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00000179-cdc6-d978-adfd-cfc6d7d40002Coverage of the issues, races and people shaping Kansas elections in 2016, including statewide coverage in partnership with KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, and High Plains Public Radio.

8 Things To Know If You Want To Vote In The Kansas General Elections

It would be hard not to know there’s a presidential election going on. There’s lots of action at the state level too.

Already, with the results of the August primaries, there’s a lot of turnover in the Legislature. And there are at least 10 Kansas Senate races and 20 House races that are competitive in the general elections.

If you’ve heard anyone say “finish the ballot”, it was probably a Democrat encouraging you to vote all the way down through county commission, school board, and precinct captain, to also make a choice for judicial retention. House GOP leaders have been leading the charge against four Supreme Court Justices they’d like to see ousted because of rulings on school finance, abortion restrictions, and death sentences.

Of course before you vote on anything you have to be registered.

1. Are you registered?

If you're not sure, you can check your status by searching the Secretary of State's database. If you are registered, your name, address, party, and information about your precinct and polling place will pop up. If your registration is incomplete in any way, you’ll get a “no records found” message. 

If you want to be superduper sure, call your county election office. You can find contact info for your county here.  

2. It’s now the last minute.

The deadline to register to vote in Kansas is Tuesday, Oct. 18.

3. The federal form is your best bet for registering.

It’s just simpler. Here it is.

The Kansas form requires you provide documentary proof of citizenship, like a passport or birth certificate. But the federal form only requires that you swear you’re a citizen under penalty of perjury.

Under a federal court order issued in September, Kansas has to accept federal form registrations without more proof of citizenship. 

The fastest, surest way to register last minute is to fill out that federal form and bring it to your county election office.

4. If you registered at the DMV, you can vote on everything.

So, you went to get your driver’s license and signed up to vote while you were at it. You were registered with the federal form, you don’t have to submit further proof of citizenship, you can go ahead and vote.

There was a lot of confusion about this over the summer leading up to the primaries. Secretary of State Kris Kobach had thousands of “motor-voters” suspended and only wanted them to be allowed to vote in federal contests with provisional ballots.

But, Kobach has since signed an agreement with the ACLU so all voters registered at the DMV or otherwise with the federal form can vote in all elections this November using a standard ballot. 

5. If you’ve used the state form, make sure you’ve submitted proof of citizenship.

Kansas is still requiring proof of citizenship documents for voters registered with the state form.

Kobach’s office says if your proof is missing, you should have received a notice saying your registration is suspended until you submit it. If your registration is suspended you’ll get a provisional ballot and your vote won’t count unless you provide a citizenship document to your county election office or the secretary of state’s office before the election.

The Douglas County Election Office says you have until midnight on the eve of Election Day to provide that proof of citizenship.

If it's been 90 days since you submitted your Kansas voter registration application and you haven't provided a citizenship document, your application will be canceled and you have to reapply. 

Again, the best way to find out your status for sure is to call your county election office.

6. Skip the line, vote in advance.

There could be a wait at the polls on Nov. 8.

Some counties are already fretting about not having enough poll workers, meaning not enough people to check-in voters and distribute ballots. 

It’s hard to say what turnout will be like, especially given the historic unfavorability ratings of the headlining candidates. But for the last presidential election in 2012, more than 811,000 voters turned out on Election Day in Kansas. That year, almost 372,000 voted early. And you can too!

You can go vote in person as early as Oct. 19 (it’s up to each county election office to say exactly when and where, so check with yours) and as late as noon on Nov. 7.

Or you can stay home and vote in your pajamas if you request an advance mail-in ballot by Nov. 4; those start going out to voters on Oct. 19. You have to mail yours back or take it to your county election office by the time the polls close on Election Day. 

7. Registered? Expect a standard ballot.

Kansas election officials can distribute provisional ballots to voters whose registration is in question. Those ballots are later reviewed by the local board of canvassers to determine whether they should count. But if you have successfully registered — signed a federal form, registered at the DMV or filled out the state form and submitted citizenship documents — you should get a standard ballot.

8. One polling place per person on Election Day.

The address where you can cast your ballot on Nov. 8 is on your voter registration card. Don’t know where your registration card is? Look up your polling place.

You may have a different polling place from the person who lives across the street from you. The way polling places are assigned is funny like that; there are multiple polling places for each Legislative district.

Editor's note: After this list was first published, we added to item 5 some detail about deadlines for submitting the proof of citizenship required by the state voter registration form.  And a clarification to item 6, voters can request mail-in ballots until Nov. 4 and can return them until polls close on Election Day. 

Andy Marso is a reporter for KHI News Service, and is on Twitter @andymarso. Kansas Elections Editor Amy Jeffries is based at KCUR, and is on Twitter @amyoverhere. KHI and KCUR are partners in a statewide collaboration covering elections in Kansas.

Copyright 2016 KCUR 89.3

Andy Marso
Andy Marso is a reporter for KCUR 89.3 and the Kansas News Service based in Topeka.
Amy Jeffries
Amy Jeffries is the Kansas elections editor, based at KCUR. She brings together coverage from a collaborative team of reporters affiliated with public radio stations and non-profit media across Kansas.