The election officials shall review all affidavit envelopes received. The review of envelopes may commence upon receipt and shall commence no later than the day after election day; provided, that no ballot shall be counted before 8:00 p.m. on election day or the closing of the polls.
The election officials shall examine each affidavit envelope and shall determine whether:
A. | The voter certificate is signed with a valid signature; |
B. | The voter identification is verified; |
C. | The witness information is complete and legible; |
D. | The ballot is postmarked no later than the day of the election or the USPS can verify receipt of the envelope on or before election day and received not later than the opening of the public canvass. |
If a signature is missing or determined to be in question, the borough clerk shall, within three days of initial review of the envelope, send a letter to the voter explaining the lack of a valid signature. The letter shall be sent to the address to which the ballot was mailed. The voter may:
A. Complete the form included with the letter and return the form to the municipality at the address specified on the form; or
B. Come to the location identified in the letter and provide the necessary signature or validate the signature. Upon arrival, the voter shall present valid identification to an election official and be allowed to either:
1. In the case of a missing signature, sign the envelope; or
2. In the case of an alleged invalid signature, sign a form provided by the municipality authenticating the signature on the envelope.
If a missing or invalid signature is not corrected by the voter prior to the canvass meeting, the ballot will not be counted.
(Ord. 18-17 § 2)