Or. Admin. R. 165-007-0045 - Counting Ballots Received by Mail
(1) The purpose of this rule is to establish
the procedures elections officials must comply with when counting ballots sent
by mail.
(2) For purposes of this
rule, these terms are defined as follows:
(a)
"USPS" is the United States Postal Service.
(b) "Postmark" or "postal indicator" is any
official mark, imprint, or stamp that verifies when a ballot was accepted by
the United States Postal Service. A postmark or postal indicator on a ballot
return envelope is the official date of mailing when determining whether to
count the ballot. A "postmark" or "postal indicator" includes a hand
cancellation by an agent of the USPS.
(c) "Valid ballot" is a ballot that is
eligible to be counted under the laws of this state, pending verification of
its timely receipt by elections officials.
(d) "Election Day Deadline" is 8 p.m. on the
day of a statewide general, primary, or special election, including all special
district elections. Electors who have begun the act of voting at 8 p.m. at an
official ballot drop site on election day have met the Election Day Deadline
and shall be allowed to complete their vote. ORS
254.470(10),
together with all related rules, defines whether an elector has begun the act
of voting.
(3) Elections
officials shall count a valid ballot received by the Election Day Deadline
without evaluating any postmark.
(4) Elections officials shall count valid
ballots received after the Election Day Deadline if:
(a) Elections officials receive the ballot
from the United States Postal Service;
(b) Elections officials receive the ballot no
later than seven calendar days after the Election Day Deadline; and
(c) The ballot was postmarked no later than
election day.
(5) If a
ballot return envelope contains more than one postmark, the earlier postmark is
the official date of mailing for purposes of counting ballots sent by
mail.
(6) If a postmark does not
appear to be present or legible:
(a) Elections
officials may use available USPS tools to clarify whether any postmark is
present or legible.
(b) If
elections officials are able to verify the date of mailing through available
USPS tools, then the postmark shall be considered to be present and/or legible,
and the verified date is the date of the postmark.
(c) If elections officials are not able to
verify the date of mailing through available USPS tools, then elections
officials shall accept a signed declaration on the ballot return envelope as
evidence of the date of mailing. Based on that evidence, the elections official
shall accept and count the valid ballots.
(d) Elections officials shall handle ballots
challenged due to failure to sign the ballot return envelope or due to a
nonmatching signature as required by ORS
254.431.
Elections officials shall complete the process described in ORS
254.431 before determining whether to accept the ballot.
(e) Ballot return envelopes received after
the Election Day Deadline that do not contain a signature are not valid ballots
and shall not be counted.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 247.005, ORS 246.110 & ORS 254.470
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 254.470 & HB 3291 (2021)
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