Arizona 2022 2022 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1460 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 06/06/2022

                      	SB 1460 
Initials SJ 	Page 1 	Transmitted 
 
ARIZONA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Fifty-fifth Legislature 
Second Regular Session 
Senate: GOV DP 7-0-0-0 | 3
rd
 Read 17-12-1-0 
House: GE DPA 11-2-0-0 | 3
rd
 Read 57-0-3-0 
Final Pass: 20-9-1-0 
 
SB 1460: election law amendments 
Sponsor: Senator Shope, LD 8 
Transmitted to the Governor 
Overview 
Makes various modifications to statutes relating to elections. 
History 
A.R.S. Title 16 outlines the requirements for the conduct of elections in this state.  The Secretary 
of State is required by statute to provide a system for qualified electors to sign a nomination 
petition for candidates for county office, city or town office and the office of precinct committeeman 
by way of a secure internet portal. This system must only allow qualified electors who are eligible 
to sign a petition for a particular candidate to sign the petition and must provide a method for the 
qualified elector's identity to be verified.  A qualified candidate may use this system to collect up 
to the minimum number of required nomination petition signatures (A.R.S. § 16-317). 
Provisions 
Call of elections 
1. Increases the time period for when each county board of supervisors must give written notice 
regarding a consolidated election program from 180 days to 210 days before each 
consolidated election date prescribed in statute. (Sec. 4) 
2. Expands the time period for calling nonpartisan elections and elections held by a school 
district, city or town that are not held concurrently with a general election from no later than 
150 days to no later than 180 days before the election date. (Sec. 5) 
3. Stipulates that for the publishing of a call of and notice of a nonpartisan election, the governing 
body must post the call of election on their public website, if there is no newspaper of general 
circulation in the election district, and at other locations where the governing body customarily 
posts public notices of their public meetings. (Sec. 6, 7) 
Elections after redistricting 
4. Directs the county board of supervisors, if after October 1 of the year before the year of a 
general election, to further adjust precinct boundaries due to the redistricting of election 
districts as prescribed by law and to adjust these precinct boundaries as soon as is 
practicable. (Sec. 12) 
5. Maintains that the county recorder must transfer voters who reside in a new precinct if new 
precinct boundaries are established as prescribed in statute. (Sec. 13) 
6. Specifies that the precincts adopted by October 1 of the year before the year of a general 
election become effective no later than January 2 of the year of the next general election. 
(Sec. 13)    	SB 1460 
Initials SJ 	Page 2 	Transmitted 
7. States that the following apply if redistricting requires adjustment of precinct boundaries after 
October 1 of the year before the year of a general election: 
a) The county recorder must transfer to the new precinct, within 60 days after adoption of the 
new precinct boundaries, all voters who reside in a new precinct as a result of the precinct 
boundary adjustments; 
b) The county recorder must mail the precinct change notice to each household containing 
a registered voter unless a sample ballot containing the precinct number or name is mailed 
before the primary election; and 
c) Precincts adopted after October 1 of the year before the year of a general election become 
effective no later than the first date for filing of nomination petitions in the year of the next 
general election. (Sec. 13) 
Early ballots 
8. Mandates that a voter be issued a standard ballot after presenting identification if the voter 
surrenders the early ballot to the precinct inspector and the voter is not otherwise required to 
be issued a provisional ballot. (Sec. 17) 
9. Specifies that the early ballot that is surrendered must be retained by the precinct inspector 
and unopened in its affidavit envelope. (Sec. 17) 
10. Declares that the following apply for elections conducted using an electronic poll book or 
similar system with continuous voter usage updates: 
a) The voter may be issued a standard ballot after presenting identification if the electronic 
poll book or other system indicates that the voter's early ballot has not been accepted by 
the county recorder or returned and the voter is not otherwise required to be issued a 
provisional ballot; and 
b) The voter may not be issued a standard ballot and may only be issued a provisional ballot 
if the electronic poll book or other system indicates that the voter's early ballot has been 
accepted by the county recorder or received. (Sec. 17) 
Address confidentiality program 
11. Directs the Secretary of State, when a person with an existing voter registration record 
becomes an Address Confidentiality Program (Program) participant, to secure the 
participant's voter registration record and notify the appropriate county recorder of the 
participant's: 
a) Secured status; 
b) Current residence address; and 
c) Substitute residence address to revise the voter registration record. (Sec. 18) 
12. Stipulates that a Program participant who is not already registered to vote may register to vote 
using the substitute address and must provide the election official with the participant's actual 
residence address for the purpose of precinct designation. (Sec. 18) 
Miscellaneous 
13. Specifies that the provisional ballot of a registered voter who has corrected the residence 
address on the elector's voter registration will be processed after signature verification. (Sec. 
1) 
14. Directs the county recorder to send the required notice to electors who have their voter record 
information sealed at least six months before the January 5 removal date. (Sec. 2) 
15. Allows a county recorder to additionally use the information provided by an electronic voter 
registration information center to identify registered voters whose addresses may have 
changed. (Sec. 3)    	SB 1460 
Initials SJ 	Page 3 	Transmitted 
16. Removes the requirement for the change in address to be a different residence address in the 
same county and for the county recorder to change the registration records to reflect the new 
address. (Sec. 3) 
17. Removes the specification of the duties of officers relating to city or town primary elections. 
(Sec. 11) 
18. Removes the requirement for there to be a square for the voter to make a cross indicating 
preference on a ballot for an election relating to a groundwater basin being designated an 
active management area. (Sec. 19) 
19. Modifies the definition of eligible person. (Sec. 2) 
20. Defines public official. (Sec. 2) 
21. Makes technical and conforming changes. (Sec. 1, 5, 7-14) 
 
☐ Prop 105 (45 votes)     ☐ Prop 108 (40 votes)      ☐ Emergency (40 votes) ☐ Fiscal Note