| Voting FAQs |
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Will you be working or traveling on Election Day?
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- Will you be out of the county on Election Day, but home sometime during the time leading up to the election?
- If your travel is brief and you will be in your home county during the period of Early Voting, which begins 13 days before the election and ends the 3rd day before the election, you can vote in person at the county courthouse or annex to the courthouse. You are not eligible to vote by mail.
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Will you be working or traveling all 13 days leading up to the election?
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Do your hours of employment make voting impossible?
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- If your employment, because of hours worked and distance from the county seat, makes voting in person impossible, you may request an absentee ballot by mail.
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Do you live in another place during part of the year?
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- If you maintain your voting residence in West Virginia and live here the majority of the time, but live elsewhere for part of the year, you may vote absentee by mail.
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Have you been given a job assignment which requires you to live outside of your county or West Virginia?
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- If you have a job assignment which requires you to live outside the county for an extended period of time (up to four years) and your employer can document that the assignment is temporary, you may maintain your voting residence in West Virginia and vote absentee by mail. This provision also covers out-of-county service as an elected or appointed federal or state officer. Please do not attempt to use this provision if you have moved from your previous residence and taken a normal job in another county or state. In that case, you need to move your voter registration to your new residence.
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Do you have health problems or a physical disability?
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- If health problems or disabilities keep you confined to your home or other care facility so that you cannot vote in person, you may apply for a ballot by mail. Be sure to apply early enough so that your application reaches the clerk at least six days before the election.
- If you can no longer get out and are permanently unable to go to the polls, you may apply to be placed on the Special Absentee Voting List to vote by mail.
- A doctor's statement must be filed with your application, but once approved, the clerk will automatically send you an absentee ballot before each election.
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Is your polling place inaccessible to you?
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- Counties try hard to provide fully accessible voting places, but because of the lack of suitable buildings in many rural areas, that is not always possible. If your polling place is inaccessible, you may vote during Early Voting at the clerk's office. You may also apply to have your voter registration transferred to an accessible precinct in your district that is convenient for you.
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Have you been hospitalized because of an emergency and will be in the hospital or care facility 7 days leading up to and including Election Day?
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- Emergency absentee voting is available when a person is suddenly hospitalized or unexpectedly admitted to a nursing home within the county, or in some cases, in an adjacent county. The provisions only apply when it is too late to get a ballot by mail.
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Are you a Military or Overseas voter?
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- Click here to access specific information about Military and Overseas Voting.
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Do you currently live outside the U.S., but when you lived in the U.S. you lived in West Virginia?
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- United States citizens who move outside the country continue to be eligible to vote at their last residence in the United States and may vote an absentee ballot by mail.
- You may apply anytime after January 1 of an election year up to the deadline, and may apply for all ballots in an election year on just one application.
- If you are in a very remote area where a ballot mailed to you might not reach you in time to vote, you may vote a write-in ballot. However, this ballot is only acceptable if you have applied for a by-mail ballot and not received it.
- Click here for more information on overseas voting.
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Do you attend school far away from home?
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- Are you a college student who will be at school out of your home county on election day?
- If you are a college student living at school, you have two choices: 1) You may become a resident for voting purposes where you live at college, register and vote there, or 2) you may maintain your residence at home and vote using an absentee ballot by mail.
- If you are a college student living at home but commuting to college in another county, you should vote in person at the polls. If your schedule requires you to be away the entire time the polls are open (6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.), you may vote during early voting at the clerk's office.
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Is voting on election day inconvenient?
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- Is getting to the polls on Election Day inconvenient because of work, transportation or other reasons?
- Any registered voter may vote early in person at the county courthouse or annex to the courthouse during regular business hours beginning the 13th day before the election and ending the 3rd day before the election. In additon, early voting is conducted from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m on Saturdays during the early voting period.
- During the 2009 Regular Session, the Legislature passed a bill allowing for Satellite Early Voting locations in addition to the primary location. Please check with your County Clerk's office to see if Satellite Early Voting is available in your county.
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Are you under incarceration or detention in Jail or in Home?
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- If you are under incarceration or detention in a jail or in a home, you may request an absentee ballot by mail as long as you are not under conviction (including period of probation or parole) of any felony, of treason or of bribery in an election.
- In order to be eligible for the absentee ballot, the affidavit on the second page of the West Virginia Absentee Ballot Application must be completed by a sheriff, chief of police, or authorized deputy.
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