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1999 SESSION
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That § 24.2-705 of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
§ 24.2-705. Emergency applications and absentee ballots for persons incapacitated or hospitalized.
Any person registered and otherwise qualified to vote who becomes incapacitated
on or after the fifth seventh day preceding an election may request at any time
prior to noon on the day preceding the election that an emergency absentee
ballot application be delivered to him. A voter who becomes hospitalized on or
after the fourteenth day preceding the election and who is unable, because of
his condition, to request an absentee ballot earlier than the fifth seventh day
preceding the election may request at any time prior to noon on the day before an election that an
emergency absentee ballot be delivered to him in the hospital. For purposes of this section,
"incapacitated" means hospitalized, ill and confined to his residence, bereaved
by the death of a spouse, child, or parent, or otherwise incapacitated by an
emergency which is found by the electoral board to justify providing an
emergency ballot application; and "hospital" means a hospital as defined in §
32.1-123 and any comparable hospital in the District of Columbia or any state
contiguous to Virginia.
On receipt of the request, the electoral board shall provide an emergency absentee ballot application to the incapacitated voter's designated representative who shall deliver the application to the voter. If the voter is hospitalized, the delivery shall be made to him at the hospital; and if the voter is otherwise incapacitated, the delivery shall be made to him at his current residence address as shown on the registration records. The representative shall be age eighteen or older and shall not be an elected official, a candidate for elected office, or the deputy, spouse, parent, or child of an elected official or candidate.
The application shall be on a form prescribed by the State Board and shall
require the applicant (i) to state the cause of his incapacity, (ii) to state
that he is unable to be present at the polls on election day, and that he was
either incapacitated on or after the fifth seventh day preceding the election
or hospitalized on or after the fourteenth day preceding the election and unable to request the
application earlier than the fifth seventh day preceding the election, (iii) to
designate a representative to receive, deliver and return the ballot, and (iv) to provide other
information required by law for an absentee ballot application.
If the voter is hospitalized, a hospital administrative official or a licensed physician attending the applicant shall certify on the form to the hospitalization of the applicant and the applicant's inability to be present at the polls on election day. If the voter is ill and confined to his residence, a licensed physician or an accredited religious practitioner attending the applicant shall certify on the form to the incapacity of the applicant and the applicant's inability to be present at the polls on election day. If the voter is bereaved, a licensed physician, an accredited religious practitioner or a funeral service licensee (as defined in § 54.1-2800) shall certify on the form to the incapacity of the applicant and the applicant's inability to be present at the polls on election day. If the voter is otherwise incapacitated as determined by the electoral board, the secretary of the electoral board shall certify on the form to the incapacity of the applicant and the applicant's inability to be present at the polls on election day. The applicant shall sign the application and state, subject to felony penalties for making false statements pursuant to § 24.2-1016, that to the best of his knowledge and belief the facts contained in the application are true and correct. His signature shall be witnessed by the designated representative who shall sign and return the completed application to the office of the general registrar no later than 5:00 p.m. on the day preceding the election. For the purposes of this section, "accredited religious practitioner" means a person who has been trained in spiritual healing or the other healing arts and has been so accredited by a formal religious order.
On receipt of the completed application and a determination of the qualification of the applicant to vote, the general registrar or secretary of the electoral board shall provide, in accordance with the applicable provisions of this chapter, an absentee ballot to the designated representative for delivery to the incapacitated voter.
The incapacitated voter shall vote the absentee ballot as provided by law and mark it in the presence of the designated representative. The representative shall complete a statement, subject to felony penalties for making false statements pursuant to § 24.2-1016, that (i) he is the representative of the incapacitated voter; (ii) he personally delivered the ballot to the voter who applied for it; (iii) in his presence, the voter marked the ballot, the ballot was placed in the envelope provided, the envelope was sealed, and the statement on its reverse side was signed by the incapacitated voter; and (iv) the ballot was returned, under seal, to the electoral board at the registrar's office.
The ballot shall be counted only if the ballot is received by the electoral board (i) prior to noon on the day of the election in any county, city, or town which does not have a central absentee voter election district or (ii) prior to the closing of the polls in any county, city, or town which has a central absentee voter precinct.