencies fall into two
main categories: those that can be cured with a cure certification (i.e., an attestation) by the voter,
and those that cannot be cured. If a deficiency cannot be cured, the ballot must be spoiled and a
new ballot must be issued, as long as the new ballot is issued before Election Day. See the Voter
Notification Section below.
Deficiencies Curable with Cure Certification (Civilian and UOCAVA)
The following deficiencies can be cured by sending the voter a cure certification:
• Voter did not sign the Voter Certification.16
• Voter signed in the wrong place.17
The cure certification process applies to civilian and UOCAVA voters.
Deficiencies that Require the Ballot to Be Spoiled (Civilian)
The following deficiencies cannot be cured by certification, because the missing information
comes from someone other than the voter:
• The name of the witness or assistant is not printed,18 unless the witness’s or assistant’s
signature is legible such that the name can be determined, in which case the ballot
envelope is not deficient and the ballot shall not be spoiled for this reason.19
• A witness or assistant did not print their address.20
15 G.S. § 163-229(b).
16 G.S. § 163-230.1(e)(1).
17 G.S. § 163-230.1(e)(2).
18 G.S. § 163-230.1(e) provides that “The identification of the two persons witnessing the casting of the
absentee ballot in accordance with G.S. 163-231(a) is not a curable deficiency.” However, if the printed
name is readable and on the correct line, even if it is written in cursive script, for example, it does not
invalidate the ballot envelope.
19 G.S. § 163-231(a)(5) (“Failure to include a printed witness name does not invalidate the application and
certificate if the identity of an individual can solely be ascertained by the witness’s signature.”).
20 Failure to list a witness’s ZIP code does not invalidate the ballot envelope. G.S. § 163-231(a)(5). A
witness’s or assistant’s address does not have to be a residential address; it may be a post office box or
6
• A witness or assistant did not sign.
• A witness or assistant signed on the wrong line. Where the witness or assistant signed in
place of the voter’s signature, that deficiency cannot be cured and requires the ballot to be
spoiled. However, if all required information from the witness or assistant is present but
not on the designated line for each (for example, the witness or assistant printed their
name on the address line, printed their address on the name line, and signed), the ballot
envelope is not deficient and the ballot shall not be spoiled for this reason.
Additionally, when a voter’s witness is a notary, two errors in the notarial certificate will result
in the ballot being spoiled: 1) the notary’s signature is missing, or 2) the notarial seal is missing
altogether or contains missing information. As discussed in Numbered Memo 2021-07, other
technical errors with the notarial certificate will not affect the sufficiency, validity, or
enforceability of the notarial certificate itself or the underlying document and are not considered
deficiencies.
3. Photo ID Documentation Deficiencies
When a voter includes photo ID documentation with their absentee ballot envelope, there may be
deficiencies in that documentation that require a cure notice to be sent to the voter. All
deficiencies with a voter’s photo ID documentation are curable, because the cure documentation
comes from the voter. 21
Photocopy of Photo ID Deficiencies
Deficiencies in a photocopy of a voter’s photo ID include:
• The ID is not a type of ID that is acceptable for voting purposes under 08 NCAC 17
.0101(a)(1).
• The ID does not meet expiration requirements, if applicable.
other mailing address. Additionally, if the address is missing a city or state, but the county board of
elections can determine the correct address, the failure to list that information does not invalidate the
ballot envelope. For example, if a witness lists “Raleigh 27603,” you can determine the state is NC, or if a
witness lists “333 North Main Street, 27701,” you can determine that the city/state is Durham, NC. If both
the city and ZIP code are missing, staff will need to determine whether the correct address can be
identified. If the correct address cannot be identified, the envelope shall be considered deficient and the
ballot spoiled and a new ballot reissued. See Numbered Memo 2020-29 for additional information
regarding address issues.
21 G.S. § 163-230.1(e) (“Curable deficiencies are deficiencies that can be cured with supplemental
documentation or attestation provided by the voter[.]”).
7
• The photocopy is not readable, which means that the name on the ID cannot be read, the
photograph on the ID does not depict a person (e.g., it only depicts a shadow or outline of
a person), or both.
• The name on the ID is not the same as or substantially equivalent to the voter’s name in
their voter record.
Any difference between the voter’s address on their ID and the address in their registration
record is not a deficiency.
Photo ID Exception Form Deficiencies
Deficiencies in a Photo ID Exception Form include:
• The voter did not print their name on the Form, unless the voter’s signature on the Form
appears to be made by the voter, meaning the signature on the Form appears to be the
name of the voter and not some other person. The county board shall presume that the
voter’s signature is that of the voter, even if the signature is illegible, unless there is clear
evidence to rebut this presumption.
• The voter did not check a box for at least one claimed exception from the photo ID
requirements, or if the exception is a reasonable impediment, the voter failed to identify
their specific reasonable impediment (including by writing their reason if they chose
“Other”22).
• If the reasonable impediment chosen is that the voter is unable to make a photocopy of
their ID to include with their ballot, the voter did not include their North Carolina driver’s
license number, DMV ID number, or last 4 digits of their social security number.23
However, if the voter has additionally checked a box indicating another reasonable
impediment that prevents them from including a copy of a photo ID, the Form cannot be
found deficient for the missing identification number alone.
22 If the voter writes a reason for “Other” but does not check the “Other” box, the Form is not deficient for
that reason alone. Similarly, if the voter writes their North Carolina driver’s license number, DMV ID
number, or last 4 digits of their social security number but does not check the “I am unable to include a
photocopy of my photo ID with this absentee ballot envelope” box, the Form is not deficient for that
reason alone provided that the voter did check the first box indicating that they suffer from a reasonable
impediment that prevents them from including a copy of photo ID.
23 G.S. § 163-230.1(g)(2).
8
• The voter did not sign the Form.24
Additionally, a voter’s failure to include any photo ID documentation—either a photocopy of
their ID or an Exception Form—is a deficiency that may be cured.25
A voter may respond to a notification that their ballot is missing photo ID documentation by
stating that it is in the ballot envelope. If this occurs, and staff have not otherwise identified any
return or ballot application deficiencies that would require the ballot to be spoiled and reissued,
staff must defer the review of the photo ID documentation to the next absentee board meeting,
when the county board can review the application and, if approved, open the ballot envelope and
confirm photo ID compliance.26 If the board identifies a photo ID deficiency at that point, staff
should be instructed to notify the voter of the opportunity to cure as explained further in this
memo.
County Board Review of Photo ID Exception Forms for Falsity
Although a county board’s finding that a Photo ID Exception Form is false will result in the
absentee ballot being rejected, this is not a “deficiency” in the same sense as the ones listed
above—where staff will take action to notify the voter to address a deficiency. Staff deficiency
review of Photo ID Exception Forms is for completeness—not falsity.27 A board’s finding of
falsity can only come after the board gives the voter notice and an opportunity to be heard on the
matter. See Numbered Memo 2020-25, p 8 (“Review of Photo ID Exception Forms”). County
boards shall follow the applicable administrative code provisions28 and Numbered Memo 2023-
03, pp. 11–13, when considering whether a Photo ID Exception Form is false.
24 If a voter is unable to sign the Photo ID Exception Form due to a disability, the person of the voter’s
choice who is assisting them can sign the Form on the voter’s behalf and must complete the assistant
certification on the envelope. See Numbered Memo 2022-11, p. 3 (Court Order Regarding Assistance for
Absentee Voters with Disabilities).
25 G.S. § 163-230.1(e)(3).
26 This does not prevent the voter from also choosing to send photo ID cure documentation to the county
board while its review of the application is pending, and staff may encourage the voter to do so when time
is of the essence.
27 Of course, staff may flag an Exception Form for the board’s review at a meeting if staff has specific
information suggesting the form is false.
28 See 08 NCAC 17 .0109(c).
9
4. Deficiencies that are first discovered at a board meeting
Some deficiencies will not be apparent until a board meeting and, when discovered, will require
board action at that time. These deficiencies can include the following:
• There is no ballot in the ballot envelope. In this situation, although there is no ballot to
spoil, the entire absentee package must be reissued to the voter so that the statutory
requirements for voting and transmitting an absentee ballot can be met.
• There is more than one ballot in the ballot envelope. In this situation, both ballots will
need to be spoiled and new absentee ballot packages issued to both voters, because it will
not be possible to determine which of the two ballots were voted by the voter who
completed the application.
• Two voters’ ballots and ballot envelopes were switched, based on the county board’s
review of the CIV numbers (ballot identifying numbers). In this situation, the county
board will need to consider the circumstances of the ballots and ballot envelopes together
to decide whether to approve the ballots. If the two voters had their absentee ballots
sent to the same address and there are no issues with the applications, then the
county board should not spoil the ballots, because under those circumstances, each
voter has properly attested to voting the ballot enclosed with their application. The ballot
identifying numbers associated with the enclosed ballots are used for official tracking
purposes, and voters in the same household should not have their ballots rejected for
failing to ensure these numbers match between their ballots and applications, which is
neither a requirement for approval of the ballot under state law nor material to
determining a voter’s eligibility to cast the ballot under federal law.29 The board staff
should make a note of the ballot number that now corresponds with the voter in the
SEIMS record.
If the county board disapproves a ballot envelope by majority vote in a board meeting, it shall
proceed according to the notification process in G.S. § 163-230.1(e) and as outlined below. If the
county board disapproves a ballot for a reason based on the voter’s photo ID documentation, it
shall proceed according to the notification process in 08 NCAC 17 .0109 and as outlined below.
Voter Notification
Sending an Absentee Ballot Deficiency Notification or New Ballot
If there are any return deficiencies or ballot application deficiencies, the county board of
elections shall mail a notice to the voter within one business day of identifying the deficiency to
inform the voter there is an issue with their absentee ballot, enclosing an absentee ballot
29 See 52 U.S.C. § 10101(a)(2)(B).
10
deficiency notification, which contains the cure certification, or a new ballot. 30 The written
notice shall also include information on how to vote in-person during the early voting period and
on Election Day. When the voter is issued a new ballot, they must include new photo ID
documentation with their ballot when transmitting it back to the county board, because each
absentee ballot envelope “returned to the county board . . . shall be accompanied by” a
photocopy of the voter’s photo ID or Photo ID Exception Form.31
The written notice shall be sent to the address to which the voter requested their ballot be sent.
The outside of the envelope containing the new ballot or absentee ballot deficiency notification
should be in an official envelope so that it indicates that it contains official election mail, unless
it is not possible due to the use of a specialized USPS or commercial carrier service envelope.
If the deficiency can be cured and the voter provided their phone number or email address on the
absentee ballot request form, then the county board shall additionally notify the voter of the
curable deficiency by phone or email.32 Like with the mail notice, this shall be done within one
business day of identifying the deficiency, and the same information shall be provided as in the
mail notice. If a voter did not provide their phone number or email address on the absentee ballot
request form, then staff shall additionally notify the voter by phone or email if the voter has a
phone number or email address contained in the voter’s registration record. If both phone and
email are available, notify the voter by email. If notifying the voter by email, the county board
shall include the absentee ballot deficiency notification document that is also mailed to the voter.
If the county board sends the notification by email and by mail, the county board should
encourage the voter to only return one of the notifications with the certification.
If the deficiency cannot be cured, and the voter has an email address on file, the county board
shall notify the voter by email that a new ballot has been issued by mail to the voter. If the voter
did not provide an email address but did provide a phone number, the county board shall contact
the voter by phone to inform the voter that the county board has issued a new ballot by mail.
A county board shall not reissue a ballot on or after Election Day. If there is a curable deficiency,
the county board shall contact voters up until the day before county canvass.
30 When there is a curable deficiency, G.S. § 163-230.1(e) specifically provides that the county board
must “promptly notify the voter of the deficiency and the manner in which the voter may cure the
deficiency.” If a ballot must be spoiled and reissued, the same need to act promptly exists.
31 G.S. § 163-230.1(f1).
32 G.S. § 163-230.1(e).
11
If there is a photo ID documentation deficiency, the county board must mail notice to the voter
within one business day of identifying the deficiency to inform the voter there is an issue with
their absentee ballot, enclosing an absentee ballot deficiency notification that identifies the
specific deficiencies with the photo ID documentation.33 The notification must also inform the
voter that the voter, the voter’s verifiable legal guardian or near relative, or a person of the
voter’s choice if the voter needs assistance due to the voter’s disability, may provide the photo
ID cure documentation to the county board.34 If the voter provided their phone number or email
address on the absentee ballot request form, then the county board shall additionally notify the
voter of the photo ID documentation deficiency by phone or email using the phone number or
email address listed on the request form.35 Like with the mail notice, this shall be done within
one business day of identifying the deficiency, and the same information shall be provided as in
the mail notice. If a voter did not provide their phone number or email address on the absentee
ballot request form, then staff shall additionally notify the voter by phone or email, using any
phone number or email address contained in the voter’s registration record.36 If both phone and
email are available, notify the voter by email. If notifying the voter by email, the county board
shall include the absentee ballot deficiency notification document that is also mailed to the voter.
