D R A F T
FOR DISCUSSION ONLY
MILITARY SERVICES AND OVERSEAS
CIVILIAN ABSENTEE VOTERS ACT
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
MEETING IN ITS ONE-HUNDRED-AND-EIGHTEENTH YEAR
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO
JULY 9 - JULY 16,
2009
MILITARY SERVICES AND OVERSEAS
CIVILIAN ABSENTEE VOTERS ACT
WITHOUT PREFATORY NOTE AND WITH REPORTER’S COMMENTS
Copyright 82009
By
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
![]()
The ideas and conclusions
set forth in this draft, including the proposed statutory language and any
comments or reporter=s notes, have not been passed upon by the National
Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws or the Drafting
Committee. They do not necessarily
reflect the views of the Conference and its Commissioners and the Drafting
Committee and its Members and Reporter.
Proposed statutory language may not be used to ascertain the intent or
meaning of any promulgated final statutory proposal.
May 20, 2009
DRAFTING COMMITTEE ON MILITARY SERVICES AND OVERSEAS CIVILIAN ABSENTEE
VOTERS ACT
The Committee appointed by and representing the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in drafting this Act consists of the following individuals:
STEVE
WILBORN,
TERRY
J. CARE, 2300 W. Sahara,
STEPHEN
T. DRAFFIN,
BARRY
C. HAWKINS,
LYLE
W. HILLYARD,
CLAIRE
LEVY, House District 13,
LUKE
MESSER,
SUSAN KELLY NICHOLS, North Carolina Department of Justice, P.O. Box 629, Raleigh, NC 27602-0629
RALPH
G. THOMPSON,
NORA
WINKELMAN, Legal Counsel’s Office, Room 620 Main Capitol,
STEVEN F. HUEFNER, Moritz College of Law, The Ohio State University, 55 West 12th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210, Reporter
EX OFFICIO
Martha Lee Walters,
Jack Davies,
AMERICAN
BAR ASSOCIATION ADVISORS
JOHN DEWITT
JOHN C. KEENEY,
EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR
John A. Sebert,
Copies of this Act may be obtained from:
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
312/450-6600
Support for this project was provided by a
grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts’ “Make Voting Work” project. The views expressed are those of the drafting
committee and do not necessarily reflect the view of Make Voting Work or The
Pew Charitable Trusts.
MILITARY SERVICES AND OVERSEAS CIVILIAN
ABSENTEE VOTERS ACT
SECTION
3. ROLE OF [STATE’S CHIEF ELECTION
AUTHORITY].
SECTION
5. SUPERSEDING OF OTHER LAW.
SECTION
6. ELIGIBILITY TO VOTE.
SECTION
7. REGISTRATION AND [ABSENTEE BALLOT]
APPLICATION
[SECTION
8. STANDING REQUEST FOR [ABSENTEE
BALLOT]
SECTION
9. APPLICATION FOR [ABSENTEE BALLOT].
SECTION
10. TRANSMISSION OF UNVOTED BALLOTS
SECTION
11. CASTING OF BALLOT.
SECTION
12. RECEIPT OF VOTED BALLOT.
SECTION
13. ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION OF
REGISTRATION AND
[ABSENTEE BALLOT] APPLICATION.
SECTION
14. CONFIRMATION OF RECEIPT OF
APPLICATION AND VOTED
BALLOT.
SECTION
15. COLLECTION OF VOTERS’ ELECTRONIC
MAIL ADDRESSES
SECTION
16. ACCEPTANCE OF FEDERAL WRITE-IN
ABSENTEE BALLOT
SECTION
17. PREPARATION OF ELECTION LISTING
SECTION
18. DECLARATION REQUIREMENTS
SECTION
19. NONESSENTIAL REQUIREMENT.
SECTION
20. ISSUANCE OF INJUNCTION
SECTION
21. APPLICATION AND CONSTRUCTION
SECTION
22. RELATION TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN
GLOBAL AND NATIONAL COMMERCE ACT.
