Texas 2017 85th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2691 Comm Sub / Bill

Filed 05/19/2017

                    By: Bonnen of Galveston, et al. H.B. No. 2691
 (Senate Sponsor - Huffman)
 (In the Senate - Received from the House May 15, 2017;
 May 15, 2017, read first time and referred to Committee on State
 Affairs; May 19, 2017, reported adversely, with favorable
 Committee Substitute by the following vote:  Yeas 8, Nays 1;
 May 19, 2017, sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote
 COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR H.B. No. 2691 By:  Huffman


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to certain election practices and procedures.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 32.002, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (c-1) to read as follows:
 (c-1)  For purposes of this subsection, the county chair
 shall provide a list of names of persons eligible for appointment as
 election judges.  Judges of countywide polling places established
 under Section 43.007 must be appointed from the list of names of
 persons submitted by the county chair in compliance with Subsection
 (c) except that in appointing a person from the list the
 commissioners court shall apportion the number of judges in direct
 proportion to the percentage of precincts located in each county
 commissioner's precinct won by each party in the last gubernatorial
 election, the commissioners court is not required to make the
 appointments based on specific polling locations or precincts, a
 presiding judge or alternate presiding judge is not required to
 serve in a polling place located in the precinct in which the judge
 resides, and more than one presiding judge or alternate presiding
 judge may be selected from the same precinct to serve in polling
 places not located in the precinct in which the judges reside. The
 county chairs may submit, and the commissioners court may
 preapprove, the appointment of more presiding judges or alternate
 presiding judges than necessary to fill available positions. The
 county clerk may select an individual whose appointment was
 preapproved by the commissioners court to fill a vacancy in a
 position that was held by an individual from the same political
 party. Other than a judge's party affiliation, nothing in this
 subsection precludes a county clerk from placing an election
 officer at a countywide polling place based on the need for services
 at that location.
 SECTION 2.  Section 32.006(a), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  The county chair of a political party holding a primary
 election shall appoint for each primary[, with the approval of the
 county executive committee,] the judges for each precinct in which
 the election will be held in the county and fill any vacancy that
 occurs in the position of presiding judge or alternate presiding
 judge.
 SECTION 3.  Section 32.009(d), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (d)  A notice to a presiding judge must state the name, [and]
 address, and any available telephone number and e-mail address of
 the alternate, and a notice to an alternate must state the name,
 [and] address, and any available telephone number and e-mail
 address of the presiding judge.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter A, Chapter 32, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 32.012 to read as follows:
 Sec. 32.012.  PROVISION OF INFORMATION RELATING TO ELECTION
 JUDGES APPOINTED BY COMMISSIONERS COURT.  (a)  After the
 commissioners court appoints a presiding election judge and an
 alternate presiding judge, the county clerk shall provide to the
 county chair of each political party a list of the individuals
 appointed by the commissioners court.
 (b)  The appointment list must be provided in writing.
 SECTION 5.  Subchapter A, Chapter 32, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 32.013 to read as follows:
 Sec. 32.013.  ELECTION JUDGES FOR EARLY VOTING AT
 RESIDENTIAL CARE FACILITY; QUALIFICATIONS; OATH. (a) Additional
 election judges shall be selected to serve at a residential care
 facility under Chapter 107 in the same manner as election judges are
 selected to serve at a polling place for early voting by personal
 appearance under this chapter. The county chair of a political
 party shall indicate on the list of names of persons if a person is
 willing to serve as an election judge under Chapter 107.
 (b)  An election judge serving at a residential care facility
 may be a volunteer, an employee of the authority conducting the
 election, or compensated by the authority conducting the election
 in the same manner as an election judge for a polling place for
 early voting by personal appearance.
 (c)  A person may not serve as an election judge for a
 residential care facility if at any time during the two years
 preceding the election, the person has been employed at a
 residential care facility in the county where the person seeks to
 serve as an election judge.