The photo ID cure documentation can be either a new photocopy of the voter’s photo ID or a
new Absentee Photo ID Exception Form. A voter who submitted a deficient photocopy of their
photo ID may also submit a Photo ID Exception Form for the first time. A voter may choose to
do so, for example, because in this instance they may no longer be able to make a photocopy of
their ID to include with their ballot. Likewise, a voter who submitted a deficient Photo ID
Exception Form may also submit a photocopy of a photo ID for the first time. A voter may
choose to do so, for example, because they may have obtained a photo ID, or the means to make
a photocopy, since the time at which they transmitted their absentee ballot to the county board.
Accordingly, when sending an absentee ballot deficiency notification for a photo ID
documentation deficiency, the county board must include a blank Absentee Photo ID
Exception Form.
33 As explained above, all photo ID documentation deficiencies are curable, and when there is a curable
deficiency, G.S. § 163-230.1(e) specifically provides that the county board must “promptly notify the
voter of the deficiency and the manner in which the voter may cure the deficiency.” See also 08 NCAC 17
.0109(b).
34 08 NCAC 17 .0109(b).
35 G.S. § 163-230.1(e).
36 08 NCAC 17 .0109(b).
12
Receipt of a Cure Certification or Photo ID Cure Documentation
The cure certification or photo ID cure documentation must be received by the county board of
elections by 5 p.m. the day before county canvass.37
The cure documents may only be returned by the voter, the voter’s near relative or legal
guardian, a multipartisan assistance team (MAT), or a person of the voter’s choice if the voter
needs assistance due to the voter’s disability.38 A cure document returned by any other person is
invalid.
The cure documents may be submitted to the county board office by email, by mail or
commercial carrier, in person, or by fax.39 When submitting cure documents by email, the voter
may attach an image of their cure documentation (e.g., emailing a photo of their photo ID or
executed Exception Form).The documents must be received by the deadline (not postmarked by
the deadline).
If a voter appears in person at the county board office to cure their ballot, they may also be
given, and can complete, a cure certification. Similarly, a voter may appear in person and
37 G.S. § 163-230.1(e) (“Any container-return envelope with a curable deficiency that is transmitted to the
county board shall be considered timely if cure documentation is received no later than the end of
business on the business day before the canvass conducted by the county board of elections held pursuant
to G.S. 163-182.5.”).
38 Voters who require assistance in returning their ballot due to the voter’s disability, can direct the person
of their choice to return the ballot according to the voter’s instruction (i.e., by mail or in person to the
county board). See Numbered Memo 2022-11.
39 Although G.S. 163-230.1(e) now provides that photo ID cure documentation “may be transmitted via e-
mail to the county board of elections,” this does not preclude the use of email to transmit a cure
certification for ballot application deficiencies, because the statute is otherwise silent on the manner of
transmittal and form of receipt of cure documentation for those deficiencies, and the statute’s instruction
to notify a voter of a curable deficiency by email indicates transmission of cure documentation by email is
permissible.
13
complete a Photo ID Exception Form to accompany the ballot envelope,40 or request that staff
make a photocopy of the voter’s photo ID to accompany the ballot envelope.41
It is not permissible for a cure certification to be submitted through a portal or form created or
maintained by a third party. A cure certification may not be submitted simultaneously with the
ballot.
Any person who is permitted to assist a voter with their ballot may assist a voter in filling out the
cure certification, making a photocopy of the voter’s photo ID, or filling out the Photo ID
Exception Form, but the certification and Photo ID Exception Form must be signed by the
voter.42 A wet ink signature is not required for cure documents, but the signature used must be
unique to the individual. A typed signature is not acceptable, even if it is cursive or italics such
as is commonly seen with an electronic signature program, such as DocuSign.
County Board Review of Cure Documentation
At each absentee board meeting, the county board of elections may consider deficient ballot
return envelopes for which cure documentation has been returned, whether a cure certification or
photo ID documentation. The county board shall consider together the executed absentee ballot
envelope and the cure documentation. If the cure documentation was timely received, includes
the required documentation or attestations, and was returned by an authorized person, the county
board of elections shall approve the absentee ballot. See Numbered Memo 2020-25.
Data Entry in SEIMS
County board staff shall follow the instructions provided by the State Board in the most recent
guide for the proper entry of data in SEIMS when processing absentee ballots and addressing
deficiencies. Data shall be promptly entered as ballots are processed. This will ensure that the
data maintained by the county boards and State Board follows uniform conventions and is up to
date. This will help ensure the processing of absentee ballots is transparent to the public.
40 The option to complete a Photo ID Exception Form in the county board office is only available for
voters who are voting absentee-by-mail. Voters who vote in person at an early voting site or on Election
Day must complete the Photo ID Exception Form at the voting site. See Numbered Memo 2023-03.
41 See Numbered Memo 2020-23 regarding staff making photocopies of photo IDs for inclusion with an
absentee ballot envelope.
42 If a voter is physically unable to sign or make their mark on the Photo ID Exception Form due to
disability, any person of that voter’s choice can write in the signature line, “Disabled - cannot sign.” See
Numbered Memo 2022-11.
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 27255
Raleigh, NC 27611
(919) 814-0700 or
(866) 522-4723
Fax: (919) 715-0135
Numbered Memo 2020-23
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director
RE: In-Person Return of Absentee Ballots
DATE: September 22, 2020 (updated September 29, 2023)
Absentee-by-mail voters may choose to return their ballot by mail or in person. Voters who
return their ballot in person may return it to the county board of elections office by 5 p.m. on
Election Day or to any early voting site in the county during the early voting period. This
numbered memo provides guidance and recommendations for the safe, secure, and controlled in-
person return of absentee ballots.1
General Information
Who May Return a Ballot
For most voters, only the voter, or the voter’s near relative or legal guardian, is permitted to
hand-deliver an absentee ballot.2 For voters who need assistance returning their absentee ballot
due to a disability, any person of that voter’s choice may return the absentee ballot for the voter,
which could include a multipartisan assistance team (MAT).3 Outside of this disability exception,
neither a MAT member nor any other person may take possession of an absentee ballot, unless
they are the voter’s near relative or legal guardian.
Intake of Absentee Ballots and Accompanying Photo ID Documentation
As outlined in Numbered Memo 2021-03, trained county board staff shall review each ballot
container-return envelope (ballot envelope) and accompanying photocopy of the voter’s photo
1 This numbered memo was updated on September 29, 2023, to include processes related to
photo ID requirements for absentee-by-mail voting.
2 It is a class I felony for any person other than the voter’s near relative or legal guardian to take
possession of an absentee ballot of another voter for delivery or for return to a county board of
elections. G.S. § 163-226.3(a)(5); see also G.S. § 163-231(b)(1).
3 See Numbered Memo 2022-11.
2
ID or a completed Photo ID Exception Form (photo ID documentation) that are transmitted to
the county board in an outer return envelope, to determine if there are any deficiencies.
Typically, depending on the intake volume, staff review of the absentee ballot materials for
acceptability occurs at a later time. But nothing prohibits staff from advising a person returning a
ballot of any deficiencies that are noted at intake which would permit the voter to promptly
correct those deficiencies.
Although a hand-delivered absentee ballot is not required to be enclosed in an outer return
envelope (which is used for mailing), the ballot must be sealed, either in the ballot envelope or
the return envelope, for it to be accepted. If the voter is returning their ballot and it is unsealed,
the voter should be instructed to seal the ballot envelope. If someone other than the voter is
returning the ballot, that person should be advised that the county board may not accept an
unsealed ballot, and the ballot must be sealed by the voter or in the voter’s presence.4
It is not recommended that county board staff serve as a witness for a voter while on duty since
staff may need to make determinations about the ballot acceptance or other decisions pertaining
to the absentee balloting process. However, staff who are not involved in the review of absentee
ballot envelopes may be permitted to serve as a witness since the potential for a conflict would
not exist and this would provide a service to a voter that may have no other way to meet the
witness requirements.
Copying a Voter’s Photo ID for a Voter Hand-Delivering an Absentee Ballot
A voter, or any person permitted to return an absentee ballot as noted above, may request that
staff make a photocopy of the voter’s photo ID to accompany the absentee ballot when hand-
delivering an absentee ballot to the county board of elections office. Early voting sites are not
required to have a copier available for this purpose, but a county may choose to do so if it has the
available resources and staff.
If the photo ID is a type of ID acceptable for voting purposes under 08 NCAC 17 .0101(a)(1),
staff are required to make a photocopy of the voter’s photo ID at no cost to the voter, and to
ensure that the photocopy is readable so it will be deemed acceptable when it is reviewed by the
county board.5 Staff do not need to complete the assistant section of the ballot envelope when
4 G.S. § 163-231(a)(3). See Numbered Memo 2021-03 for further information on return
deficiencies.
5 See 08 NCAC 17 .0109(e). Staff should consult the list of approved photo IDs that has been
distributed by the State Board to determine whether the photo ID is an acceptable type. If the
photo ID requested to be copied is not an acceptable type, then staff should inform the person of
this fact and invite the person to provide for copying any other photo ID that is acceptable.
3
performing this task. After staff have made the photocopy of the photo ID, they should return the
photo ID to the person delivering the absentee ballot, and then have that person place the
photocopy of the photo ID in the clear sleeve used for this purpose on the ballot envelope, place
the ballot envelope in the return envelope, and then seal the return envelope before handing it
over to staff for intake. If the return envelope is already sealed, staff should open the return
envelope so that the person can accomplish this task.6 To avoid confusion when staff is later
reviewing the absentee ballot materials for deficiencies, the intake staff person should note on
the return envelope that it was opened to allow photo ID documentation to be provided in person.
Log Requirement
An administrative rule requires county boards to keep a written log when any person returns an
absentee ballot in person.7 The contents of the log are prescribed in the administrative rule, and
county boards shall use the form provided by the State Board which complies with this rule.
Intake staff shall note on the log the date that it was received.
Because of the log requirement, an absentee ballot may not be left in an unattended drop
box.
Board Consideration of Delivery and Log Requirements
Failure to comply with the logging requirement, or delivery of an absentee ballot by a person
other than the voter, the voter’s near relative, the voter’s legal guardian, or a person of the voter’s
choice when the voter needs assistance due to disability, is not sufficient evidence in and of itself
to establish that the voter did not lawfully vote their ballot.8 A county board shall not disapprove
6 Intake staff do not conduct a review of whether the person hand-delivering the absentee ballot
reasonably resembles the photo on the photo ID when the absentee ballot is hand-delivered at the
county board office or an early voting site. The law provides specific requirements that a county
board is to ensure are met by photo ID documentation accompanying an absentee-by-mail ballot,
and reasonable resemblance of the voter to their photo ID is not one of them. See 08 NCAC 17
.0109.
7 08 NCAC 18 .0102 requires that, upon delivery, the person delivering the ballot shall provide
the following information in writing: (1) Name of voter; (2) Name of person delivering ballot;
(3) Relationship to voter; (4) Phone number (if available) and current address of person
delivering ballot; (5) Date and time of delivery of ballot; and (6) Signature or mark of person
delivering ballot certifying that the information provided is true and correct and that the person is
the voter or the voter's near relative.
8 Id. Compare G.S. § 163-230.2(3), which states that an absentee request form returned to the
county board by someone other than an unauthorized person is invalid.
4
an absentee ballot solely because it was delivered by someone who was not authorized to possess
the ballot. The county board may, however, consider the delivery of a ballot in accordance with
the rule, 08 NCAC 18 .0102, in conjunction with other evidence in determining whether the
ballot is valid and should be counted.
Return at a County Board Office
A voter may return their absentee ballot to the county board of elections office any time the
office is open. A county board must ensure its office is staffed during regular business hours to
allow for return of absentee ballots until the end of Election Day. . You are not required to accept
absentee ballots outside of regular business hours. Similar to procedures at the close of polls on
Election Day, if an individual is in line at the time your office closes or at the absentee ballot
return deadline (5 p.m. on Election Day), a county board shall accept receipt of the ballot.
If your site has a mail drop or unattended drop box used for other purposes, you must affix a sign
stating that voters may not place their ballots in the drop box. However, a county board may not
disapprove a ballot solely because it is placed in a drop box.9
In determining the setup of your office for in-person return of absentee ballots, you should
consider and plan for the following:
• Ensure adequate parking, especially if your county board office will be used as a one-stop
site
• Provide signage directing voters to the location to return their absentee ballot
• Ensure the security of absentee ballots and the privacy of the photo ID documentation
that accompanies the absentee ballot. Use a locked or securable container for returned
absentee ballots that cannot be readily removed by an unauthorized person.
