On November 2, 2022

100,000+Vermonters have mailed in ballots for general election

By Juliet Schulman-Hall/VTDigger

More than 100,000 Vermonters have already voted in this year’s general election.

According to Secretary of State Jim Condos, town and city clerks had received 103,395 mail-in ballots by last Wednesday evening, Oct. 26.

All vote-by-mail ballots were due by Monday, Oct. 31 in order to ensure they will be received on time. If they haven’t mailed their ballots by that date, Condos said, voters should drop them off at their town clerk’s office by Nov. 7 or bring them to their polling place on Nov. 8.

This year’s advance voting tally is lagging behind 2020, when the state had received 175,061 ballots about two weeks before Election Day. But Condos said he “really doubt(s)” that advance voting rates will match the last cycle because it was a presidential election year and early in the Covid-19 pandemic.

By Mike Dougherty/VTDigger
Diane Blodgett opens mail-in ballot envelopes at a polling place in Barre City in 2020. This is the state’s first general elec- tion in which universal mail-in voting is permanent.

This is the first year in which universal mail-in voting is a permanent feature of Vermont elections.

The practice of sending mail-in ballots to all active registered voters was first allowed in Vermont in 2020 to help reduce the spread of Covid. Gov. Phil Scott subsequently signed a universal mail-in voting law for general elections, Act 60, in June 2021.

In 2018, during the entire midterm election, only 72,230 early votes were cast. In 2016, the prior presidential election year, 95,203 total early votes were cast.

This is also the first year that the state has instituted ballot “curing,” a process that allows a voter who might have made a mistake in filling out their ballot to correct the issue and, if fixed correctly, have their ballot counted.

In 2020, voters submitted 1,335 defective ballots, Condos said, and none were cured because there was no process in place. So far this year, town clerks have tagged 334 defective ballots, and 183 have been cured.

“That’s pretty significant,” Condos said. More than half of defective ballots have been cured, and he expects the rate of cured ballots to improve.

Condos added that ballots were redesigned this year to make the ballot instructions more “readable and user friendly,” which he hopes will bring down the overall rate of defective ballots.

Condos said that town clerks send a postcard with options to cure a ballot to voters with defective ballots.

Vermont has about 500,000 registered voters, including more than 440,000 “active” registered voters, according to Condos. Inactive voters have been challenged by a municipality’s Board of Civil Authority, according to state statute.

Following passage of the mail-in voting law, Vermont ranks as the third easiest state to vote in the country, according to the 2022 edition of the Cost of Voting Index, compiled by a trio of researchers for the Election Law Journal. In 2020, Vermont ranked 23rd.

Vermont has same-day voter registration. All U.S. citizens who will be 18 or older on Nov. 8, 2022, are eligible to register to vote.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Amazon to pay $400,000 to Vermont for violating online sales ban on vaping products

October 30, 2024
Attorney General Charity Clark announced that Amazon has agreed to pay $400,000 to the State of Vermont to settle a dispute regarding violations of the state’s delivery sales ban, which prohibits the direct shipping of tobacco products, including e-cigarettes and vaping products, to Vermont consumers. The settlement resolves allegations that third-party sellers on Amazon’s platform…

Lt. governor candidate Rodgers wants Republican voters. Does he want the Republican label, too?

October 30, 2024
By Shaun Robinson/VTDigger In Vermont’s race for lieutenant governor a single label has been front and center. Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman, a Progressive/Democrat and produce farmer from Hinesburg, is facing a challenge from John Rodgers of Glover, a former state lawmaker who owns a stone excavation business and also runs a hemp and cannabis business, who…

Quechee Gorge Bridge inconvenience to be extended

October 30, 2024
By Curt Peterson Drivers on Route 4 in Quechee have been calling the bridge over the gorge “Grumble Strip.” During busy times and tourist season, it can take several minutes to negotiate the way through the traffic signal and the single lane to the other end. Grumblers have a lot of company in their misery…

$19.5m investment will help expand rail infrastructure in Vermont

October 30, 2024
The Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) of the U.S. Dept. of Transportation (USDOT) announced Tuesday, Oct. 29, that it has invested more than $19.5 million in new rail grant funding in Vermont. Nationally, more than $2.4 billion in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding is being invested in 122 rail improvement projects in 41 states and Washington, D.C. These projects…