 (d)  Before beginning the duties of an election judge under
 Chapter 107, each individual appointed to serve as an election
 judge at a residential care facility shall sign and date this oath:
 I swear (or affirm) that I will not in any manner request or
 seek to persuade or induce any voter to vote for or against any
 candidate or measure to be voted on, and that I will faithfully
 perform my duty as an officer of the election and guard the purity
 of the election.
 I have read the statutes and training materials provided and
 will conduct this election accordingly.
 I understand that failing to follow procedures exactly may
 result in invalidation of the voter's ballot.
 I will not unduly influence or pressure a person to
 participate or cast a ballot in the election.
 I will not influence the choice of a voter to choose a
 particular primary ballot, vote in a particular race or election,
 or vote on a particular proposition.
 Signed: ________________________
 This ___ day of ____, 20__.
 (e)  The secretary of state shall provide training for an
 election judge serving under Chapter 107.
 SECTION 6.  Section 32.114(e), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (e)  An election judge, early voting clerk, or deputy early
 voting clerk in charge of an early voting polling place is entitled
 to compensation for attending the training program at an hourly
 rate fixed by the appropriate authority in an amount that is equal
 to or greater than the federal minimum wage [not to exceed $7].
 SECTION 7.  Section 43.007, Election Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a), (c), and (d) and adding Subsections (m)
 and (n) to read as follows:
 (a)  The secretary of state shall implement a program to
 allow each commissioners court participating in the program to
 eliminate county election precinct polling places and establish
 countywide polling places for:
 (1)  each general election for state and county
 officers;
 (2)  each election held on the uniform election date in
 May and any resulting runoff;
 (3)  each election on a proposed constitutional
 amendment;
 (4)  each primary election and runoff primary election
 if:
 (A)  the county chair or county executive
 committee of each political party participating in a joint primary
 election under Section 172.126 agrees to the use of countywide
 polling places; or
 (B)  the county chair or county executive
 committee of each political party required to nominate candidates
 by primary election agrees to use the same countywide polling
 places; and
 (5)  each election of a political subdivision located
 in the county that is held jointly with an election described by
 Subdivision (1), (2), (3), or (4).
 (c)  In conducting the program, the secretary of state shall
 provide a training manual for election judges and clerks appointed
 to work at a countywide polling place and for an audit of the voting
 system [direct recording electronic voting] units used, including
 any type of voting system unit described by Subsection (d)(4),
 before and after the election, and during the election to the extent
 such an audit is practicable.
 (d)  The secretary of state shall select to participate in
 the program each county that:
 (1)  has held a public hearing under Subsection (b);
 (2)  has submitted documentation listing the steps
 taken to solicit input on participating in the program by
 organizations or persons who represent the interests of voters;
 (3)  has implemented a computerized voter registration
 list that allows an election officer at the polling place to verify
 that a voter has not previously voted in the election;
 (4)  uses either direct recording electronic voting
 machines or a voting system capable of printing all available
 ballot styles of that polling place; and
 (5)  is determined by the secretary of state to have the
 appropriate technological capabilities.
 (m)  In adopting a methodology under Subsection (f), the
 county must ensure that:
 (1)  each county commissioner's precinct contains at
 least one countywide polling place; and
 (2)  the total number of permanent branch and temporary
 branch polling places open for voting in a county commissioner's
 precinct does not exceed more than twice the number of permanent
 branch and temporary branch polling places in another county
 commissioner's precinct.
 (n)  To the greatest extent possible, countywide polling
 places shall be located in a precinct where the political party that
 received the greatest number of votes in the last gubernatorial
 election is the same political party with which the presiding judge
 is affiliated.
