You are reading

Gov. Hochul Signs Sen. Gianaris’ Voting Reform Bills Into Law

Early voting site (NYC BOE via Twitter)

Dec. 27, 2021 By Allie Griffin

Governor Kathy Hochul signed two bills into law last week that were sponsored by state Senator Michael Gianaris that aim to improve the voting system.

One bill requires absentee ballots to be counted by election night, while the other requires the state to increase the number of early voting sites in each county.

The latter aims to cut down the amount of time candidates and the public have to wait to know the results of elections — as more and more races have been called based on absentee votes during the pandemic.

For instance, many election results in the city were delayed this year because the New York City Board of Election only releases the tally of in-person votes — without absentees counted — on election night. In tight races, voters waited weeks until the final count was released and a winner could be determined.

Gianaris’s legislation would require local boards of election to count the absentee ballots as they come in, so the full — albeit unofficial — count is released on election night. It takes effect on Jan. 1, 2022.

“To increase faith in our democracy, people should be able to vote more easily and know election results in a timely manner,” Gianaris said in a statement. “That includes ensuring voters do not wait on lengthy lines to vote early, and requiring absentee ballots to be counted more expeditiously.”

His other bill requires local boards to open at least one early voting place for every 30,000 registered voters in each county. It would nearly double the number of early voting sites across the state and expand hours at each site.

The line of people waiting to vote at York College on the first day of Early Voting in October 2020 (Former Acting Queens Borough President Sharon Lee via Twitter)

The bill aims to cut back on lines outside early voting sites like those many voters experienced ahead of the November 2020 election. The legislation goes into effect on April 1, 2022.

Gianaris thanked Hochul for signing both bills into law.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Long Island man pleads guilty to ‘sadistic’ 2020 crime spree, including Queens kidnappings

A Long Island man is facing two decades in prison after he admitted he crossed into Queens multiple times during the summer of 2022 to commit a “sadistic crime spree,” according to Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz.

Gil Iphael, 25, of Copiague Street in Valley Stream, pleaded guilty in Queens Supreme Court on Thursday to kidnapping, robbery, and promoting prostitution for three disturbing incidents in which his victims were enticed to go to locations for sex, then detained, assaulted, and robbed them with the help of a female co-defendant from Brooklyn.

Teen gunman held without bail after fatal shooting of Brooklyn cheerleader in Holliswood: DA

The 16-year-old boy who allegedly shot and killed a Brooklyn cheerleader inside a Holliswood home on Saturday, Feb. 15, is being held without bail after he made his first court appearance on Monday night.

The teenager, who was not identified because he is a minor, was arraigned in Queens Criminal Court on a complaint charging him with manslaughter in the second degree and criminal possession of a weapon, an armed felony offense.