SECTION
23. EFFECT ON OTHER STATE AND LOCAL
LAWS.
MILITARY SERVICES
AND OVERSEAS CIVILIAN ABSENTEE VOTERS ACT
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This [act] may be cited as the Military Services and Overseas Civilian Absentee Voters Act.
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS. In this [act]:
(1) “Absent
uniformed services voter” means:
(A)
a member of a uniformed service who, by reason of such service, is absent from
the place of residence where the member is otherwise qualified to vote; or
(B)
a spouse or dependent of a member referred to in subparagraph (A) who, by
reason of the service of the member, is absent from the place of residence
where the spouse or dependent is otherwise qualified to vote.
(2) “Covered
election” means any general, special, primary, or runoff election for federal,
state, or local government office [or a ballot measure] conducted according to
the procedure of [reference election title or other relevant portion of state
code].
(3) “Overseas
voter” means a
(A)
is qualified to vote in this state;
(B)
would be eligible to vote in this state, if this state was the last place in
which the citizen was eligible to vote, or, if the person had been of voting
age, would have been eligible to vote, before leaving the United States; or
(C)
in the case of a citizen who was born outside the United States and who is not
included in subparagraph (A) or (B), would be eligible to vote in this state if
a resident of this state and if this state was the last place in the United
States in which one of the citizen’s parents was eligible to vote.
(4) “Uniformed
services” means the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Merchant
Marines, National Guard, the commissioned corps of the Public Health Service,
and the commissioned corps of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
(5) “
The Act’s definition
of the terms “absent uniformed services voter” and “overseas voter” builds upon
the definitions of these same terms in the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens
Absentee Voting Act (“UOCAVA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1973ff-6(1), but simplifies these
definitions and particularizes them to an enacting state. The Act also adds, in definition (3)(c), a
class of voter not covered under UOCAVA, namely
Because these
“stateless” voters lack a connection with a particular state, the drafting
committee considered limiting the participation of these voters to only federal
elections. As a policy matter, the
committee was divided over whether to impose such a limitation. These voters clearly have interests in
The drafting committee also took note of the fact that limiting stateless voters to federal elections likely would create some additional burdens on state and local elections officials to classify and segregate these voters and treat them differently from other voters, including creating special ballots for them. If these voters are allowed to participate in only federal elections, other sections of the Act also would need modification to effectuate this limitation and ensure that states properly identify and segregate these voters.
(a) [The state’s chief election authority] shall implement this [act].
(b) [The state’s chief election authority] shall serve as the chief state official responsible for implementing the state’s responsibilities under the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973ff et seq.
(c) [The state’s chief election authority] shall provide information regarding voter registration procedures and absentee voting procedures under this [act] to all absent uniformed services voters and overseas voters who wish to register to vote or vote in any jurisdiction in the state. [The state’s chief election authority] may delegate this responsibility only to the state office designated in compliance with the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973ff-1(b)(1).
(d) [The state’s chief election authority] shall develop standard absentee voting materials, including privacy envelopes or their electronic equivalent, transmission envelopes or their electronic equivalent, authentication materials, and voting instructions, to be used in conjunction with the [absentee ballot] of any jurisdiction within the state.
Each
state will need to supply the appropriate title for its chief elections
authority, whether it is the Secretary of State, State Board of Elections, or
other official or entity. The expectation
is that this authority in turn will delegate its duties at least in part to the
same office that the state has designated to fulfill the UOCAVA requirement
that the state designate a state office to facilitate the state’s compliance
with the UOCAVA. Other duties may
naturally devolve to local election officials, depending on how the state has
structured its election processes generally.
The requirement that states develop “standard” voting materials is not meant to require statewide uniformity in voting processes where such uniformity does not already exist. Thus, in states using different voting systems in different jurisdictions around the state, “standard” voting materials may include one standard for jurisdictions using one system, and another standard for jurisdictions using another system. Nevertheless, the state’s chief elections authority should work with local election officials to simplify and standardize as much as possible the materials provided to voters, including developing standard identifying labels and other markings on such materials to expedite their handling.