• If your set-up allows the return of ballots outside, plan for the possibility of severe
weather. You may need a tent or other covering. Have a plan for how crowd control will
occur without the physical barriers of an office and the security of your staff and the
balloting materials. For safety reasons, it is not recommended you keep an outside return
location open after dark or during inclement weather.
Return at an Early Voting Site
Location to Return Absentee Ballots
Each early voting site shall have at least one designated, staffed station for the return of absentee
ballots. Return of absentee ballots shall occur at that station. The station may be set up
exclusively for absentee ballot returns or may provide other services, such as a help desk,
9 Id.
5
provided the absentee ballots can be accounted for and secured separately from other ballots or
processes. Similar to accepting absentee ballots at the county board of elections office, you
should consider and plan for the following with the setup of an early voting location for in-
person return of absentee ballots:
• Have a plan for how crowd control will occur and how voters will be directed to the
appropriate location for in-person return of absentee ballots
• Provide signage directing voters
• Ensure adequate parking and sufficient space for long lines
• If your set-up allows the return of ballots outside, plan for the possibility of severe
weather. You may need a tent or other covering. Have a plan for how crowd control will
occur without the physical barriers of an office and the security of your staff and the
balloting materials. For safety reasons, ensure that there is adequate lighting as voting
hours will continue past dark.
Because absentee ballots must be returned to a designated station, absentee ballots should not be
returned in the curbside area.
Procedures
Absentee ballots that are hand-delivered must be placed in a secured container upon receipt,
similar to how provisional ballots are securely stored at voting sites. Absentee-by-mail ballots
delivered to an early voting site must be stored separately from all other ballots in a container
designated only for absentee-by-mail ballots. The secure storage of absentee-by-mail ballots is
also important because these ballots will be accompanied by photo ID documentation, which
could contain confidential information. County boards must also conduct regular reconciliation
practices between the log and the absentee ballots. County boards are not required by the State to
log returned ballots into SOSA; however, a county board may require their early voting site staff
to complete SOSA logging.
If a voter brings in an absentee ballot and does not want to vote it, the ballot should be placed in
the spoiled-ballot bag in such a way that will distinguish it from ballots issued to the voting site
when later performing reconciliation. Voters who call the county board office and do not want to
vote their absentee ballot should be encouraged to discard the ballot at home.
Return at an Election Day Site
An absentee ballot may not be returned at an Election Day polling place. If a voter appears in
person with their ballot at a polling place on Election Day, they shall be instructed that they may
(1) take their ballot to the county board office by 5 p.m. or mail it so it is postmarked that day
and received by the deadline; or (2) have the absentee ballot spoiled and vote in-person at their
polling place.
6
If someone other than the voter appears with the ballot, they shall be instructed to take it to the
county board office or mail the ballot so it is postmarked the same day.
If the person returning the ballot chooses to mail the ballot, they should be encouraged to take it
to a post office to ensure the return envelope is postmarked. Depositing the ballot in a USPS mail
box on Election Day may result in the return envelope not being postmarked by Election Day
and therefore not being counted.
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 27255
Raleigh, NC 27611
(919) 814-0700 or
(866) 522-4723
Fax: (919) 715-0135
Numbered Memo 2020-25
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director
RE: Absentee Board Meetings
DATE: September 22, 2020 (updated September 23, 2020, and September 18, 2023)
This numbered memo addresses the requirements and procedures for conducting absentee ballot
meetings, as set forth in state law. It also addresses questions that are commonly asked in
connection with absentee meetings or the review and custody of absentee ballots.
Legal Requirements for Absentee Meetings
General Requirements
Beginning every Tuesday on the fifth Tuesday before Election Day, county boards of elections
must hold a public meeting at 5:00 p.m. to review and act upon absentee ballots.1 The county
board of elections may change the time of these meetings (to an earlier or later time) and may
provide for additional meetings. However, absentee meetings may not be held prior to the fifth
Tuesday before Election Day. Any meetings that are held at a different time on Tuesdays and
any additional meetings must be noticed in a county newspaper at least 30 days prior to the
election. You must also send notice of absentee meetings to your regular notice list, including to
the county political parties.
At each absentee board meeting, the board must act upon all absentee container-return envelopes
received prior to that meeting and after the previous absentee meeting.2 An absentee meeting
must be held if there are any absentee ballots (absentee by mail or one-stop early voting ballots)
for the board to review. Absentee meetings should only be cancelled if the board has not
1 G.S. §163-230.1(f).
2 See G.S. § 163-230.1(e): “At its next official meeting after return of the completed container-
return envelope with the voter’s ballots, the county board of elections shall determine whether
the container-return envelope has been properly executed.” (Emphasis added.)
2
received any absentee container-return envelopes since the last absentee meeting.3 If you
anticipate a high volume of absentee ballots returned, it is strongly recommended that your board
schedule additional absentee board meetings and/or begin meetings earlier than 5:00 p.m.
A county board may recess an absentee board meeting to a date and time certain if it is not
possible to complete review of absentee ballots during the specified meeting period. The notice
should be sent as soon as possible but it is not required to be sent 48 hours in advance of the
reconvened meeting if that is not possible based on when the meeting was recessed from.
To determine how many additional absentee meetings you need to schedule, consider how many
absentee ballot requests your county has received to date, how many total requests your county
received for a similar election in the past, and estimate how many requests you anticipate based
on the county’s current rate of requests. For example, if your county received 6,000 requests in
November 2016 and you anticipate a 50% increase for the November 2024 election, that would
be 9,000 requests total. If you have six absentee board meetings and everyone who requested a
ballot returned one, your board would need to consider approximately 1,500 ballots per meeting.
If your board scheduled ten absentee meetings, your board would consider around 900 ballots
per meeting.
County Board Member Attendance
Absentee board meetings require a quorum of members present. A quorum is three members.4
If at all possible, at least one member from each political party should be represented at each
absentee meeting when the board is approving absentee applications. Because board members
must be able to view absentee envelopes in order to approve or disapprove the ballot, a
quorum of board members must be physically present during each absentee board
meeting.
Once a quorum is physically present, remaining board members may attend the meetings via live
video feed, but they must have a secure way to view the meeting and to participate. They must be
able to view all materials that board members are reviewing to make decisions on the absentee
envelopes.
3 See G.S. § 163-230.1(f), entitled “Required Meeting of County Board of Elections”: “During
the period commencing on the fifth Tuesday before an election . . . the county board of elections
shall hold one or more public meetings each Tuesday at 5:00 p.m. for the purpose of action on
applications for absentee ballots.” (Emphasis added.)
4 G.S. § 163-31(d): “A majority of the members shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of
board business.”
3
A majority of board members present at a meeting must vote for an action for it to pass.
Public Attendance
Absentee board meetings are public meetings and are subject to North Carolina’s open meetings
laws. For absentee meetings, it is recommended that the county board locate a meeting room
large enough to accommodate members of the public. If it is not possible to procure a
sufficiently large space for those who may want to attend in person, the county board of elections
should consider broadcasting the absentee board meetings via video feed using a service such as
WebEx or Microsoft Teams.
The public in attendance must be able to see and hear the proceedings without compromising the
secrecy of any voter’s ballot. Staff must ensure that the public cannot view any voted ballots or
other confidential information, such as a photocopy of a voter’s photo ID included with their
ballot or a ballot identifier number (CIV, MIL, etc.), either in person or on a video feed. County
board members and staff must be particularly mindful of ballot secrecy when duplicating ballots
and inserting ballots into the tabulator.
The public is not permitted to disrupt the process of adjudicating the validity of absentee
applications by the board and is not part of the deliberation process during absentee board
meetings. The decision of the county board of elections as to the validity of an envelope is final
and is not subject to public comment, objection, or review.5
Confidentiality of Absentee Register
G.S. § 163-228 requires county boards of elections to keep a register of absentee ballot requests
that includes information about the request, the address to which the ballot should be sent, the
date of the request, the voter’s precinct, and other information. The absentee request register is
confidential and not a public record until Election Day.6 County boards of elections are not
permitted to release copies of absentee request forms or identifying information that could be
used to determine that a voter requested an absentee ballot.
5 G.S. § 163-230.1(f): “At these meetings, the county board of elections shall pass upon
applications for absentee ballots. . . . The decision of the board on the validity of an application
for absentee ballots shall be final subject only to such review as may be necessary in the event of
an election contest.”
6 G.S. § 163-228(c).
4
Absentee request data is no longer confidential when the ballot is returned to the county board of
elections office.7 Therefore, names of absentee voters may be read aloud during the absentee
board meetings, as the ballot has been returned to the county board office at that point. If,
however, a ballot has been delivered but there is a deficiency requiring the ballot to be spoiled
and reissued, that voter’s name cannot be read aloud or otherwise disclosed, because that voter’s
ballot is still outstanding. Reading from lists of voters who have requested absentee ballots or
otherwise releasing the names of voters with outstanding requests is prohibited until the ballot is
returned or until Election Day. It is a Class G felony for a person to “steal[], release[], or
possess[] the official register of absentee requests for mail-in absentee ballots as provided in G.S.
163-228 prior to the opening of the voting place.”8 This does not apply to a ballot that has been
received by the county board and is in a pending cure status, because at that point the ballot has
been returned and it is only the cure certification for the voter’s signature deficiency or the
voter’s photo ID cure documentation that must be submitted for the absentee application to be
complete.
Confidentiality of Copies of Photo ID and Information on a Photo ID Exception Form
The photocopy of a voter’s photo ID is confidential and not a public record subject to
disclosure.9 This means that the photocopy of the photo ID cannot be redacted and disclosed,
because the entire photocopy is a confidential record under the law. The public is not permitted
to view or receive copies of a voter’s copy of their photo ID submitted with their absentee ballot.
A Photo ID Exception Form is a public record. However, the Form is likely to contain
confidential information that must be redacted, when submitted with an absentee ballot. The
most common reason for submitting a Photo ID Exception Form with an absentee ballot is likely
to be that the voter is unable to make a photocopy of their ID to include with their ballot, which
is a “reasonable impediment” specifically identified in the law.10 When choosing this option, the
voter is required to write on the Form their North Carolina driver’s license number, DMV ID
7 See G.S. § 163-233(b), which makes the list of absentee applications received by the county
board a public record.
8 G.S. § 163-237(d6).
9 G.S. §§ 163-82.10(a1) and 163-233(a).
10 G.S. § 163-230.1(g)(2).
5
number, or last 4 digits of their social security number.11 The public is not permitted to view this
confidential information during an absentee meeting.12
Procedures for Review of Absentee Ballot Materials
At each absentee board meeting, the county board of elections will review each absentee ballot
container-return envelope (ballot envelope) to determine whether it has been properly executed
and is accompanied by either a photocopy of the voter’s photo ID or a completed Photo ID
Exception Form (photo ID documentation), and if so, to approve the application and ballot.13
Given the volume of absentee ballots the county board is required to review and act upon at each
meeting, certain preparatory work should be performed by staff in advance, and the board should
consider ways to streamline the process.
Delegation of Preparatory Work
The county board of elections has the authority to delegate to its director “so much of the
administrative detail of the election functions, duties, and work of the board, its officers and
members, as is now, or may hereafter be vested in the board or its members as the county board
of elections may see fit.”14 However, the board may not delegate to a director or other staff any
of its quasi-judicial or policymaking duties and authority.
Based on the volume of absentee ballots a county board anticipates receiving, the county board
should determine which preparatory tasks staff can complete prior to absentee board meetings. A
delegation of administrative duties by the board to the director or staff should occur by
majority vote. The delegation may be by resolution or the approved motion should be
documented in the minutes. It should delegate specific preparatory steps that staff can perform
prior to absentee board meetings, and the delegation must provide for oversight by the board.
Preparatory steps include:
• Inspecting ballot envelopes and return envelopes for deficiencies and contacting voters as
required by Numbered Memo 2021-03. Please note that voters must be contacted within
one business day of when staff identify the deficiency. It is not permissible to wait for the
absentee board meeting to contact the voter about a deficiency.
11 G.S. § 163-230.1(g)(2).
12 Similarly, in the rare situation when a voter writes confidential information in the “Other” line
on the Photo ID Exception Form, the county board would need to redact that information too.
13 G.S. § 163-230.1(e), (f), and (f1).
14 G.S. § 163-35(d).
6
• Sorting ballot envelopes with accompanying photo ID documentation into categories for
the board to review and take action (e.g., approve or reject).