 SECTION 8.  Section 85.009(b), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  Before July of each year, the county chair of each
 political party holding a primary election in the county shall
 submit in writing to the county clerk a list of names of persons in
 order of preference for each early voting polling place who are
 eligible for selection as an election officer.  The county chair
 may supplement the list of names of persons until the 30th day
 before early voting begins in case an appointed election officer
 becomes unable to serve.  The county clerk shall appoint the first
 person meeting the applicable eligibility requirements from the
 list submitted in compliance with this subsection by the party with
 the highest number of votes in the county as the presiding judge
 [election officer] of that polling place and the first person
 meeting the applicable eligibility requirements from the list
 submitted in compliance with this subsection by the party with the
 second highest number of votes in the county as the alternate
 presiding judge [election officer] of that polling place.  The
 county clerk shall appoint additional election officers for each
 polling place in the manner described by Subsection (a).  The
 county clerk may reject the list if the persons whose names are
 submitted on the list are determined not to meet the applicable
 eligibility requirements.
 SECTION 9.  Subchapter A, Chapter 85, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 85.0091 to read as follows:
 Sec. 85.0091.  EARLY VOTING ELECTION OFFICERS FOR PRIMARY
 ELECTIONS. (a) The early voting clerk shall select election
 officers for a primary election for the main early voting polling
 place and any branch polling place in a manner consistent with
 Section 85.009, except that the early voting clerk shall prescribe
 the deadline by which county chairs must submit names of persons
 eligible to serve as election officers during early voting.
 (b)  This section does not apply to a joint primary governed
 by Section 172.126.
 SECTION 10.  Subchapter C, Chapter 85, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 85.0651 to read as follows:
 Sec. 85.0651.  MOVABLE POLLING PLACE OPERATION. (a)
 Notwithstanding Sections 85.064 and 85.065, early voting by
 personal appearance at a movable polling place established under
 Section 85.062 shall be conducted for at least eight hours on each
 day voting is conducted.
 (b)  The location of a movable polling place may be changed
 only after the polling place has been open for at least two days of
 voting at its current location.
 SECTION 11.  Section 86.003, Election Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a) and (b) and adding Subsection (e) to read
 as follows:
 (a)  The balloting materials for voting by mail shall be
 provided to the voter by mail, unless the ballot is delivered to a
 voter for early voting under Chapter 107. A ballot provided by any
 other method may not be counted.
 (b)  Subject to Subsection (c), the balloting materials
 shall be addressed to the applicable address specified in the
 voter's application. The election officer providing the ballot may
 not knowingly deliver [mail] the materials to an address other than
 that prescribed by this section.
 (e)  A voter who makes an application to vote early by mail on
 the grounds of age or disability requesting that the ballot be sent
 to the address of a residential care facility, as defined by Chapter
 107, is required to vote as provided by that chapter if five or more
 applications for ballots to be voted by mail are made by residents
 of the same facility who request that the ballots be sent to that
 facility.
 SECTION 12.  Section 86.004, Election Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (c) to read as
 follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (b) or (c), the
 balloting materials for voting by mail shall be mailed to a voter
 entitled to vote by mail not later than the seventh calendar day
 after the later of the date the clerk accepts the voter's
 application for a ballot to be voted by mail or the date the ballots
 become available for mailing, except that if that mailing date is
 earlier than the 45th day before election day, the balloting
 materials shall be mailed not later than the 38th day before
 election day.
 (c)  An application to vote early by mail on the grounds of
 age or disability requesting that the ballot be sent to the address
 of a residential care facility, as defined by Chapter 107, shall be
 held until the earlier of:
 (1)  the date on which five or more applications for
 ballots to be voted by mail made by residents of the same facility
 who request that the ballots be sent to that facility have been
 received, in which case ballots may not be mailed to the voters and
 voting shall be conducted under Chapter 107; or
 (2)  the last day on which an application for a ballot
 to be voted by mail may be received, after which the ballot shall
 promptly be mailed to the voter.
 SECTION 13.  Subtitle B, Title 7, Election Code, is amended
 by adding Chapter 107 to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 107. EARLY VOTING AT A RESIDENTIAL CARE FACILITY
 Sec. 107.001.  PURPOSE. This chapter is enacted to
 facilitate voting in a nursing home, other long-term care facility,
 or retirement center in which a significant number of occupants,
 patients, or residents lack adequate transportation to an
 appropriate polling place, need assistance in voting, are 65 years
 of age or older or are disabled, or are indefinitely confined.
