April 2021 Newsletter

Passed: Election Integrity Act of 2021

“Elections and Primaries; persons or entities that mail absentee ballot applications shall mail such application only to eligible registered electors.”
– Georgia General Assembly, S. B. 202, Act No. 9

S.B. 202 Election Integrity Act of 2021, introduced February 18, 2021 by chairman of the Senate Ethics Committee Senator Max Burns, was rewritten twice before the final version of 98 pages passed March 25th. The Senate substitute passed March 8th and went to the House; the House substitute passed the House March 25th. Also on March 25th, when the Senate agreed to the House substitute, the bill, finally, passed. When Governor Kemp signed it late afternoon of March 25th, it became Act 9. S.B. 202 is so comprehensive that the introduction required the bill’s first two and one-half pages to mention the many changes made to Georgia Election Law.

Brief Excerpts from S.B. 202

  • Georgia’s Attorney General will create/maintain an election complaint telephone hotline.
  • The General Assembly will elect a non-partisan chairman of the State Board of Elections.
  • State Election Board reports to the General Assembly any proposed donation for elections.
  • It provides for two Saturday voting days and two optional Sunday voting days.
  • Advance voting begins the 4th Monday before the election, ends Friday before the election.
  • An outline is included for handling the death of a candidate, if it occurs before the election.
  • It addresses voter registration changes for voters who move out of state or are deceased, etc.
  • The number of voters in precincts is restricted to 2,000 to limit wait-time to one hour.
  • If the number of voters exceeds 2,000 in a precinct, another precinct must be created.
  • Advance voting sites are in buildings; portable units are allowed ONLY in emergencies.
  • Ballots must be printed on security paper, except for electronic ballots sent to eligible voters.
  • Absentee ballot application requires (a) name, birthdate, address; (b) number on Georgia driver’s license, government ID or other document; (c) oath; and (d) pen-and-ink signature.
  • Incarcerated individuals who are eligible voters may apply for absentee ballots.
  • Absentee ballots are sent to previous recipients, others upon request and last-election voters.
  • A drop box is allowed for each 100,000 voters, or up to the number of advance voting sites.
  • Drop box construction is prescribed; their placement must be in lighted surveillance areas.
  • Poll hours may be extended, if a judge issues written findings that support the change.
  • By 10:00 pm Election Day, election superintendents must report to the Secretary of State the number of ballots (a) cast that day, (b) cast at advance voting, (c) returned and received by the deadline, (d) provisional ballots cast, plus (e) any other uncounted ballots.
  • After polls close, vote counting begins and proceeds until all are counted: advance votes, absentee ballots, and those cast on Election Day. Results are released to the public.
  • Counting of provisional and other absentee ballots continues day-to-day until completed.
  • Run-off elections will be held 28 days after the preceding election.
  • At least 29 days must be between the call of a special primary and holding a special primary.
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March 2021 Newsletter – Extra Edition

National Danger! H.R. 5 Equality Act in Congress

Redefines Sex to include Preferences, No Exception for Religious Beliefs
“The Religious Freedom Act of 1993 (42 U.S.C. 2000bb et seq.) shall not provide a claim concerning, or a defense to a claim under, a covered title, or provide a basis for challenging the application or enforcement of a covered title.”
– H.R. 5, pp. 21-22

H.R. 5 Equality Act, introduced February 18, 2021 by Representative David Cicilline (D-RI), was introduced previously in 2015. H.R. 5 amends seven titles (II, III, IV, VI, VII, IX, XI) of the Civil Rights Act, in addition to these Acts: Government Employee Rights, Congressional Accountability, Civil Services Reform, Fair Housing, Equal Credit Opportunity, and jury laws.

Each Act would be amended by inserting “(including sexual orientation and gender identity)” after “sex,” wherever it appears. H.R. 5 passed the U.S. House 224-206 on February 25, 2021 with 3 Republicans voting YES. Two representatives abstained.

No Religious Exemption
“The Religious Freedom Act of 1993 (42 U.S.C. 2000bb et seq.) shall not provide a claim concerning, or a defense to a claim under, a covered title, or provide a basis for challenging the application or enforcement of a covered title.” (H.R. 5, pp. 21-22)
H.R. 5 unconstitutionally prohibits adherence to Bible doctrine and biological fact in federally funded entities. Church and religious entity 501C3 exemption may be deemed federal support. Foster care and adoption agencies could not use religious beliefs to determine child placement. Sex-specific facilities would have to co-mingle men and women. No one could use faith in business dealings, “preferred pronouns” would be mandated, and refusing to use preferred ID could be punishable violations.

ACTION – Oppose. Ask Georgia’s U.S. Senators to vote NO. Senator Jon Osoff, 202 224-3521 and Senator Raphael Warnock, 202 224-3643 or call both toll-free in D.C. at 1 877 762-8762.