• Verifying the list of ballot envelopes against the absentee pollbook.
• Performing ballot duplication with a bipartisan team.
A delegation of administrative duties to the director or staff does not need to include a
preliminary review of photo ID documentation for deficiencies because this has already been
tasked to staff by an administrative rule adopted by the State Board.15
Staff Review of Envelopes
Upon receipt of an absentee ballot at the county board office, staff must review the materials
accompanying the ballot—the photo ID documentation and the ballot envelope/application—to
ensure there are no deficiencies.
First, staff must confirm that the voter has included the necessary photo ID documentation and,
if so, review that documentation to ensure that it meets the requirements of the administrative
code provisions governing the approval of photo ID for absentee ballots, 08 NCAC 17 .0109(a)
& (b).
If the voter has included a photocopy of their photo ID, then staff should make an initial
determination that:
• The ID is a type of ID that is acceptable for voting purposes;
• The ID meets any applicable expiration requirements;
• The name on the ID can be read;
• The photograph on the ID depicts a person (not a shadow or outline of a person); and
• The name on the ID is the same as or substantially equivalent to the voter’s name in their
voter record.
If the voter has included a Photo ID Exception Form, then staff should make an initial
determination that the voter has:
• printed their name;
• checked the box for at least one claimed exception from the photo ID requirements; and
• signed the Form.16
15 08 NCAC 17 .0109(b).
16 If a voter is unable to sign the Photo ID Exception Form due to a disability, the person of the
voter’s choice who is assisting them can sign the Form on the voter’s behalf and must complete
the assistant certification on the envelope. See Numbered Memo 2022-11, p. 3 (Court Order
Regarding Assistance for Absentee Voters with Disabilities).
7
If any deficiency exists with either a photocopy of the voter’s photo ID or a voter’s Photo ID
Exception Form, staff must follow the photo ID cure process in 08 NCAC 17 .0109(b) and as
described in Numbered Memo 2021-03.
Second, staff must inspect the absentee ballot envelope to make an initial determination as to
whether the envelope was properly executed, and if there is a deficiency with the envelope,
whether that deficiency can be cured by the voter. If a voter signature deficiency exists, staff
must follow the cure process in Numbered Memo 2021-03.
Third, staff should perform an initial sort of ballot envelopes into categories upon initial review
and to present those recommendations to the board at each absentee board meeting. Those
categories may include designations for recommended approval, recommended disapproval,
envelopes awaiting a cure certification or photo ID cure documentation, and those that staff have
questions about that require deliberation by the board. The delegation may also require staff to
prepare a report to the board indicating the number of ballot envelopes in each category for
reconciliation purposes.
Board Review of Envelopes
The board may, by majority vote, accept staff’s recommendation for absentee ballot envelopes
that staff have reviewed and recommended for approval. The delegation must include a process
for the board to spot-check the envelopes and photo ID documentation to ensure accuracy and
consistency. However, the board must individually review all ballot envelopes that: (1) have
been recommended for disapproval by staff, (2) have a cure certification associated with that
ballot envelope, or (3) where staff need further guidance from the board as to whether the
envelope was properly executed or the photo ID documentation meets all legal requirements.
It is also permissible for bipartisan teams of board members to pair off to review absentee ballot
envelopes during each meeting, if the board votes to allow this.
Whether the county board delegates the initial review of absentee envelopes to staff or chooses
to have a bipartisan team of board members review envelopes during the meeting, all board
members present at the meeting must approve or disapprove the ballots. A decision as to whether
an envelope is properly executed and whether the photo ID documentation meets all
requirements must be decided by a vote of the board as a whole and not by individual
members.17 A board’s decision to disapprove a ballot based on a finding that a voter’s Photo ID
17 G.S. § 163-230.1(f) (“The county board of elections shall constitute the proper official body to
pass upon the validity of all applications for absentee ballots received in the county; this function
shall not be performed by the chairman or any other member of the board individually.”); see also
08 NCAC 17 .0109(c) (“Final Review by County Board”).
8
Exception Form is false can only be made by unanimous decision of all members of the board
participating in the vote, and that decision must be in writing.18 A decision to disapprove a ballot
for any other reason, or to approve the ballot, is by majority vote.
Review of Photo ID Exception Forms
The board must also individually review all completed Photo ID Exception Forms where staff
has indicated that available information may lead the board to conclude that the Form is false.
When staff has given this indication to the board, or if a board member raises a question as to the
falsity of the Form after staff review, the voter must be given notice and an opportunity to be
heard on the information that will be considered by the board, unless one or more board
members disagree that there are grounds to believe the affidavit is false (in which case there is no
need to notify the voter, since a finding of falsity on the Form must be unanimous).19 If the board
is considering a finding of falsity, the board’s review of the envelope should remain in a pending
status until the absentee meeting at which the voter has the opportunity to be heard, and the
board can only make a final decision on the approval or disapproval of the envelope after the
voter has that opportunity to be heard regarding their Form. Numbered Memo 2023-03 contains
guidance as to what may be considered by a county board when reviewing a voter’s Photo ID
Exception Form.
Review of Photo ID Photocopies
If the board reviews a photocopy of a voter’s photo ID that staff have identified as being
acceptable, but unanimously determines that the photocopy of ID does not meet all legal
requirements, staff are required to notify the voter.20 If this determination is made at an absentee
meeting prior to the county canvass, the board’s review of the envelope should remain in a
pending status until the county canvass, because in this instance the voter can still submit a new
photocopy of their photo ID, or a Photo ID Exception Form if they are unable to submit a
photocopy of their photo ID.
Review of Deficient Photo ID Documentation that Is Uncured
If staff has indicated that a voter’s photocopy of their photo ID or Photo ID Exception Form is
deficient, and the photo ID documentation remains uncured, the board must reserve its final
decision on the approval of the envelope until the county canvass and, when doing so, must
individually review the photo ID documentation that has not been cured.21 An uncured
18 08 NCAC 17 .0109(c)(2).
19 08 NCAC 17 .0109(c).
20 08 NCAC 17 .0109(c)(1).
21 08 NCAC 17 .0109(c)(3).
9
deficiency with the photo ID documentation does not prevent the board from making a
preliminary determination on the envelope when staff has indicated further guidance is needed as
to a potential deficiency, so that any envelope-related deficiencies can also be identified and the
voter notified.
Formalizing Approval of Envelopes
After absentee envelopes and accompanying photo ID documentation are approved by the board,
the task of stamping every envelope with “Approved” and stamping or otherwise affixing the
chair’s signature or initials to the ballot envelopes may be delegated to staff. Alternatively, the
board’s delegation may authorize the board to sign a cover sheet containing a list of envelopes
that were acted upon during the meeting and indicating whether those envelopes were approved
or disapproved in lieu of signing the individual envelopes. The delegation may also apply to
review and approval of one-stop absentee applications.
Scanning Absentee Ballots at Absentee Board Meetings
It is important to distinguish between scanning and tabulating approved ballots, because the law
permits each task to occur at different times. “Scanning” is a preparatory step that occurs when
the approved absentee ballots are opened, removed from the envelope, and inserted into the
tabulator. The tabulator reads the ballots but does not print the totals at that time, and no election
returns are released. “Tabulating” or “counting” occurs on Election Day and involves closing the
polls on a tabulator and printing tabulated results from ballots that have been previously scanned.
A county board of elections may, by majority vote, decide to scan absentee ballots during each
absentee meeting.22 If a county board anticipates a large volume of absentee ballots, it is
strongly recommended that the board authorize the scanning of approved ballots during
absentee board meetings instead of waiting until Election Day.
The scanning cannot begin until a majority of the board members and at least one board member
of each political party is in attendance. If a board member of each political party is not available,
the chair or other member of the executive committee of the county political party of the absent
member must be present. The political party representative shall act as an official witness to the
scanning and shall sign the absentee ballot abstract as an “observer.”23
Staff may enter the approved ballots into the tabulator, but each board member present is
responsible for and must observe and supervise the opening of the envelopes and scanning of the
22 G.S. § 163-234(3).
23 G.S. § 163-234(9).
10
ballots.24 It is not permissible for approved ballot envelopes to be opened, for ballots to be
removed from the envelope, or for ballots to be inserted into the tabulator outside of a
board meeting. These tasks cannot be delegated to staff to complete outside of a board
meeting.
If the board chooses to scan approved ballots during absentee meetings, it should consider ways
to make the process as efficient and streamlined as possible. For example, the board could
approve staff-recommended ballots first, then direct the staff to open those envelopes and enter
the ballots into the tabulator while the board reviews the envelopes that require further
consideration and those that staff have recommended be disapproved.
Scanning of ballots must be performed during a board meeting, and if scanning occurs before
Election Day, ballots must be scanned at the same meeting during which they were approved.25
The number of approved absentee ballots must be reconciled with the number of ballots inserted
into the tabulator. Reconciliation should be completed at each board meeting. If it is not possible
to scan all approved ballots at that meeting, the board may recess the scanning to a time and date
certain, which could be the next absentee board meeting. The county board should send out the
notice as soon as possible but it is not required to be sent 48 hours in advance of the reconvened
meeting. Ballots should be processed in groups, so that ballots from all opened ballot envelopes
are processed in the same meeting.
Election Day Meeting
County boards are strongly encouraged to begin counting ballots at 2 p.m. rather than 5 p.m. on
Election Day to avoid a delay in absentee results being released on election night.26 County
boards may begin counting UOCAVA ballots beginning at 9 a.m. on Election Day.
To begin counting ballots prior to 5 p.m., a county board must adopt a resolution at least two
weeks prior to the election stating the hour and place of the counting of absentee ballots. The
resolution also may provide for an additional meeting following the day of the election and prior
to the day of canvass to count absentee ballots received pursuant to G.S. 163-231(b)(ii) or (iii) as
provided in subdivision (11) of G.S. § 163-234. A copy of the resolutions shall be published
24 G.S. § 163-234(5).
25 G.S. § 163-234(3): “Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (2) of this section, a county
board of elections may, at each meeting at which it approves absentee ballot applications
pursuant to G.S. 163-230.1(c) and (c1), remove those ballots from their envelopes and have them
read by an optical scanning machine, without printing the totals on the scanner.” (Emphasis
added).
26 G.S. § 163-234(2).
11
once a week for two weeks prior to the election, in a newspaper having general circulation in the
county. Notice may additionally be made on a radio or television station or both, but such notice
shall be in addition to the newspaper and other required notice.
At its meeting on Election Day, county boards must count all absentee ballots that have come in
prior to 5 p.m. on the day before Election Day. No absentee ballot counting results may be
released until after the polls close.
Ballot Duplication
UOCAVA ballots and ballots that have been damaged or otherwise cannot be read by the
tabulator must be duplicated in order to be scanned by the machine and to avoid having to
manually enter the voter’s selections into the reporting software. County boards may adopt a
policy to authorize a bipartisan team of staff members or poll workers to duplicate ballots outside
of an absentee board meeting. The policy must include the following:
• Each bipartisan duplication team must consist of at least three staff members, with no
more than two members being of the same political affiliation. It is a best practice to have
at least four members, two of each political party, to ensure accuracy.
• The director must supervise and train all members of the duplication team and assign the
following roles:
o Ballot Caller – Announces the voter’s selections listed on the original ballot to the
Ballot Duplicator and Ballot Reviewer.
o Ballot Duplicator – Replicates the voter’s selections from the original ballot onto
the machine-readable ballot as instructed by the Ballot Caller.
o Ballot Reviewer – Reviews the Ballot Caller’s readings from the original ballot
and compares it to the selections recorded on the machine-readable ballot by the
Ballot Duplicator to ensure accuracy. It is a best practice to have two ballot
reviewers, one who will review the selection announced by the Ballot Caller and
one who will review the selection made by the Ballot Duplicator.
• Prior to the start of the ballot duplication process, each member of the bipartisan
duplication team must complete a participation log noting the date, time, and their name,
role, and party affiliation.
• During the ballot duplication process, the duplication team is not permitted to leave each
other’s immediate presence until the process has been completed, unless authorized by
the director.
• All duplicated ballots must contain the following in the blank box at the top of each
ballot:
o A notation (for example, “DUP”) to indicate the ballot is a duplicate of the
original.
o The ballot number assigned to the voter.
o The precinct of the voter.
12
• Upon completion of the process, the team must do the following:
o Ensure that the duplicated ballots are attached to the corresponding original
ballots for the Board to verify at its next scheduled meeting.
o Enter the time of completion and their signatures to the ballot duplication log.
o Provide the completed duplication log and the ballots to the director.
• The director must ensure that the ballots are kept in a secured container until the next
absentee board meeting.
• The board must review each duplicated ballot at its next scheduled board meeting prior to
approval of the ballots.