SECTION 4. EMERGENCY POWER. If an international, national, state, or local emergency or other situation arises that makes substantial compliance with this [act] or the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973ff et seq., impossible or impracticable, as confirmed by an official declaration by [the governor] that a state of emergency exists, by the existence of armed conflict involving United States Armed Forces, or the mobilization of those forces, including State National Guard and Reserve component members of this state, or by the occurrence of a natural disaster or the existence of a state of emergency, civil unrest, war, or other exigency in a foreign country, [the state’s chief election authority] may prescribe, by emergency order or rule, a special procedure or requirement as may be necessary to facilitate absentee voting by those absent uniformed services voters or overseas voters directly affected who are eligible to vote in this state. [The state’s chief election authority] shall take reasonable steps to provide absent uniformed services voters and overseas voters with timely notice of any special procedure or requirement prescribed under this section.
The starting point for this section was language from the Federal Voting Assistance Program, which recommends providing states with authority to adjust UOCAVA voting processes in the event of an emergency. As of 2008, eighteen states had provided some form of emergency authority to their chief elections official.
SECTION 5. SUPERSEDING OF OTHER LAW. A provision of this [act] setting out a date, timeline, or deadline for the submission of a voter registration or [absentee ballot] application, or the casting, receipt, or counting of an [absentee ballot], to the extent that it conflicts with other state law, shall supersede the other state law.
(a)
If the place of residence from which an absent uniformed services voter is
absent because of service in the uniformed services is within this state, the
voter may register to vote and apply for an [absentee ballot] in this state for
all covered elections.
(b)
If the last place where an overseas voter was,
or if then of voting age would have been, eligible to vote before leaving the
United States is within this state, the voter may register to vote and apply for an [absentee ballot] in this state for
all covered elections.
(c)
If the last place where a parent of an
overseas voter was eligible to vote before leaving the United States is within
this state, and the voter has not previously registered to vote in any other
state, the voter may register to vote
and apply for an [absentee ballot] in this state.
(d)
A voter eligible to register to vote under this section shall use the address
of the voter’s last place of residence in this state, or, in the case of a
voter eligible under subsection (c), the address of the voter’s parent’s last
place of residence in this state.
Because the definitions in Section 2 largely track the UOCAVA definitions, they alone do not determine whether an absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter is eligible to vote in any particular state that has adopted the uniform Act. Section 6 therefore makes their eligibility to vote depend on their ties to the enacting state.
SECTION 7. REGISTRATION
AND [ABSENTEE BALLOT] APPLICATION.
Alternative 1
(a)
For any covered election, an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas
voter eligible to register to vote under Section 6 may use, and the state shall
give effect to, a Federal Post Card Application, as prescribed under the
Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973ff(b)(2), or its electronic
equivalent, to register to vote and to request an [absentee ballot]
simultaneously.
(b) If an absent
uniformed services voter or an overseas voter is already registered to vote in
this state, the voter may apply for an [absentee ballot] for any covered
election using either the regular [absentee ballot] application in use in the
voter’s jurisdiction, or the Federal Post Card Application or its electronic
equivalent. [The state’s chief election
authority] shall ensure that each jurisdiction’s regular [absentee ballot]
application requires the applicant to supply sufficient information for
election officials to determine whether the applicant is an absent uniformed
services voter or an overseas voter. [The state’s chief election authority] shall
use best efforts to minimize the information necessary, standardize its
collection, and streamline the [absentee ballot] application process.
Alternative 2
To receive the
protection of this [act], an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas
voter must apply for an [absentee ballot] using the Federal Post Card Application,
as prescribed under the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section
1973ff(b)(2), or its electronic equivalent, or complete a Federal Write-In
Absentee Ballot as a simultaneous [absentee ballot] application.
End of Alternatives
Reporter’s Comment
The drafting committee continues
to consider how best to rely on the Federal Post Card Application while not
complicating a state’s ability to develop and use Internet-based and other methods
of accepting voter registration and absentee ballot applications that are not
Federal Post Card Applications.
