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  • Forest Grove News Times

    OPINION: Elections officials want people to register to vote

    By Catherine McMullen, Bill Burgess, Tim Scott, Dan Forester, Keri Hinton,

    15 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0onoD5_0vZi7xsi00

    Join local election officials in Clackamas, Marion, Multnomah, Washington and Yamhill counties as we celebrate National Voter Registration Day. Beginning on Tuesday, Sept. 17, we’re encouraging Oregonians to take a few moments to get Vote Ready for the 2024 November general election.

    First celebrated in 2012, National Voter Registration Day has grown into a nationwide, nonpartisan holiday in which election officials, organizations and volunteers join forces to ensure that our family, friends and neighbors are prepared to make their voices heard by making a plan to VOTE!

    Your county elections officials are encouraging voters to take these three steps:

    First, check your voter registration status and make sure your information is up to date at oregonvotes.gov . Voters should update their voter registration any time they move, change their residence or mailing address, change their name, or want to change their party affiliation. The deadline for online registration is 11:59 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 15.

    Second, sign up for a ballot-tracking service. As a voter in these five counties, you can sign up to receive Track Your Ballot alerts via text, phone or email, so you know when your ballot has been mailed to you. After you vote and return your ballot, you will be notified when it has been received and accepted for counting by your county elections office. Voters can sign up for this free service at ballottrax.net/voter or learn more by visiting your county elections website listed below.

    Third, make a plan to vote! Elections officials will begin to mail ballots to voters on Wednesday, Oct. 16. Get prepared and make a plan that includes when you will receive your ballot, when and where you will vote, and how you will be returning your ballot. Ballots can be mailed or returned to any official ballot drop site in the state. To find the closest drop site near you visit oregonvotes.gov . Voted ballots must be mailed with a valid postmark or returned to an official ballot drop site by 8 p.m. on Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 5.

    For every election, county elections officials go to great lengths to ensure the integrity, accuracy, transparency and security of the election process ensuring that all the federal, state and local elections we administer are accessible and secure for all voters in our counties.

    Did you know when every ballot return envelope arrives to one of our offices it is inspected for a voter signature? The signature on the ballot return envelope is compared to the voter’s signature on file in the state’s centralized voter registration system and the signature must match before the ballot is opened and counted. If the signature does not match or is missing, you will receive a letter in the mail with directions on next steps so we can verify your signature and count your ballot. Voters who have signed up for status updates through Track Your Ballot also will be notified via text, phone or email if your local elections officials are unable to be accept your signature, alerting you to get in contact with your local election’s office.

    Your county elections official is a reliable source for trusted and accurate information about elections processes and voter information. We are prepared and ready to conduct November’s general election. We are ready to count your vote! Are you prepared?

    To learn more about voting in your county and for more information about the Nov. 5, general election, please visit your local county elections website listed below.

    Catherine McMullen, Clackamas County clerk

    Bill Burgess, Marion County clerk

    Tim Scott, Multnomah County elections director

    Dan Forester, Washington County elections manager

    Keri Hinton, Yamhill County clerk

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    Comments / 1
    Add a Comment
    Chuck Puke
    14d ago
    I remember when one reporter per story.... this one has five. Five. What happened? Underachieving in every stage in a society. Has intelligence peaked? I'm no genius..... no really, but people seem distracted
    View all comments
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