It is a best practice to have a duplication team present at every meeting to duplicate any damaged
ballots that are identified during the board meeting. Duplicating ballots at the board meeting
when the ballot envelope was approved reduces the likelihood of mistakes.
Control of Board Meeting
The county board of elections is responsible for maintaining control at its absentee board
meetings. The county board must ensure that the public receives proper notice of the board
meeting and is given the opportunity to attend. However, because state law vests members of the
county board with the duty to approve absentee ballots and the board’s decision is final, the
county board should not permit public comment while absentee envelopes and the accompanying
photo ID documentation are being adjudicated, or while ballots are being duplicated, sorted, or
tabulated. The board also should not permit questions from the public as the board approves
absentee envelopes and photo ID documentation, to avoid disruption of proceedings which must
be carefully managed, the potential for outside influence of the board’s decisions, and the
potential for nonuniform review of ballots. G.S. 163-234 is very clear that others shall be
permitted to attend the meeting during which absentee ballots are counted and observe the
process, but may not interfere with the election officials in the discharge of their duties.27
It is recommended that the board chair explain the process at the beginning of the board meeting
and state that public comment is not permitted during the approval and scanning of absentee
ballots. The board may, but is not required to, designate a separate part of the meeting for public
comment.
At the end of each board meeting, the goal is total reconciliation of all envelopes, photo ID
documentation, and ballots. To do that requires careful control of every document in the room. It
27 G.S. § 163-234(2): “Any elector of the county shall be permitted to attend the meeting and
allowed to observe the counting process, provided the elector shall not in any manner interfere
with the election officials in the discharge of their duties.”
13
also requires ensuring that the board members focus on the task at hand and that the public
remains in an observer rather than a participant role. Envelopes, photo ID documentation, and
ballots must not be allowed to be removed from assigned areas. A voter’s photo ID
documentation must also be retained with the voter’s corresponding envelope. The reconciliation
process shall ensure the number of ballot envelopes in each stack is tracked, and that the number
of envelopes approved at the meeting is equal the number of ballots entered into the tabulator.
The county board shall record the count on the tabulator at the start and end of each absentee
meeting. A sample reconciliation log that you may use for process is available here.
Public Records Requests for Envelopes
Some county boards may have received public records requests for absentee ballot return
envelopes. Ballot return envelopes are public records under North Carolina’s Public Records
Act, with exceptions for voter signatures and CIV number.28 Public records requests should not
be fulfilled during a board meeting, but must be fulfilled as promptly as possible. Photo ID
photocopies and Photo ID Exception Forms are technically separate documents from absentee
ballot envelopes, so each are addressed separately below, even though these are retained with the
envelopes. Photo ID photocopies are confidential and should never be provided, and Photo ID
Exception Forms may need to be redacted due to confidential information included on the
forms.29
Providing Copies of Envelopes
Prior to providing a copy of the envelope to the requestor, the voter signature and CIV number
must be redacted, as the number links the envelope to a particular voter's ballot. Witness or
assistant information may not be redacted.
To redact the voter signature and CIV number, you may copy the envelope, mark through the
confidential information on the copy, and then copy it again. Some counties have used
removable tape or a cardboard or other thick paper cutout to cover the confidential information
when making a copy. Digital copies may also be provided using a template redaction tool in a
PDF editing program like Adobe.
Viewing Envelopes
Unredacted envelopes may be viewed by the public in your office, though no copy, photo, or
tracing may be made. A county board must ensure that the requestor is monitored while
28 G.S. §§ 132-1.2(4), 163-82.10(a), 163-165.1(e). See also Numbered Memo 2016-25 and
Numbered Memo 2022-01.
29 G.S. § 163-82.10(a1), 163-233(a).
14
reviewing the envelopes in the office to ensure the voter’s signature is not retained. Absentee
ballot return envelopes contain an identifier that is linked to the ballot, so this identifier must also
be redacted from public view to protect the secrecy of the ballot.
Photo ID Documentation
Photo ID documentation must be retained with the envelope because it is reviewed as part of the
absentee application. For this reason, the photocopy of photo ID or Photo ID Exception Form
must be retained for as long as the county retains that voter’s corresponding absentee envelope.30
As noted above, the photocopy of a voter’s photo ID is not a public record, and therefore a
county board should not provide a copy of the photocopy of photo ID or allow viewing of the
photocopy of photo ID in response to a public records request. The photocopy of photo ID must
be retained with the voter’s corresponding envelope through at least the end of canvass and the
certification of all elections in the county. After that time, for efficiency in responding to public
records requests and to reduce the likelihood of a mistaken disclosure, a county board can
separate the photocopy of photo ID from the corresponding envelopes and securely store them in
a separate container—so long as the photocopies of photo ID are still stored in the same secure
location as the envelopes.
Unlike the photocopy of photo ID, a Photo ID Exception Form is a public record. If a public
records request seeks copies or viewing of Photo ID Exception Forms, the county board will
need to redact any confidential information from the Form before allowing the requestor to view
the form or receive a copy.
Finally, if allowing a requestor to review an envelope in person and the photo ID documentation
has not been separated from the envelope, a county board should first separate the photocopies of
photo ID from their respective envelopes and redact confidential information on Photo ID
Exception Forms before allowing the public to review the envelopes.
30 This period is at least 22 months for primaries and elections involving a contest for federal
office, 52 U.S.C. § 20701, and at least one year for primaries and elections not involving a
contest for federal office, G.S. § 163-233(c).
1
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 27255, Raleigh, NC 27611 (919) 814-0700 or (866) 522-4723 Fax:(919) 715-0135 Numbered Memo 2022-11
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director
RE: Court Order Regarding Assistance for Absentee Voters with Disabilities
DATE: August 29, 2022
On July 11, 2022, a federal court issued an order invalidating state laws preventing certain
individuals from helping disabled voters request, complete, and submit absentee ballots.1 The
court determined that these laws, as applied to disabled voters, violate federal law. Specifically,
Section 208 of the Voting Rights Act permits any voter who is blind, disabled, or unable to read
or write to request “assistance by a person of the voter’s choice, other than the voter’s employer
or agent of that employer or officer or agent of the voter’s union.”2
This numbered memo provides guidance for county boards to comply with the court order. It
supersedes Numbered Memo 2020-15 and any other prior memo to the extent they provide
guidance regarding who may assist an absentee voter who needs assistance due to a disability.
Assistance for Absentee Voters with Disabilities
Voters who need assistance voting absentee by mail due to their disability may now receive
assistance from any person they choose. This could be a friend, relative, or any other person the
voter chooses to assist them. A candidate may not witness the ballot of a voter unless the
candidate is the voter’s near relative.3
Voters in Covered Facilities
A voter who needs assistance due to a disability and is a patient or resident in a covered facility
may receive assistance from any person they choose. They may receive assistance from the staff
1 Disability Rights NC v. State Board of Elections, 5:21-CV-361-BO, Order on Motion for Summary
Judgment (E.D.N.C. July 11, 2022). The specific laws that were invalidated with respect to assisting
disabled voters are N.C.G.S. §§ 163-226.3, -230.1, -230.2, -230.3, and -231(b)(1).
2 52 U.S.C. § 10508.
3 However, a voter living in covered care facilities may receive assistance from a candidate if the voter
needs assistance due to the voter’s disability.
2
of the hospital, clinic, nursing home, or rest home where they are a patient or resident. There is
no requirement that the facility staff complete a log when they assist a voter, although the facility
may choose to do so. Facility staff are not required to assist a voter if they do not wish to do so
or are instructed not to do so by the facility. Facility staff may continue to rely on multipartisan
assistance team (MAT) members to assist their residents, if that is the facility’s preference.
Under the court’s order, a voter in a covered facility who needs assistance due to a disability may
also receive assistance from an elected official, political party officeholder, or candidate. They
may still request and use a MAT, but they are not required to do so.
A voter who is a patient or resident in a covered facility but who does not need assistance due to
a disability may request assistance from a near relative, legal guardian, or a MAT. Recall, the
court’s order changes the rules only for voters who need assistance due to a disability. If a near
relative, legal guardian, or MAT is not available within seven calendar days of such a voter’s
request, the voter may get assistance from anyone EXCEPT:
• An owner, manager, director, or employee of the hospital, clinic, nursing home, or rest home where the voter is a patient or a resident;
• An elected official, candidate, or officeholder in a political party; or
• A campaign manager or treasurer for a candidate or political party.4
Assistance with Absentee Voting
Absentee Requests
Upon request of a voter who needs assistance due to a disability, any person may assist the voter
by:
• Completing the absentee request form, according to the voter’s instruction;
• Making the absentee request on the voter’s behalf, according to the voter’s instruction;
and
• Returning the request form, according to the voter’s instruction. The assistant may return
the request form by mail or in person, or through the State Board’s online portal.
4 N.C.G.S. § 163-226.3(a)(4).
3
The assistant must complete Section 9 of the request form, including providing their name and
address. The form is invalid if the assistant does not provide information such that the assistant’s
name and address can be determined.5
If the assistant is making the request for the voter (i.e., not just helping to fill out the form, but
making the request in lieu of the voter), they must also complete and sign Section 8. As long as
the assistant’s address is listed in either Section 8 or Section 9, it is not required to be listed twice
since the assistant’s address can be determined if it is listed once.
Absentee Container-Return Envelopes
Upon request of a voter who needs assistance due to a disability, any person, including a MAT
member, may assist the voter by:
• Completing the absentee container-return envelope, according to the voter’s instruction;
• Marking the ballot, according to the voter’s instruction;
• Signing the envelope if, due a disability, the voter is unable to sign or make their mark;
and
• Returning the ballot, according to the voter’s instruction. The assistant may return the
ballot by mail or in person to the county board of elections office or a one-stop site in the
county.
The assistant must complete the Voter Assistant Certification section of the envelope. If a
voter is physically unable to sign or make their mark due to disability, the person assisting with
the ballot should write in the signature line, “Disabled - cannot sign” and must complete the
Voter Assistant Certification located on the back of the ballot return envelope.
The assistant may return a cure certification for a voter who needs assistance due to a disability.
See Numbered Memo 2021-03 for information about the cure process for deficient absentee
container-return envelopes. County boards shall keep a log for cure certifications that are
hand-delivered to the county board office.
Absence for Sickness or Physical Disability
If a voter expects to be unable to go to the voting place to vote in person on Election Day
because of that voter’s sickness or other physical disability, any of the following people may
5 N.C.G.S. § 163-230.2(e1) states: “If a voter is in need of assistance completing the written request form
due to blindness, disability, or inability to read or write and there is not a near relative or legal guardian
available to assist that voter, the voter may request some other person to give assistance, notwithstanding
any other provision of this section. If another person gives assistance in completing the written request
form, that person’s name and address shall be disclosed on the written request form in addition to the
information listed in subsection (a) of this section.” (Emphasis added.)
4
make the request for absentee ballots in person to the board of elections of the county in which
the voter is registered after 5:00 p.m. on the Tuesday before the election but not later than 5:00
p.m. on the day before the election:
• The voter;
• The voter’s near relative or legal guardian; or
• Any other person, if the voter needs assistance due to a disability.
Upon receipt of a completed request form, the county board shall personally deliver the
application and ballots to the voter, near relative, legal guardian, or assistant.6
Assistance with In-Person Voting
The requirements for who may assist a voter voting in person have not changed.
A disabled or illiterate voter who is voting in person may receive assistance from a person of the
voter’s choice, other than the voter’s employer or agent of that employer or an officer or agent of
the voter’s union.7 There is no limit on how many voters an assistant may assist, if properly
requested.
Answers to Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: May a voter who needs assistance due to a disability receive assistance from a
candidate?
A: It depends. A voter who needs assistance due to a disability may receive assistance from
a candidate if the voter is a patient or resident of covered facility.
However, the court order did not enjoin G.S. § 163-237(c), which prevents a candidate
from serving as a witness otherwise. Therefore, a voter who is not a patient or resident of
a covered facility is prohibited from having a candidate serve as a witness unless the
candidate is their near relative.
Q2: What is the definition of a disability?
A: Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, a disability is a physical or mental
impairment that causes someone to be substantially limited in a major life activity.8 This
means someone who has substantial limitations on the ability to perform everyday
6 N.C.G.S. § 163-230.1(b).
7 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.8(a)(2).
8 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(A).
5
things—such as seeing, hearing, walking, standing, speaking, reading, concentrating,
thinking, and writing—as compared to most people in the general population.9
Most people living in nursing homes and other congregate care settings need help with at
least one aspect of daily living and will generally be considered to have a disability.