Alternatively, option 2 would limit the protections of the Act to voters
who used the FPCA, because its use immediately identifies for local election
officials the special status of the voter.
If the uniform act permits
“stateless children” to vote only for candidates for federal office, then some
method would be needed to further distinguish these voters from other overseas
voters. The current Federal Post Card
Application does not require overseas voters to declare whether or not they
have previously lived in the
[SECTION
8. STANDING REQUEST FOR [ABSENTEE BALLOT].
(a) If an
absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter submits a Federal Post Card Application, as prescribed under the Uniformed
and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973ff(b)(2), or its
electronic equivalent, and requests that the application be considered an
application for an [absentee ballot] for all subsequent elections for the time
period permitted under federal law[, including any runoff elections that may
occur as a result of the outcome of such general elections], election officials
shall provide an [absentee ballot] to the voter for each subsequent covered election,
as provided in Section 10, for at least the period required under federal law, or
any longer period provided under state law other than this [act].
(b) Subsection (a) does not apply to any election held after an election official determines that a voter is no longer eligible to vote in this state. Nothing in this section prevents an election official from removing a voter from the rolls of registered voters in this state under any program or method permitted under Section 8 of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993.]
Legislative
Note: The
bracketed language in subsection (a) pertaining to runoff elections is only for
states with runoff elections.
Reporter’s
Comment
This section is only a default rule concerning whether voters covered under the Act can request to automatically receive voting materials for all future elections, at least for the period (currently two federal election cycles) for which UOCAVA voters can now ask to receive voting materials for all federal elections. Some members of the drafting committee would omit this section, largely out of reservations about the burden on local elections officials of automatically sending absentee voting materials for every election to all voters covered under the Act, when many of the covered voters may have little interest in nonfederal elections, and the “returned-as-undeliverable” rate on voting materials sent to UOCAVA voters for subsequent elections has been high. Other committee members thought it best to include this section given that federal law now requires states to provide this option to UOCAVA voters for all federal elections, and voters might therefore reasonably expect to be receiving voting materials for all elections.
In light of this lack of agreement in the committee, the section is presented to the Conference as a bracketed section. One option would be to let each enacting state make its own determination about whether to include or omit this section, depending on its evaluation of the cost and burden. Omitting the section would have no impact on other portions of the Act. Another option would be to draft the section to permit individual voters to opt out of receiving voting materials for subsequent elections involving only state or local, and not federal, races.
SECTION 9. APPLICATION FOR [ABSENTEE BALLOT]. An application from an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter for an [absentee ballot] is timely if received by the later of the 30th day before the election or the last day for other voters in the state to apply for an [absentee ballot] for the election. A timely and otherwise valid [absentee ballot] application from an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter must be accepted at any time before the next election for which it is submitted.
SECTION 10. TRANSMISSION
OF UNVOTED BALLOTS.
(a) For all covered elections, the official charged with preparing and distributing ballots and election materials in each jurisdiction shall prepare a sufficient number of [absentee ballots] as soon as possible after receiving information concerning candidates [and ballot measures] to be voted on at the election, and shall immediately transmit [absentee ballots] and related balloting materials to all absent uniformed services voters and overseas voters who have applied for them.
(b) No later than [___] days before an
election, local election officials, with the assistance of [the state’s chief
election authority], as appropriate, shall make available by electronic means,
other than facsimile, an unvoted [absentee ballot] and related balloting
materials to any absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter who by that
date has submitted a valid [absentee
ballot] application requesting electronic transmission of [absentee balloting] materials.
(c) When an [absentee ballot]
application of an absent
uniformed services voter or overseas voter arrives after the jurisdiction has
begun transmitting [absentee balloting] materials to voters, the
official charged with distributing ballots and election materials shall transmit
the [absentee balloting] materials to the voter as promptly as possible.