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March 2021 Newsletter

ACTION NEEDED! Con Con Bills Passed Senate!

S.R. 28 Requests Congress to Call Article V Constitutional Convention introduced January 28th by Senator Bill Cowsert would (a) limit terms for Representatives in the U.S. House and U.S. Senators. (b) It claims continuing application status until at least two-thirds of the 50 states apply on the same subject. It (c) suggests that Article V Constitutional Conventions can be limited by legislation. However, this bill, inadvertently, indicates otherwise with the latter part of this statement: “the General Assembly of Georgia insists that the convention be solely limited to strict consideration of the subject matter contained in this resolution and that the U.S. Congress enact a severe criminal penalty for persons who violate the finite scope of the call.” The underlined words indicate the probability that con con delegates may stray into other issues. It passed the Senate 34-20 on February 22nd and went to the House Rules Committee.

ACTION – Oppose. Since the Rules Committee has 37 members, please call Representatives Richard Smith Ch., 656-5141; V-Ch., Hatchett, 656-5025; Jasperse, Sec., 656-7153; Democrats Beverly, 656-5058; Drenner, 656-0202, and Holcomb, 656-6372, plus Republicans Ballinger, 656-7153; Kelley, 656-5024; and Carson, 656-7855.

S.R. 29 Application for an Article V Convention of States (COS) introduced January 28th by Senator Ben Cowsert requests that Congress pass a COS limited to passing a balanced budget amendment. The Senate passed it 34-20 February 22nd and it‟s in the House Rules Committee. The explanation of S.R. 28 also pertains to S.R. 29, which passed the Senate 34-20 on February 22nd, as well. Both S.R. 28 and S. R. 29 are in the House Rules Committee.

ACTION – Oppose. The Rules Committee has 37 members, please call the few members listed above under S.R. 28.

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February 2021 Newsletter – Extra Addition

Online Link to Your Legislators
A Brief Tutorial

To learn your legislators’ names, (a) access https://www.openstates.org/find_your_legislator/, (a) where appropriate, type your street address, state and zip code for the link to their House and Senate district numbers. (b) Click a number for either your senator’s or representative’s name and (c) click the other number for the other’s name. (e) Then click on each name to access their pictures and contact numbers. You may email them by putting a period between their first and last name, then add @house.ga.gov for representatives or @senate.ga.gov for senators.

For example: Peter.Rabbit@senate.ga.gov; Minnie.Mouse@house.ga.gov.

H.B. 258 Sexual Offenses, Age of Consent introduced February 4th by Representative Steven Sainz would raise the age of consent for sodomy from age 10 to age 16. Current law that allows 10-year-olds to consent to sodomy would not be affected, but this adds to current law a new subsection that states: “(e) when the alleged victim is under age 16, consent of the victim shall not be a defense to a prosecution under this Code section.” Further change is needed, as well.

ACTION – Support. Although age 10 for consent needs to be raised, too, this change is an improvement. Call Judiciary Non-Civil Committee Representatives Burchett, Ch., 404 656-5705; Reeves, V-Ch., 651-7737; Gravley, Sec., 656-5025; Efstration, 656-5125; Ballinger, 656-7153; Boddie, 656-0287; Byrd, 656-0213; Cooper, 656-5069; Kendrick, 656-0109; Lopez, 656-0298; McLaurin, 656-0202 Momtahan 656-0178; Setzler, 656-5143; Smith, 657-1803.

H.B. 276 School Athletes Compete According to Biological Sexual ID Representative Wes Cantrell introduced February 8th applies to athletic teams of local school systems, private schools or institutions of the University System of Georgia to prohibit competition with teams of other such schools that allow biological males to participate in athletics designated for females. Biological sex is determined by reproductive biology and genetics at birth.

H.B. 372 High School Athletes Compete According to Biological Sexual ID introduced February 10th by Representative Rick Jasperse does not affect lower grades, but requires high school athletes who are biological males to participate in sports as males. Students whose biological ID is female would participate in events or activities with biological females only.

ACTION – Support both H.B. 276 & H.B. 372. Call Education Committee Representatives Dubnik, Ch., 656-0213; Erwin, V-Ch., 656-0188; Belton, Sec., 656-3947; Benton, 656-5126; Cantrell, 656-0152; Carter, 656-0220; Cheokas, 463-7853; England, 463-2247; Evans, 656-0109; Glanton, 657-1803; Hill, 656-0325; Howard, 656-6372; Jasperse, 656-7153; Jan Jones, 656-5072; Todd Jones, 463-2246; LaRiccia, 651-7737; Mainor, 656-0126; Nguyen, 656-0314; Nix, 656-5146; Paris, 656-0109; Rich, 656-5087; Setzler, 656-5143; Wade, 656-0188; and Wilson, 656-6372.

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