Federal law states that public entities are not to engage in demanding tests to determine
an individual’s level of disability.10 For the purposes of seeking assistance with absentee
voting, however, the disability should substantially impair an activity that pertains to the
absentee voting process.11 All of the examples of everyday activities listed above could
pertain to some aspect of the absentee voting process.
Q3: Is advanced age a reason for assistance (for example, curbside is open to those who
due to age or disability are unable to enter the enclosure)?
A: No, age alone is not a reason the voter may receive assistance under the court order. The
voter must need assistance due to a disability, but a disability may be age-related. See the
answer to Question 2 for the definition of a disability.
Q4: How do we know if someone has a disability?
A: See the answer to Question 2 regarding the definition of a disability. The voter’s
disability is confirmed through the attestations on the request form and the absentee
envelope. These contain language requiring the assistant to attest that the voter asked for
help due to the voter’s disability. It is not for the county board to inquire into the
specifics of a voter’s attested-to disability that renders the voter in need of assistance. If
the assistance portion of an otherwise valid request form or envelope is properly
completed, the county board shall approve it.
If the county board has reason to believe that non-disabled voters are receiving assistance
to which they are not entitled, or that disabled voters’ wishes are not being respected,
they shall forward such evidence the State Board’s Investigations Division.
9 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A); 28 C.F.R. § 35.108(c)(1), (d)(1)(v).
10 28 C.F.R. § 35.101; see 28 C.F.R. §§ 35.108(a)(2)(i), (c)(2)(i)-(ii), (d)(1)(i)-(viii), .
11 The Voting Rights Act permits a voter to get assistance from a person of their choice if that voter
“requires assistance to vote by reason of blindness, disability, or inability to read or write[.]” 52 U.S.C. §
10508 (emphasis added).
6
Q5: What if a disabled voter in a covered facility wishes to get assistance from and use as
witnesses two staff members in the facility, but the voter’s near relative is concerned
about undue influence and has contacted the county board to complain?
A: A voter who needs assistance due to a disability has the right to select an assistant of their
choice under the court order (and federal law). If a family member is concerned that
someone has improperly influenced a voter, the county board of elections should refer
them to the State Board’s Investigations Division. It is a crime to interfere with a voter
when marking their ballot, or to defraud a blind or illiterate voter from marking the ballot
selections of their choosing.12
Q6: Is the assistant required to respect the secrecy of the voter’s ballot?
Yes. Any person who assists a voter must keep the voter’s ballot choices confidential. It
is a crime for any person who has access to another person’s ballot to reveal how the
person voted.13
Q7: Are there any changes to the requirement that an absentee voter have two witnesses
or a notary?
A: No. An absentee ballot must still be witnessed by two people or one notary public. The
witnesses must be at least 18 years old.
Q8: What is the definition of a covered facility?
A: A “covered facility” is any facility that provides residential or in-patient healthcare in the
State that is licensed or operated pursuant to Chapter 122C, Chapter 131D, or Chapter
131E of the General Statutes, including, for example, a hospital, clinic, nursing home, or
adult care home; or by the federal government or an Indian tribe.14
12 N.C.G.S. §§ 163-273(a)(4) and 163-274(a)(13).
13 N.C.G.S. § 163-274(b).
14 08 NCAC 16 .0101(b).
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 27255, Raleigh, NC 27611 (919) 814-0700 or (866) 522-4723 Fax: (919) 715-0135
Numbered Memo 2021-07
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director
RE: Deficiencies in Notary Portion of Absentee Application and Certificate
DATE: August 31, 2021
This numbered memo explains how county boards of elections should treat technical deficiencies
in the execution of the notary portion of an absentee container return envelope (officially called
the absentee ballot application and certificate). It replaces Numbered Memo 2020-07. The
guidance balances the goal of uniformly applying the law while seeking to not punish the voter for
a notary’s inadvertent mistake or error.
G.S. § 163-231(a) requires a voter to mark the absentee by-mail ballot in the presence of two
witnesses or one notary public, who must sign the container return envelope as witness(es). If
witnessed by a notary, the statute requires the notary public to affix their valid notarial seal to the
envelope and include the phrase “Notary Public” below his or her signature.
State Board of Elections staff consulted with the North Carolina Department of the Secretary of
State’s Electronic Notarization and Notary Enforcement Division regarding the validity of an
incomplete notarization on the container return envelope. While the Secretary of State’s Office
cannot adjudicate an absentee ballot, they provided useful information on how the notary statutes
work in conjunction with our election statutes, including that there is a presumption of regularity
in the absence of fraud on the part of the notary, or evidence of a knowing and deliberate violation
of the notary statutes by the notary.1 The Secretary of State’s Office has requested that notarial
errors on the absentee ballot container-return envelope be reported to them.
Certain technical errors in executing the notary’s portion of the container return envelope are not
considered deficiencies. Other errors are considered deficiencies that require the ballot to be
spoiled and reissued in accordance with Section 2.2 of Numbered Memo 2021-03.
1 G.S. 10B-99(a) (relevant portion): “In the absence of evidence of fraud on the part of the notary, or evidence of a
knowing and deliberate violation of this Article by the notary, the courts shall grant a presumption of regularity to
notarial acts so that those acts may be upheld, provided there has been substantial compliance with the law.”
2
1. Technical Errors That Are Not Considered Deficiencies
The following technical errors do not affect the sufficiency, validity, or enforceability of the
notarial certificate itself or the underlying document and are not considered deficiencies:
• Notary leaves off the name of the voter or misspells the voter’s name;
• Notary does not write the expiration date of their commission;
• Notary does not include the name of the county or State;
• The notary seal is hard to read;
• The notary does not include the date the notary witnessed the marking of the ballot; or
• A combination of the above.2
2. Technical Errors That Are Considered Deficiencies
The following errors in the notarial certificate are considered deficiencies that cannot be cured by
certification, and require that the ballot be spoiled and reissued in accordance with Numbered
Memo 2021-03:
• The notary’s signature is missing. Pursuant to G.S. § 163-231(a)(5), the notary’s signature
is required.
• The notarial seal is missing altogether or contains missing information. G.S. § 163-231(a)
requires the notary to affix a valid notarial seal to the envelope.
2 G.S. § 10B-68 (relevant portion):
(a) Technical defects, errors, or omissions in a notarial certificate shall not affect the sufficiency, validity,
or enforceability of the notarial certificate or the related instrument or document.
[…]
(c) As used in this section, a technical defect includes those cured under G.S. 10B-37(f) and G.S. 10B-
67. Other technical defects include, but are not limited to, the absence of the legible appearance of the notary's
name exactly as shown on the notary's commission as required in G.S. 10B-20(b), the affixation of the
notary's seal near the signature of the principal or subscribing witness rather than near the notary's signature,
minor typographical mistakes in the spelling of the principal's name, the failure to acknowledge the principal's
name exactly as signed by including or omitting initials, or the failure to specify the principal's title or office,
if any.”
G.S. 10B-67: “An erroneous statement of the date that the notary's commission expires shall not affect the sufficiency,
validity, or enforceability of the notarial certificate or the related record if the notary is, in fact, lawfully commissioned
at the time of the notarial act. This section applies to notarial acts whenever performed.”
G.S. 10B-37(f): “The failure of a notarial seal to comply with the requirements of this section shall not affect the
sufficiency, validity, or enforceability of the notarial certificate, but shall constitute a violation of the notary's duties.”
3
3. Fraud Indicators
If there are indications of fraud on the absentee envelope, whether they relate to the notary section
or other sections of the envelope, this information should be sent to the State Board’s Investigations
Division. Examples of fraud indicators include:
• A notary or witness completed multiple applications containing technical errors;
• The handwriting for the voter’s signature and witness’s signature appears identical;
• The envelope appears to have been tampered with; and
• There are stray or suspicious markings on the envelope.
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 27255 Raleigh, NC 27611 (919) 814-0700 or (866) 522-4723 Fax: (919) 715-0135
Numbered Memo 2020-29
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director
RE: Witness or Assistant Address Issues on the Absentee Container-Return Envelope
DATE: October 4, 2020
This memo is issued to provide uniform guidance and further clarification on how to determine if
the correct address can be identified if the witness’s or assistant’s address on an absentee container-
return envelope is incomplete.
If No Address
If a witness or assistant does not print their address, the envelope is deficient.
Missing ZIP Code or City
As previously explained in Footnote 3 of Numbered Memo 2020-19, failure to list a witness’s ZIP
code does not require a cure. G.S. § 163-231(a)(5). A witness or assistant’s address does not have
to be a residential address; it may be a post office box or other mailing address. Additionally, if
the address is missing a city or state, but the county board of elections can determine the correct
address, the failure to list that information also does not invalidate the container-return envelope.
For example, if a witness lists “Raleigh 27603” you can determine the state is NC, or if a witness
lists “333 North Main Street, 27701” you can determine that the city/state is Durham, NC.
If City and ZIP Code Missing
If both the city and ZIP code are missing, staff will need to determine whether the correct address
can be identified. If the correct address cannot be identified, the envelope is deficient. If one of
the following criteria are met, you can determine the address and the envelope is not deficient:
• The witness or assistant’s address is the same as the voter’s address – either because the
witness or assistant wrote “same as above” or something similar on the address line or
because the partial address provided matches the address of the voter – or it is on the same
street as the voter’s address;
• The witness’s or assistant’s name and partial address match that of a registered voter in
your county in SEIMS; or
2
• The street address is a valid address in your county. You may confirm this using a county
GIS website1 or office, or a similar tool. Do not use an online directions tool such as
Google Maps, which does not identify whether an address is valid.
If there is only a street address and none of the above criteria are met, the county board cannot
determine the address and the envelope is deficient. If a P.O. box is listed but the address provided
does not include a city or ZIP code, it is not possible to determine the address and the envelope is
deficient.
1 https://www.lib.ncsu.edu/gis/counties.html
P.O. Box 27255
Raleigh, NC 27611 (866) 522-4723
www.ncsbe.gov
Numbered Memo 2023-03
TO: County Boards of Elections
FROM: Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director1
RE: Photo ID and In-Person Voting
DATE: September 14, 2023 (updated February 23, 2024)2
This numbered memo provides guidance related to photo identification (photo ID) requirements
for in-person voting. The memo’s instructions for the review of Photo ID Exception Forms also
apply to absentee ballots.
General Overview
Election officials, staff, and county board of elections members are encouraged to carefully
review the two laws that primarily govern the in-person photo ID requirements and processes:
N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16 and 08 NCAC 17 .0101.
As a general overview of the in-person photo ID process, when a voter enters the voting place to
vote in person during early voting or on Election Day, the voter will be asked to show a photo ID
during the check-in process.3 The photo ID shown by the voter must meet certain legal
requirements:4
(1) the ID must be an acceptable type of photo ID;
(2) the ID must meet the expiration requirements, if applicable;
(3) the photo on the ID must reasonably resemble the person showing the ID; and
(4) the name on the ID must be the same as or substantially equivalent to the voter’s name in
their registration record.
1 This memo is issued under the authority delegated by the State Board to the executive director pursuant
to G.S. § 163-22(p).
2 This memo was updated on February 23, 2024, to provide further guidance on photo ID implementation
following the municipal elections in 2023.
3 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.7(a).
2
If a voter’s photo ID meets these requirements, then the voter proceeds with the check-in process
and will vote with a regular ballot, unless there is some other reason under the election laws for
them to vote with a provisional ballot.
If the check-in official believes that a voter’s photo ID does not meet these requirements, then
the check-in official will ask the voter to provide a different photo ID. If the voter cannot do so,
then the check-in official will initiate a photo ID challenge, which is then immediately heard by
the judges of election at the voting place. If at least one judge determines the photo ID meets the
legal requirements, then the voter proceeds with the check-in process and will vote with a regular
ballot unless there is some other reason under the election laws for them to vote with a
provisional ballot. If the judges unanimously agree the voter’s photo ID does not meet the legal
requirements, the voter will still be permitted to vote and will vote with a provisional ballot, as
explained below.
Voters who do not present acceptable photo ID may choose to leave the voting enclosure to
retrieve an acceptable photo ID and present to vote again, as long as they have not yet received a
ballot.5 Some voters may prefer this option, especially during the early voting period, when it is
easier for the voter to obtain an acceptable photo ID in time to vote with that ID, including by
obtaining a free voter photo ID from the county board.
Voting Without Acceptable Photo ID
All voters are allowed to vote with or without a photo ID.6 There are two options for an in-
person voter who does not present acceptable photo ID. Every voter without an acceptable photo
ID must be offered both options.
(1) The voter may complete a Photo ID Exception Form, claiming an exception to the photo
ID requirement, and then vote a provisional ballot. A county board is required to approve
and count the provisional ballot unless the county board unanimously finds that the form
was falsely completed and puts that finding in a written decision. Before the county board
makes a final finding of falsity, it must give the voter notice and an opportunity to
address the county board on the matter.
