Florida Courier, August 10, 2012, #32

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Celebrating Ramadan: A closer look at this Islamic observance B1

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VOLUME 20 NO. 32

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AUGUST 10 - AUGUST 16, 2012

TIME TO VOTE With early voting under way around the state, here are some elections myths vs. facts, courtesy of the Florida Division of Elections.

FLORIDA COURIER FILES

Voter purge fight continues

Early voting is defined as “casting a ballot in person prior to Election Day at a location designated by the Supervisor of Elections and depositing the voted ballot in the tabulation system.” The voter uses the same type of voting equipment that is used at the polls on Election Day. Contact your county’s supervisor of elections office for dates, times and location. Voters who want to vote early should present a valid photo identification and a signature identification at the early voting site.

• MYTH: Voters will be turned away if they are wearing campaign apparel. FACT: “Voters may wear campaign buttons, shirts, hats, or any other campaign items when they enter the polling place to vote; voters may not otherwise campaign there.” (Source: The Polling Place Procedures Manual incorporated within Rule 1S-2.034, Florida Administrative Code.) So merely going to the polls wearing campaign paraphernalia is okay, but, by Section 102.031(4), Florida Statutes, one cannot solicit voters within 100 feet of the entrance to any polling place. • MYTH: The address on the driver license must match the address in the voter registration record in order to be able to vote. FACT: The address on the driver license does not need to match the address in the voter registration record. If you have moved and haven’t changed your driver license to reflect your new address, that’s okay. What is important is that you vote in the precinct where See TIME, Page A2

2012 SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES / LONDON, ENGLAND

Focused on finishing

May not be settled until after elections FROM THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA

A legal battle over Florida’s controversial attempt to purge ineligible voters might not be resolved until next year – after this fall’s elections, according to a document filed Wednesday. The federal government filed a lawsuit in June, arguing that Florida was violating election laws in the way it was conducting the purge. U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle signed an order Wednesday that indicated a scheduling conference could be held in January to set a trial date. Hinkle also ordered the state to meet an Aug. 17 deadline to turn over a variety of records to the federal government, including a 180,000-name list that has been at the center of the controversy.

Settlement ‘possible’ In a document filed last week, the federal government said a settlement of the case is possible, though it would hinge on “prompt disclosure” by the state of the list, the name of voters removed from the election rolls and the reasons. The document also said that the federal government issued subpoenas July 30 to nine elections supervisors, seeking information about the lists and voters removed from the rolls. It does not name the nine supervisors. The state countered in the document that there is no need for a lengthy “discovery” period in the case. It said the state is receiving access to a federal Department of Homeland Security database that will allow it to better verify voter eligibility. “Since the state of Florida wants to verify that properly registered voters were not removed from the rolls, the secretary (of state) will promptly use the … database to check whether any of the voters removed from the rolls pursuant to the process challenged in this case were, in fact, citizens,’’ the state said in the document. “In the event that any eligible voters were wrongfully removed, the secretary will ensure that they are immediately restored to the rolls and notified that any prior notice of ineligibility was in error.”

ALSO INSIDE

CHUCK MYERS/MCT

The USA’s Dawn Harper, right, and Kellie Wells clear a hurdle in the final stretch of the women’s 100-meter hurdles at Olympic Stadium. Harper won the silver medal and Wells claimed the bronze. Read an Olympics-related “No Chaser” column on Page A4 and view a page of pictures on Page B3.

Thousands of qualified ex-felons not registered to vote BY MICHAEL PELTIER THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA

More than 13,000 ex-felons may be eligible to vote but don’t know it, the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida said last week, citing data it obtained from the Florida Parole Commission. The ACLU said the commission is sitting on more than 17,000 Restoration of Civil Rights certificates that would notify former felons that they can now register to vote, but which have not reached their intended recipients. The civil rights group crosschecked the names on those certificates with voter registration lists and found that 13,571 of them are not registered voters, presumably because many of them don’t know they’ve been cleared to register.

Not automatic Florida is one of a minority of U.S. states that does not automatically restore civil rights once a felon has completed a sentence. The certificates were sent between 2007 and March 2011, during which time a change in policy spearheaded by former Gov. Charlie Crist allowed nonviolent ex-felons to have their rights automatically restored. The policy was repealed in March 2011 after Florida Gov. Rick Scott and newly elected members of the Florida Cabinet voted to eliminate automatic restoration and again make it more difficult for ex-felons to get their civil rights, including the right to vote, restored.

Searching for ‘non-citizens’ Scott has been aggressively pursuing efforts to clean up the state’s voter rolls because, he says, there are some non-citizens who are ineligible to vote who are registered. Following a legal battle, the state last month gained access to a federal Department of Homeland Security database to continue the effort to re-

SNAPSHOTS NATION | A3

Black president, but no Black agenda FLORIDA | A6

State sees spike in ‘noparty’ voters Carroll on trade mission to homeland

See VOTE, Page A2

COMMENTARY: CHARLES W. CHERRY II: RANDOM THOUGHTS OF A FREE BLACK MIND | A4 COMMENTARY: PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: THE AMERICA WE BELIEVE IN | A5

FINEST | B5

Meet Andre


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