According to Administrator of Elections Gab Lowe, the Scott County
Election Commission will hold a Town Hall meeting on Tuesday, November 1, 2011
at 5:00 p.m. in the conference room of the
The major points of the new valid photo ID law include:
·
A voter is required to produce a federal or state government-issued
photo ID before being allowed to vote. Some examples of a valid photo ID, even
if expired, are a Tennessee driver license, U.S. passport, Department of Safety
photo ID card, state or federal employee photo identification card, or a U.S.
military photo ID. Student college IDs will not be accepted
for voting purposes.
Free
photo IDs may be obtained from any Department of Safety driver license testing
station. Registered voters must sign an
affidavit stating that the photo ID is for voting purposes, that they are a
registered voter, and that they do not have any other valid government-issued
photo ID. The Department of Safety will
not issue a free photo ID if the person already has a valid government-issued
photo ID
·
Voters
who are unable to produce a valid photo ID will be allowed to vote a provisional
ballot, which is a paper ballot, at the polls.
Voters casting a provisional ballot will have until two (2) business
days after Election Day to return to the election commission office to show a
valid photo ID.
·
Voters with
a religious objection to being photographed, or voters who are indigent and
unable to obtain a photo ID without paying a fee - for example, the voter
cannot pay for a birth certificate for proof of citizenship - may sign an oath affirming to the information and will be allowed
to vote on the machines.
·
Voters who vote absentee by mail, voters who are hospitalized, and
voters who
live in licensed nursing homes or assisted living centers and vote at the
facilities are not required to show photo IDs. Registered voters over the age of 65 may
request an absentee ballot and vote by mail.
“The goal of the town hall
meeting is to educate the public and prepare voters for the upcoming 2012
elections,” stated Lowe. “We want voters
to have plenty of time to obtain a valid photo ID if they do not already
possess one. We encourage everyone to
attend the November 1 meeting,” she added.
For more information about
the new voting requirements, contact Mark Goins,
coordinator of elections, or Andrew Dodd, elections specialist, in the state Division
of Elections at 1-877-850-4959 or your local county election commission at
423-663-3210.