(d) A local election jurisdiction that maintains an Internet site shall make available on the Internet site downloadable versions of [absentee ballots] and voting instructions for absent uniformed services voters and overseas voters, as well as the most updated state and local election listing required by Section 17.
SECTION 11. CASTING OF BALLOT. For [an absentee ballot] of an absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter to be valid, the voter must have submitted the [absentee ballot] for mailing, electronic transmission, or other means of delivery no later than 11:59 p.m. local time in the place where the voter completes the ballot, on the day before the day of the election. If, at the time of completing the balloting materials, the voter has affirmed under penalty of perjury, as provided in Section 18, that the [absentee ballot] was timely submitted, the ballot may not be rejected on the basis that it lacks a postmark showing that it was submitted before the day of the election.
SECTION 12. RECEIPT
OF VOTED BALLOT. A
valid [absentee ballot] cast by an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter must be counted if
the appropriate state or local election office receives it by the deadline for
completion of the [local canvass].
Reporter’s Comment
In
light of occasional controversies about when election officials have “received”
absentee ballots, some additional clarification of this term may be worth
considering.
SECTION 13. ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION OF REGISTRATION AND [ABSENTEE BALLOT] APPLICATION. In addition to any other method of registering to vote or applying for an [absentee ballot], an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter may submit a Federal Post Card Application or other application by electronic transmission, in a manner directed by [the state’s chief election authority], which protects the integrity of the transmission and the privacy of the voter’s identity and other personal data contained in the application.
SECTION 14. CONFIRMATION OF RECEIPT OF APPLICATION AND VOTED BALLOT. [The state’s chief election authority], in coordination with a local election jurisdiction, shall develop an electronic system by which an absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter may determine, either by telephone, electronic mail, or Internet access, whether the voter’s Federal Post Card Application or other registration and [absentee ballot] application has been received and accepted, and whether the voter’s [absentee ballot] has been received and its current status.
SECTION 15. COLLECTION OF VOTERS’ ELECTRONIC MAIL ADDRESSES. A voter registration and [absentee ballot] application form must ask an absent uniformed services voter and overseas voter to provide an individual electronic mail address. A state or local election official may not release a personal electronic mail address provided on the form to any third party, and may use the electronic mail address provided on the form only for the purpose of communicating with the voter about the voting process, including confirming the present address of the voter. A form requesting a personal electronic mail address must clearly state the sole purpose for which the electronic mail address will be used, and that any other use or disclosure is prohibited by law.
SECTION 16. ACCEPTANCE OF
FEDERAL WRITE-IN ABSENTEE BALLOT.
(a)
In a covered election, an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter
may use the Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot approved under the Uniformed
and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973ff, if the voter affirms that:
(1)
the voter submitted a Federal Post Card Application or other application
requesting an [absentee ballot] in time to be received by [the later of the 30th
day before the election or the last date for other voters in the adopting state
to apply for an absentee ballot for the election]; and
(2)
the voter has not received the requested [absentee ballot].
(b)
In a covered election, an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter
may use the Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot transmission envelope’s voter
declaration as a request for registration and an application for an [absentee
ballot] simultaneous with the submission of the Federal Write-In Absentee
Ballot. The request for registration and
application for an [absentee ballot] must be accepted if:
(1)
it is received by [the later of the 30th
day before the election, or the adopting state’s last day for registering to
vote]; and
(2)
the voter is otherwise eligible to vote in the jurisdiction to which the
request is submitted.
SECTION 17. PREPARATION
OF ELECTION LISTING.
(a)
No later than 180 days before a covered election, or as soon as practicable in
the case of a special or runoff election, the official in each
jurisdiction charged with printing and distributing ballots and election
material shall prepare an
election listing for that jurisdiction, to be used in conjunction with the
Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot identified in Section 16. The election listing must contain a list of
all of the federal, state, and local offices [and ballot measures] that the
official expects to be on the ballot in the jurisdiction on the date of the
election. The listing must contain
specific instructions for how a voter is to indicate on the Federal Write-in
Absentee Ballot the voter’s choice for each office to be filled [and for each ballot
measure to be contested].