 Sec. 107.002.  DEFINITION. In this chapter, "residential
 care facility" means a facility licensed and regulated under
 Chapter 242 or 247, Health and Safety Code, with more than 10 beds.
 Sec. 107.003.  APPLICABILITY OF EARLY VOTING BY PERSONAL
 APPEARANCE PROVISIONS. To the extent applicable and not in
 conflict with this chapter, Chapter 85 applies to voting at a
 residential care facility under this chapter.
 Sec. 107.004.  EARLY VOTING AT RESIDENTIAL CARE FACILITY
 REQUIRED. (a)  A voter residing in a residential care facility who
 has applied to vote early by mail on the grounds of age or
 disability and who requested that the ballot be sent to the address
 of the facility must vote as provided by this chapter if five or
 more applications for ballots to be voted by mail were made by
 residents of the same facility who requested that the ballots be
 sent to the facility.
 (b)  If a residential care facility has fewer than five
 residents qualified to vote under this chapter on January 1 of each
 calendar year, the secretary of state may exempt a residential care
 facility from the requirements of this chapter. For this exemption
 to apply, the Department of State Health Services and the facility
 director must provide written confirmation that the exemption
 applies to the residential care facility. The secretary of state
 shall adopt rules to implement this subsection.
 Sec. 107.005.  VOTING LOCATION. (a) The administrator of
 the residential care facility shall make available an area located
 in a common area of the facility for the purposes of voting under
 this chapter. The area shall allow a voter to cast a secret ballot.
 (b)  The facility administrator shall allow posting of
 required notices during the period that voting is conducted under
 this chapter.
 (c)  An election judge may enter the private room of a voter
 who requests that balloting materials be brought to the voter.
 Sec. 107.006.  NOTICE OF ELECTION IN RESIDENTIAL CARE
 FACILITY; DETERMINATION OF TIME FOR VOTING. (a) If early voting at
 a residential care facility is required under this chapter, the
 early voting clerk shall give notice that early voting will occur at
 the facility and appoint election judges for the purpose of
 conducting voting under this chapter.
 (b)  Not later than 5 p.m. on the sixth business day before
 election day, the election judges shall, with the input of the
 administrator of the residential care facility, designate one or
 more times for voting to be conducted. Voting may be conducted not
 earlier than the 29th day before election day and not later than the
 fourth day preceding election day.
 (c)  Notice of the time or times for conducting the election
 shall be posted at the residential care facility by the election
 judge and on the appropriate county's Internet website as soon as
 practicable after determining the time and not later than the fifth
 day before the first day on which voting will be conducted at the
 facility.
 (d)  The secretary of state with the assistance of the
 Department of State Health Services shall create a list of all
 residential care facilities eligible under this chapter on January
 1 of each calendar year in an early voting clerk's jurisdiction.
 The secretary of state shall provide the list to the early voting
 clerk.
 (e)  The early voting clerk shall maintain a public list of
 all residential care facilities in the clerk's jurisdiction at
 which voting is conducted under this chapter. The list must be
 available on the Internet website of the authority conducting the
 election or posted at the location where public notices are posted
 in the county courthouse or authority's public building, as
 applicable, and for each facility state:
 (1)  the name of the facility;
 (2)  the address of the facility;
 (3)  the dates and times for voting at the facility; and
 (4)  the names of the election judges for the facility.
 (f)  At any time during the year and regardless of whether
 five or more voters at a residential care facility have requested
 ballots to be voted by mail, the early voting clerk may post notice
 of the dates on which voting will be conducted at the facility under
 this chapter for each election. If the early voting clerk posts
 notice under this subsection, the names of the election judges and
 the hours during which voting will be conducted must be posted at
 least 48 hours before voting is conducted at the facility,
 notwithstanding Subsection (c).
 Sec. 107.007.  CONDUCT OF ELECTION. (a) In an election
 conducted under this chapter, the early voting clerk shall deliver
 to the election judges for a residential care facility the
 balloting materials for any qualified voters who have requested a
 mail ballot for an election that would have been otherwise mailed to
 the voter at the facility under Chapter 86.