(2) The voter may vote a provisional ballot and then bring an acceptable photo ID to the
county board office before 5:00 P.M. on the day before county canvass. When a voter
5 See 08 NCAC 10B .0104 (voter not permitted to return to the voting enclosure once they receive their
ballot).
6 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(c)–(d); N.C. Sess. Laws 2018-144, sec. 1.5(a)(10).
3
chooses this option, their photo ID will be evaluated at the county board office in the
same manner as it would have been evaluated at the voting place.
Frequently Asked Questions About Photo ID and In-Person Voting
Acceptable Forms of Photo ID
The types of photo ID that are acceptable for voting purposes are listed in N.C.G.S.
§ 163-166.16(a) and 08 NCAC 17 .0101(a)(1).
1 Is a photocopy of a voter’s photo ID, or a picture of their photo ID stored electronically on
a mobile device, an acceptable form of photo ID for in-person voting?
No. Under N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16, a voter presenting to vote in person must “produce” one of
the listed “forms of identification.” An image of a photo ID, either as a photocopy or a photo on
a mobile device, is not one of the permitted forms of photo ID when voting in person.
2 Are learner’s permits and provisional licenses acceptable forms of Photo ID? What about
a paper temporary driving certificate given to someone while they wait for the driver’s license to
arrive in the mail?
A provisional license is a license, and therefore is acceptable photo ID, subject to the expiration
requirements. Additionally, a learner’s permit falls within the definition of a “license” in
N.C.G.S. § 20-4.01(17), and is therefore a “North Carolina drivers license” under the photo ID
law for voting,7 subject to the expiration requirements.
A “temporary driving certificate,” however, is not permitted to be used for identification
purposes under state law. Therefore, it cannot be used as an acceptable form of photo ID for
voting purposes.8
3 Is a suspended or revoked driver’s license an acceptable Photo ID?
No. If an election official becomes aware that a voter is presenting a suspended or revoked
license, the official should inform the voter that such an ID is no longer “valid,” as required by
7 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(a).
8 N.C.G.S. § 20-7(f)(5) (“The temporary driving certificate shall be valid for driving purposes and shall
not be valid for identification purposes, except when conducting business with the Division and not
otherwise prohibited by federal law.”).
4
the photo ID law for voting.9 In practice, however, election officials are typically not going to
know whether a person’s license has been suspended or revoked, since that information does not
appear on the face of an ID, and election officials should not do independent research to
determine the license status. Without having a reason to believe a voter’s license has been
revoked or suspended, election officials must assume that the license remains valid.
4 When a student or government-employee ID card is approved by the State Board, does
that mean that only those ID cards that are identical to the one submitted with the institution’s
application for approval can be used for voting?
No. Once an institution’s ID has been approved, that institution’s ID is acceptable, including ID
cards that were issued before the ID was approved, even if those previously issued ID cards
differ from the latest version. Both N.C.G.S. §§ 163-166.17 and 163-166.18 permit the State
Board to approve “the use of . . . cards issued by” an institution if “cards issued during the
approval period” comply with the requirements outlined in the statute, including the requirement
that the card contain an expiration date. In short, the legislature’s intent was to permit an
institution’s ID card to be used for voting if that institution commits to issuing compliant cards
during the approval period. The law is not meant to permit only those cards issued during the
approval period to be accepted for voting, thus requiring an institution to replace the already-
issued ID cards in circulation, in order for their students or employees to be able to use their IDs
to vote. Instead, once an institution’s ID meets the requirement with respect to the IDs that are to
be issued during the approval period, the institution’s ID, including cards already issued, are
acceptable.
However, to the extent the institution has gained State Board approval of only a special-issued
ID (i.e., a special “voter ID” card, not the regular ID card), only that ID, and any past version of
that special-issued ID, would be acceptable for voting purposes.10
5 If a voter believes their photo ID does not reflect their current appearance, should they
obtain a new ID with a new photo on the ID?
The voter is not required to obtain a new photo ID when their appearance changes. Importantly,
the voter’s appearance at the voting place is not required to be a perfect match to the photo on
9 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(a)(1).
10 For example, there was one such approved student or government employee ID card that fell into this
situation for the 2023 municipal elections: Duke University’s student voter ID card.
5
their ID. Election officials evaluating the photo on the ID must take into account the many
reasons why a voter’s appearance may have changed.11
Even with these considerations in mind, a voter concerned about a comparison of their photo ID
to their current appearance could choose to obtain a new photo ID, if permitted by the agency
that issued their ID. The voter could also obtain and use a different type of acceptable photo ID
from the one they already possess. For example, a voter with a driver license could obtain a
Voter Photo ID Card from their county board of elections and present either ID at the voting
place when voting.
6 Will a photo ID used for voting also satisfy a requirement for some voters to show “HAVA
ID”? Can a person’s photo ID for voting also be used to prove residency for same-day registration
at an early voting site?
In each situation, it depends on the ID provided.
Most voters will use an unexpired driver’s license as their photo ID when voting, and this would
satisfy both HAVA and the photo ID requirements. But sometimes an acceptable photo ID for
voting would not satisfy HAVA ID, due to the ID’s expiration. A “HAVA ID” that is required to
be presented by some voters, pursuant to state law and the Help America Vote Act of 2002
(HAVA), must be “current.”12 Under our state’s photo ID law for voting, however, some IDs that
can be used for photo ID purposes do not have to be current. Instead, some photo IDs can be
expired for up to a year; or if the voter is over 65, then the ID can be used for photo ID purposes
if it was unexpired when the voter turned 65. And some types of photo IDs can always be
expired, such as military and veteran ID cards.13 So while it is unlikely that a voter’s photo ID
will not be acceptable as HAVA ID, it is possible, where the ID is expired.
A same-day registrant who presents an unexpired driver’s license with their current address can
use that ID for both same-day registration proof of residency and the photo ID requirement for
voting. But a photo ID does not need to have the voter’s current address. For example, a voter
can show a valid driver’s license that includes the voter’s former address, and that would be
acceptable for photo ID purposes. But it would not be acceptable to prove current residence for
same-day registration. Additionally, many documents used to establish residency for same-day
registration are not acceptable photo IDs for voting—including utility bills, bank statements,
11 08 NCAC 17 .0101(a)(2).
12 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.12(a)(1); 52 U.S.C. § 21083(b)(2)(A)(i)(I).
13 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(a).
6
paychecks, and government documents that contain no photo. See Numbered Memo 2023-05
(Same-Day Registration) for further guidance on this point. So it is possible that an acceptable
same-day registration document will not satisfy the photo ID requirement, and vice versa.
Evaluation of an In-Person Voter’s Photo ID
The process for evaluating a voter’s photo ID when they present to vote at an early voting site or
on Election Day is guided by N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16 and 08 NCAC 17 .0101.
7 What can an election official consider when deciding whether the person showing a
photo ID bears a reasonable resemblance to the photo on the ID?
The election official is required to determine only whether the photo on the ID bears a
“reasonable resemblance” to the person presenting the photo ID.14 By law, the election official
making this determination must consider all the circumstances, and must bear in mind that there
are many reasons that a person’s appearance could change. The election official must keep in
mind the purpose of the photo identification requirement, which is “to confirm the person
presenting to vote is the registered voter on the voter registration records.”15 In other words, the
election official is trying to determine that the ID belongs to the person presenting to vote, by
comparing faces.
Election officials must take into account that a voter’s appearance may have changed since their
ID was issued, and this can be due to various reasons, including but not limited to changes in:
• Weight;
• Hair features and styling, including changes in length, color, hairline, or use of a wig or
other hairpiece;
• Facial hair;
• Complexion or skin tone;
• Cosmetics, including piercings or tattooing; and
• Apparel, including the presence or absence of eyeglasses or contact lenses.16
14 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(b).
15 08 NCAC 17 .0101(a)(2).
16 Election officials are not allowed to require a voter to remove apparel for the purposes of determining
reasonable resemblance. If the face of the person presenting to vote is covered enough that the election
official cannot determine reasonable resemblance, then the election official should inform the voter that
7
Election officials must also take into account other factors that can affect a voter’s appearance in
comparison to the photo on the photo ID, such as the effects of aging and the effects of medical
conditions or medical treatment.
A person’s changed appearance, no matter the reason for that change, cannot prevent a voter
from voting. If the election official can determine it is the same person when comparing the
person’s face in the photo to the face of the person standing before them, then the election
official must permit the voter to proceed and vote a regular ballot.
8 What can an election official consider when comparing the name on the photo ID with
the name in the registration records?
The election official reviewing the photo ID is determining whether the name on the photo ID is
“the same as or substantially equivalent to” the voter’s name in the registration records (i.e., the
pollbook).17 The name review must be based on all the circumstances, and the election official
must construe all evidence, along with any explanation or documentation voluntarily offered by
the person presenting to vote, in the light most favorable to that voter.
The election official shall consider the name on the ID to be substantially equivalent to the name
in the pollbook if any differences in the name are subject to a reasonable explanation.
Reasonable explanations for name differences include, but are not limited to, one or more of the
following:
• Omission or inclusion of one or more parts of the name (for example, Mary Beth Smith
versus Beth Smith, or Patrick Todd Jackson, Jr. versus Patrick Todd Jackson, or Maria
Guzman-Santana versus Maria Guzman);
• Use of a variation or nickname rather than a formal name (for example, Bill versus
William, or Sue versus Susanne);
• Use of an initial in place of one or more parts of a given name (for example, A.B.
Sanchez versus Aaron B. Sanchez);
• Use of a former name, including maiden names (for example, Emily Jones versus Emily
Gibson);
the face covering is preventing the official from determining that the photo on the identification is that of
the voter and then offer the voter the option to briefly remove the face covering. If the voter chooses to
not remove the face covering, then the election official must offer the voter the two options to vote by
provisional ballot. 08 NCAC 17 .0101(b).
17 08 NCAC 17 .0101(a)(3).
8
• Variation that includes or omits a hyphenation or hyphen (for example, Chantell D.
Jacobson-Smith versus Chantell D. Jacobson or Chantell D. Jacobson Smith);
• Variation of accents (for example, José Muñoz versus Jose Munoz);
• Variation of an apostrophe (for example, Andrea D’Antonio versus Andrea Dantonio);
• Ordering of names (for example, Maria Eva Garcia Lopez versus Maria E. Lopez-
Garcia); or
• Variation in spelling or typographical errors (for example, Dennis McCarthy versus
Denis McCarthy, or Aarav Robertson versus Aarav Robertsson).18
The address on the photo ID does not need to match the address of the voter in the pollbook.19
The photo ID law does not require such a strict document match. This takes into account the fact
that many voters will move and update their voter registration but not their driver’s license (for
example, non-driving elderly voters). Also, many acceptable forms of photo ID have no address
at all, making it impossible to do an address comparison for voters using such IDs. All voters
must be evaluated using the same criteria.
9 Can an election official take into account other information about the person presenting
to vote when making the reasonable resemblance determination or name determination?
Election officials should not factor in outside information to decide that the voter does not
reasonably resemble the person in the photo on the ID or that their name is not the same as or
substantially equivalent to their name in their registration record. Instead, a determination that
the photo ID does not meet the photo or name requirements must be based solely on a review of
the photo and name on the ID. On the other hand, if an election official is unable to make a
determination that the photo ID meets the photo and name requirements after reviewing the ID,
the official can turn to other evidence to confirm the photo ID is the person’s ID and that the
name on the ID is that of a registered voter.
For example, if a voter presents to vote at the voting place and they reasonably resemble the
photo on the ID, the fact that their gender presentation does not match the gender or sex listed on
their photo ID or voter registration record cannot be used to reject the photo ID. A determination
of no resemblance, under the law, must be based on the comparison of the voter to the photo on
18 08 NCAC 17 .0101(a)(3).
19 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(g).
9
the ID, bearing in mind the many reasons a person’s appearance could change, and should not be
influenced by extraneous information.20
On the other hand, if a voter presents to vote at the voting place and part of their name on their
photo ID is not readable due to wear and tear on the ID, then it would be permissible for the
election official to use other evidence voluntarily provided by the voter, such as a credit card,
library card, or other documentation they may have with them, to confirm the voter’s name and
match it with their registration record. Such documentation cannot replace the need to present
valid photo ID, but it could support the determination of a match between the photo ID and the
voter record.
10 Can a voter be challenged by someone other than an election official for photo ID-related
reasons?
Yes, but only for failure to present a valid photo ID, and not for resemblance, name similarity, or
ID exception reasons.