(b)
An absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter may request a copy of
the election listing, which shall be delivered to the voter by facsimile, electronic
mail, Internet transmission, or regular mail, as the voter requests.
(c) As soon as regular [absentee
ballots] are printed, and no later than the date when regular [absentee
ballots] are required to be transmitted to absentee voters, the official
charged with preparing the election listing shall update the listing with the
certified candidates for each office [and the text of ballot measures], and
shall make the updated listing publicly available.
SECTION 18. DECLARATION REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Each voter
registration application, [absentee ballot] application, and submitted [absentee
ballot] of an absent uniformed services voter or an overseas voter must include
or be accompanied by a single declaration for the voter to execute affirming
that a material misstatement of fact in completing the document may be grounds
for a conviction for perjury under the laws of the United States and this state. The declaration must read substantially as
follows:
“I swear or affirm, under penalty
of perjury, that:
1. I am a member of the Uniformed Service or an eligible
spouse or dependent of such a member, or a
2. I am a
3. I have not been convicted of a felony or other disqualifying offense or been adjudicated mentally incompetent, or if so, my voting rights have been reinstated, and
4. I am not registering, requesting a ballot, or voting in
any other jurisdiction in the
5. If this declaration accompanies my voted [absentee ballot], I have voted and sealed this ballot in private and have not allowed any person to observe the marking of this ballot, except for those authorized to assist voters under state or Federal law and I have not been influenced, and
6. My signature and the date listed below indicate when I completed this document, and
7. The information on this document is true and complete to the best of my knowledge.
I understand that a material misstatement of fact in completing this
document may be grounds for conviction of perjury under the laws of the
Signature____________________________ Date___________________”
(b) [The state’s chief election authority]
shall ensure that an appropriate form for the execution of the declaration
specified in subsection (a), including the date of its execution, is a prominent
part of each document or, in the case of a voted ballot, each transmission
envelope, for which this declaration is required.
(c) A
notarization or authentication requirement other than the declaration specified
in subsection (a), or the declaration on the Federal Post Card Application and
Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot, may not be required for the execution of any
document under this [act].
SECTION 19. NONESSENTIAL REQUIREMENT. Mistake
or omission in the execution of any document under this [act] and a
nonessential requirement, such as paper size and weight, that does not prevent
identifying or determining the eligibility of an absent uniformed services
voter or an overseas voter does not invalidate the document. An abbreviation, misspelling, or other minor
variation in the form of the name of a candidate or a political party must be
disregarded in determining the validity of a write-in ballot cast by the voter,
if the intention of the voter can be ascertained.
SECTION 20. ISSUANCE OF INJUNCTION. On application by any registered voter of the state or by any person alleging eligibility to register to vote under this [act], the courts of this state may issue an injunction or grant other equitable relief appropriate to enforce this [act].
SECTION 21. APPLICATION
AND CONSTRUCTION.
(a) In applying and construing this uniform act, consideration must be given to the need to promote uniformity of the law with respect to its subject matter among states that enact it.
(b) This [act] is designed to facilitate, and should be read in harmony with, the federal Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1973ff et seq.
SECTION 22. RELATION
TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN GLOBAL AND NATIONAL COMMERCE ACT.
This [act] modifies, limits, and supersedes the federal
Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act, 15 U.S.C. Section
7001, et seq., but does not modify, limit, or supersede Section 101(c) of that
act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7001(c), or authorize electronic delivery of any of the
notices described in Section 103(b) of that act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7003(b).
SECTION 23. EFFECT
ON OTHER STATE AND LOCAL LAWS. The exercise of any right under this [act] shall not by
itself affect, for purposes of any provision of a state or local tax law or
other nonelection law in which the residence or domicile of a person is a
factor, the residence or domicile of the person exercising the right.
(1) ..........................................
(2) ........................................
(3) ........................................
SECTION 25. EFFECTIVE DATE. This [act] takes effect . . . .