 (b)  The election judges for a residential care facility
 shall deliver the balloting materials to the voter at the facility.
 (c)  The voter shall mark and seal the ballot in the same
 manner as a voter voting under Chapter 86.
 (d)  Both election judges for the residential care facility
 shall sign the carrier envelope as witnesses. In the space for the
 address of the witness, each election judge shall write in
 "Residential Care Facility Election Judge."
 (e)  The election judges shall accept the carrier envelope
 and place the envelope in a secure bag or ballot container for
 transport to the early voting clerk's office.
 (f)  Ballots voted at a residential care facility shall be
 processed for counting in the manner provided by Chapter 86 for a
 ballot voted by mail.
 Sec. 107.008.  VOTING BY ADDITIONAL QUALIFIED VOTERS. (a)
 The early voting clerk shall produce a list of all additional
 qualified voters who reside at, and are registered to vote at, a
 residential care facility where voting is conducted under this
 chapter.
 (b)  The clerk shall supply the election judges for the
 residential care facility with sufficient additional ballots and
 voting materials to allow any additional qualified voter who
 resides at the facility to vote under this chapter. During the
 voting period, any registered voter who resides at the facility may
 complete an application to request a mail ballot as if they were
 voting by mail. An election judge for the facility shall serve as a
 witness for any person who is unable to sign the person's name and
 may witness multiple applications.
 (c)  An election judge for the residential care facility must
 accept a properly completed application for a ballot made under
 this section, and shall provide a ballot to the voter. The election
 judge shall make a notation on an application that it was made under
 this section.
 (d)  A voter who applies for a ballot under this section
 shall vote in the manner provided by Section 107.007, except that
 the voter's ballot must be stored with the voter's application, and
 the voter's ballot may not be counted if the voter was not a
 qualified voter for the election as demonstrated from the
 information contained in the voter's application.
 (e)  An election judge at the residential care facility may
 assist and witness a ballot received by a voter who resides at the
 facility and is not registered to vote at the facility while the
 election judge is present at the facility.
 (f)  The secretary of state may prescribe an application for
 a voter to request a ballot under Subsection (b).
 Sec. 107.009.  RETENTION OF RECORDS. (a)  The election
 judges for the residential care facility shall record the number of
 ballots voted. Both of the election judges for each facility and
 the early voting clerk shall sign and attest to the number of
 ballots issued.
 (b)  On completion of voting under this chapter, the election
 judges must record the number of:
 (1)  completed ballots;
 (2)  spoiled ballots; and
 (3)  unused returned ballots.
 Sec. 107.010.  PROOF OF IDENTIFICATION PRESENTED AT
 RESIDENTIAL CARE FACILITY. (a)  Notwithstanding Section 63.0101 or
 any other law, a voter voting under this chapter may submit a
 statement as proof of identification signed by both election judges
 for the residential care facility that:
 (1)  contains the name and address of the voter; and
 (2)  verifies that the voter is a resident of the
 facility and appears on the list of registered voters.
 (b)  The election judges shall enclose the statement in the
 carrier envelope.
 Sec. 107.011.  ASSISTING VOTER; NOTICE. (a) On written
 request to the early voting clerk by a relative of a registered
 voter in a residential care facility, the clerk may notify the
 relative of the time or times at which election judges will conduct
 voting at the facility. The relative may be present at the facility
 while voting is conducted.
 (b)  A voter may receive assistance in the same manner as
 provided by Subchapter B, Chapter 64.
 (c)  An election judge shall seal a ballot if the voter
 receives assistance from a person who is not an election judge.
 Sec. 107.012.  SECURITY OF BALLOTS AND MATERIALS. (a) On
 completion of the voting each day on which voting is conducted at a
 residential care facility under this chapter, the election judges
 for the facility shall seal the ballot envelopes and any absentee
 ballot applications inside a secure envelope and shall seal the
 envelope and sign the seal. The election judges shall place the
 envelope inside a ballot bag or container.
