Some absentee voters may stretch law's intent Five Star Late Lift Edition

St. Louis has seen a steady stream of people since absentee in- person voting opened at the end of September. About 4,300 absentee ballots have been cast, including mail-ins. Typically, an absentee voter must sign the outside of the envelope that's mailed. But rules adopted Oct. 23 waive the re...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSt. Louis post-dispatch
Main Authors Wagman, Jake, Of the Post-Dispatch Tim Rowden, Peter Shinkle and Mark Schlinkmann of the Post-Dispatch contributed to this report
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published St. Louis, Mo Pulitzer, Inc 30.10.2004
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Summary:St. Louis has seen a steady stream of people since absentee in- person voting opened at the end of September. About 4,300 absentee ballots have been cast, including mail-ins. Typically, an absentee voter must sign the outside of the envelope that's mailed. But rules adopted Oct. 23 waive the requirement if the ballot is cast in person at the Election Board's office in Maplewood. The rationale, officials said, is that it would be an election worker's fault for not making sure the envelope was signed. photo; (1) Photo by GABRIEL B. TAIT / POST-DISPATCH - Voters wait in line Thursday to cast absentee ballots at the St. Louis County Election Board office at 12 Sunnen Drive in Maplewood. (2) Photo by ODELL MITCHELL JR. / POST-DISPATCH - At the St. Clair County Courthouse in Belleville, Greg Turner casts an absentee ballot. Turner, of O'Fallon, Ill., said he voted Thursday because he would be out of town on Election Day. Note: photo #2 appeared in the ILLINOIS FIVE STAR LIFT Edition, page 07.
ISSN:1930-9600