On the day of a primary or election, or during early voting, any other registered voter of the
county may challenge a voter on the grounds that the “registered voter does not present photo
identification in accordance with G.S. 163-166.16” when that voter presents to vote in person.21
Accordingly, a defect in the manner that a voter presents ID can be challenged. For example, if
an election official permits a voter to check in and receive a regular ballot without the voter
presenting photo ID at all, that voter may be challenged by another registered voter. Likewise, if
a voter offers an ID that is plainly not an acceptable form of photo ID—a retail store membership
card, for example—an observer could challenge the voter.22 In the event such a challenge is
made, the challenger is not permitted to handle or review the voter’s photo ID. That duty is
reserved for the judges of election hearing the challenge.
Apart from issues concerning the act of presenting the ID, however, challenges to the photo ID
process by other voters are not permitted. By law, election officials at the voting place (i.e.,
check-in officials) are the persons tasked with entering a challenge when they determine a
20 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(b); 08 NCAC 17 .0101(a)(2).
21 N.C.G.S. § 163-87(5).
22 While this type of challenge is theoretically possible, election officials must be careful not to permit
persons who are not election officials to be so close to the voter in the voting enclosure that they are able
to perceive confidential details on the voter’s photo ID—for example, date of birth, driver’s license
number, or passport number. See N.C.G.S. § 132-1.10(b)(5); N.C.G.S. § 163-82.10B.
10
voter’s photo ID, upon official review, does not meet the legal requirements of a reasonable
resemblance or name similarity.23 Additionally, a voter who informs the election officials that
they will vote a provisional ballot and later bring their photo ID to the county board office cannot
be challenged by a registered voter for a failure to present a photo ID. Such a voter is expressly
permitted by law to vote a provisional ballot without showing ID at the voting site, and is
therefore not subject to the challenge under N.C.G.S. § 163-87(5). Finally, a challenge cannot be
made by any person, election official or otherwise, based on the voter completing a Photo ID
Exception Form. In that instance, the voter is claiming an exception from the photo ID
requirements and therefore is not required to “present” a photo ID under the law. The decision on
the approval of a Photo ID Exception Form is reserved for the county board alone.
11 How should election officials proceed with a hearing when the check-in official challenges
a voter’s photo ID for not meeting the photo or name requirements?
A photo ID challenge hearing is required when the check-in official determines that the photo on
the voter’s photo ID does not reasonably resemble the person showing the ID, that the name on
the photo ID is not the same as or substantially equivalent to the voter’s name in their
registration record, or both requirements are not met.24 A photo ID challenge proceeds somewhat
differently than a challenge entered by a voter pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 163-87. For a photo ID
challenge, the check-in official must use the Help Station Referral Form, rather than the
challenge form, to note their reason for why the photo ID does not meet these requirements, and
then immediately notify the judges of election so that they may conduct the challenge hearing as
promptly as possible.
When conducting the challenge hearing, the judges of election generally follow the hearing
procedures in N.C.G.S. § 163-88. After explaining the photo ID requirements for voting in-
person to the voter, the judges of election must then examine the photo ID presented by the voter
and apply the same standards as the check-in official for reasonable resemblance and name
similarity. The judges must then record their final decision in writing on the Help Station
Referral Form. The judges do not utilize the oath process detailed in N.C.G.S. § 163-88 for other
voter challenges because under N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(b), the judges of election conducting a
photo ID challenge are only tasked with the limited determination of whether “the photo
identification presented does not bear a reasonable resemblance to that voter.”
23 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(b); 08 NCAC 17 .0101(d)(3).
24 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(b); 08 NCAC 17 .0101(d)(3).
11
If at least one judge determines the photo ID meets the legal requirements, then the voter returns
to the check-in station, proceeds with the check-in process, and will vote with a regular ballot,
unless there is some other reason under the law for them to vote with a provisional ballot.
If the judges unanimously agree the voter’s photo ID does not meet the legal requirements, the
voter will still be permitted to vote. Rather than vote a challenged ballot pursuant to N.C.G.S. §
163-88.1, the voter will be offered the two options to vote with a provisional ballot in 08 NCAC
17 .0101(e). As an example, if the voter has another acceptable photo ID that is not with them at
the voting place, then that voter can choose to vote a provisional ballot and bring that other photo
ID to the county board office by the day before canvass, or that voter could choose to complete a
Photo ID Exception Form and assert an exception to the photo ID requirement stating why they
are unable to present an acceptable photo ID when presenting to vote.
12 Who is responsible for reviewing a voter’s photo ID when they bring it to the county
board office after voting a provisional ballot with the intent to provide their photo ID later?
A voter who brings their photo ID to the county board of elections office will have their ID
reviewed for compliance with all legal requirements, just as if they had shown the ID when
voting in-person at the voting site.25 Each county director is strongly encouraged to designate at
least one staff member to perform this function during the period of early voting and canvass,
and to have that person trained in the same manner as check-in officials for the purposes of
reviewing a photo ID. The county director can perform this function as well, if needed.
13 Can a voter obtain a photo ID after they have voted provisionally in person, bring the
newly issued photo ID to the county board office before the deadline, and still have their ballot
counted?
Yes. If the photo ID meets all the criteria to be accepted, and the voter presents the ID to the
county board by 5:00 P.M. on the day before canvass, the law requires the county board to count
that provisional ballot.26 This applies to any acceptable type of photo ID, including a Voter Photo
ID Card issued by a county board of elections.
The law does not state that a photo ID card must be issued by a certain date for it to be an
acceptable form of photo ID. If a voter is voting a provisional ballot during early voting or on
25 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(2).
26 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(c).
12
election day due to a lack of photo ID at the voting place, they must still be a registered and
eligible voter as of election day for their vote to be counted.
14 Can a voter, who voted a provisional ballot because they did not have their photo ID with
them when voting, return to the voting place later with their photo ID, have their provisional
ballot “spoiled,” and then vote a regular ballot?
No. Once a voter has voted a provisional ballot, they cannot have that ballot “spoiled” so that
they can then vote a regular ballot.27 If a voter casts a provisional ballot because they did not
have their photo ID with them when presenting to vote, their only option to have their ballot
counted is to bring their photo ID to the county board office. In that case, if the voter’s photo ID
meets all legal requirements, then the county board of elections must approve the provisional
application and the voter’s ballot will be counted the same as a voter who casts a regular ballot.28
Photo ID Exception Forms for In-Person Voters
The exceptions to the photo ID requirement are found in N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(d)–(f), and the
county board processes involved are guided by 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(1).
15 Can a voter complete a Photo ID Exception Form at a county board office when the voter
voted a provisional ballot intending to bring their photo ID to the county board office later but
instead could not find a photo ID?
No. Under N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(d), a voter who is voting in person on Election Day or during
early voting can only complete a Photo ID Exception Form “at the voting place.”
16 What can a county board consider when reviewing a voter’s Photo ID Exception Form?
Truth or falsity. When a voter completes a Photo ID Exception Form and votes with a
provisional ballot, “the county board of elections shall find that the provisional ballot is valid
unless the county board has grounds to believe the affidavit is false.”29 (The “affidavit” refers to
the Photo ID Exception Form.) A decision that the Form is false must be unanimous, and can
27 See 08 NCAC 10B .0104(a) & (e) (once a voter receives their ballot, they cannot return to vote again).
28 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(c).
29 N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(f).
13
only be made after the county board provides the voter notice and an opportunity to address the
board on any grounds that the county board is considering regarding the falsity of the Form.30
If a county board ultimately decides that a voter’s Photo ID Exception Form is false, then the
county board must “substantiate any finding of falsity with grounds recorded in a written
decision.”31 What this means is that the county board must be able to point to specific
information before the board that led it to conclude that the Photo ID Exception Form contains a
false statement. A decision that the Form is false must be based on facts, not speculation, and
may not be based on personal opinion as to whether the voter’s asserted reason is a good reason
for not showing an ID. Importantly, it is not the county board’s role to second-guess the
reasonableness of a voter’s asserted impediment to showing photo ID. Instead, the board is only
concerned with the truth or falsity of the assertion on the Form that (1) an identified impediment
is preventing the voter from showing a photo ID, (2) the voter has a religious objection to being
photographed, or (3) the voter was a victim of a recent natural disaster.32
A Photo ID Exception Form that identifies an “other” reasonable impediment that bears no
relationship to a voter’s ability to present photo ID may be rejected for being false. For example,
a Form that states the voter was unable to present photo ID because “the sky is blue” could be
deemed false by the county board. Although the sky may be blue, the voter is claiming on the
Form that the blueness of the sky is preventing them from showing ID. The county board could
rationally conclude, without speculating, that nothing about the color of the sky prevents a voter
from showing photo ID. Similarly, a Form claiming an inability to present photo ID due to the
voter’s disagreement with or objection to the photo ID requirement could be deemed false.
Although it may be true that the voter disagrees with or objects to the law, the county board
could rationally conclude, without speculating, that nothing about one’s disagreement with or
objection to a law actually prevents the voter from complying with the law—much like how
disagreeing with the tax laws does not prevent someone from paying their taxes. Accordingly, if
the county board finds that an “other” reasonable impediment bears no relationship to a voter’s
30 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(1).
31 08 NCAC 17 .0101(e)(1).
32 As Judge (now Justice) Kavanaugh explained in a case dealing with South Carolina’s similar
reasonable impediment exception to presenting photo ID, “[a]ny reason that the voter subjectively deems
reasonable will suffice, so long as it is not false. If the affidavit is challenged before the county board, the
county board may not second-guess the reasonableness of the asserted reason, only its truthfulness.”
South Carolina v. United States, 898 F. Supp. 2d 30, 36–37 (D.D.C. 2012).
14
ability to present photo ID, and therefore the Form false, then a disapproval of a voter’s
provisional ballot upon that finding would comply with the law.33
17 Will a voter’s ballot be counted if the voter completes a Photo ID Exception Form and
writes on the reasonable impediment “Other” line, “I did not know photo ID was required”?
A statement that the voter was not aware of the photo ID requirement is a true reason for why a
voter could not show a photo ID at the time they presented to vote, unless the county board has
information proving that the voter did, in fact, know they needed to show ID. Again, the
reasonableness of a voter’s impediment to presenting ID is for the voter to determine.34 The
county board’s concern is with the truth or falsity of the Form. And for a reasonable impediment,
the county board is specifically concerned with whether it is true or false that the claimed reason
“prevents the registered voter from presenting photograph identification.”35
County boards must remember that an impediment to presenting ID could involve something
that has kept the voter from even obtaining an ID in the first place (for example, lack of
transportation, lack of documents needed to get the ID, etc.). But even if a voter has an ID, the
law still permits them to claim a reasonable impediment to presenting ID at the voting site (for
example, ID misplaced, voter unaware that they would need to bring ID, etc.).
33 On the other hand, a rejection of a ballot based on the county board’s conclusion that a voter’s given
reason on the Form was “insufficient” or “nonresponsive” would not comply with the law. The law
permits the county board to reject a provisional ballot with a completed Photo ID Exception Form only if
“the county board has grounds to believe the affidavit is false.” N.C.G.S. § 163-166.16(f).
34 See note 32. Judge Kavanaugh further explained, “the reasonableness of the listed impediment is to be
determined by the individual voter, not by [an election official] or county board. The reasonable
impediment affidavit simply helps to ensure that voters . . . are who they say they are.” South Carolina,
898 F. Supp. 2d at 36.
35 N.C.G.S. § 163-166(d)(2).
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
Supplemental Oath Certificates for Absentee Ballots
Applicable Statutes and/or Rules
N.C. Gen. Stat §§ 163-232, and 163-232.1 (Modified by Session Law 2023-140 (S747), and 163-258.26
Summary:
The New Hanover County Board of Elections will be required to complete supplemental oaths attached
to an executed list of approved supplemental absentee applications and ballots. There is an oath
certificate for both military and civilian applications/ballots received.
Document/s Included:
Oath Certificates for Supplemental Absentee Applications and Ballots; Certified List of Absentee Voters
(Provided at Board meeting)
Board Action Required:
Discuss as necessary and action required
Item # 2 Item # 3d
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
Closed Session
Chairman Statement Prior to Closed Session:
I move that the Board enter into closed session, under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-318.11(6) to discuss
personnel matters.
Applicable Statutes and/or Rules:
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-318.11(6)
Summary:
Closed session is required to discuss personnel matters under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-318.11(6).
Board Action Required:
Discuss as necessary
Returning to Open Session:
I move that the Board return to open session, under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-318.11(6), to conduct
business remaining before the Board.
Item # 2 Item # 4
Special Meeting
New Hanover County Board of Elections
March 14, 2024
Subject:
General Discussion
Summary:
This is an opportunity for discussion on other elections-related matters not included in the
meeting agenda.
Board Action Required:
Discuss as necessary
Item # 5