 (b)  As soon as possible after conducting voting at a
 residential care facility, but not later than 18 hours after
 leaving the facility, the election judges shall deliver the ballot
 bag or container to the early voting clerk.
 Sec. 107.013.  PROVISION OF MAIL BALLOT TO CERTAIN VOTERS.
 (a)  If a qualified voter residing at a residential care facility
 and seeking to vote at the facility under this chapter is not able
 to cast a ballot during any time when voting is conducted at the
 facility, the election judges for the facility shall inform the
 early voting clerk not later than the fourth day before election
 day. The clerk shall mail the ballot to the voter not later than the
 fourth day before election day.
 (b)  Any registered voter who did not cast a ballot at the
 residential care facility may cast a ballot by:
 (1)  voting in person on election day; or
 (2)  voting by mail.
 (c)  An election judge shall leave a ballot package for a
 voter who:
 (1)  requested a ballot to be voted by mail and was not
 present during the scheduled time for early voting at the
 residential care facility; and
 (2)  is expected to return to the residential care
 facility before the deadline for returning a ballot by mail.
 (d)  If a voter who requested a ballot to be voted by mail
 under this chapter is temporarily located at another location,
 including by hospitalization:
 (1)  the early voting clerk may mail the ballot to the
 voter's temporary address, if known; or
 (2)  the early voting judge may personally deliver the
 ballot package to the voter's temporary address, if known.
 (e)  If an election judge personally delivers a ballot
 package under Subsection (d), the election judge may:
 (1)  allow the ballot to be returned by mail; or
 (2)  accept the marked ballot personally.
 Sec. 107.014.  WATCHERS. (a) In an election held under this
 chapter, a watcher may observe the process of ballot distribution
 in the common areas of a residential care facility in a manner
 consistent with Chapter 33.
 (b)  A political party entitled to have the names of its
 nominees placed on the general election ballot may appoint a
 watcher to accompany the election judges to a residential care
 facility.
 (c)  A political party seeking to appoint a watcher to serve
 at a residential care facility shall submit the name of the watcher
 to the county election officer of the county in which the facility
 is located not later than the close of business on the last business
 day before the date the watcher seeks to observe the conduct of the
 election under this chapter.
 (d)  A watcher must present the watcher's certificate of
 appointment to an election judge for the residential care facility
 on arrival at the facility.
 (e)  A watcher has access to the same areas of the
 residential care facility as an election judge.
 Sec. 107.015.  LIMITATIONS ON APPLICABILITY OF CHAPTER. (a)
 The early voting clerk is not required to send election judges to
 conduct an election at a residential care facility unless there are
 at least five registered voters who are residents of the facility.
 (b)  This chapter does not prevent a registered voter from:
 (1)  voting early by personal appearance;
 (2)  voting on election day; or
 (3)  voting by mail from an address other than the
 residential care facility, including from the address of a family
 member designated under Section 84.002.
 Sec. 107.016.  RULES. The secretary of state may adopt rules
 and prescribe procedures for voting at a residential care facility
 in accordance with this chapter.
 SECTION 14.  Subchapter A, Chapter 242, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 242.0181 to read as follows:
 Sec. 242.0181.  COMPLIANCE WITH CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS
 REGARDING EARLY VOTING. An institution must comply with Chapter
 107, Election Code.
 SECTION 15.  Subchapter A, Chapter 247, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 247.008 to read as follows:
 Sec. 247.008.  COMPLIANCE WITH CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS
 REGARDING EARLY VOTING. An assisted living facility must comply
 with Chapter 107, Election Code.
 SECTION 16.  Sections 32.006(b), 32.010, 42.002(c), and
 43.007(i), Election Code, are repealed.
 SECTION 17.  Sections 242.0181 and 247.008, Health and
 Safety Code, as added by this Act, apply only to a license issued or
 renewed on or after the effective date of this Act. A license
 issued or renewed before that date is governed by the law in effect
 on the date the license was issued or renewed, and the former law is
 continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 18.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2017.
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