SUPPORTING STATEMENT
A. JUSTIFICATION
1. Need for the Information Collection
The Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA), 52 U.S.C. § 203, requires the Presidential designee (Secretary of Defense) to prescribe the Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot for absent uniformed service voters and overseas voters in general elections for Federal office. The form serves as a backup ballot for voters who did not receive their State ballot with enough time to vote and return it to their local election official. The authority for the States to collect personal information comes from UOCAVA. The burden for collecting this information resides in the States. The Federal government does not collect nor retain any personal information associated with this form.
2. Use of the Information
The collected information will be used by State and local election officials in determining the eligibility of the uniformed services and overseas citizens who submitted the information as an affirmation that they are eligible to vote in that jurisdiction. Additionally, the ballot portion of the form is used by the State and local election officials as an absentee ballot and is counted following normal State absentee ballot counting procedures. Additionally, the collected information will be retained by the State and local election officials that allow the form to be used for voter registration to provide election materials, including absentee ballots, to the uniformed services, their eligible family members and overseas voters during the form’s eligibility period provided by State law. No information from the Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot is collected by or retained by the Federal government.
3. Use of Information Technology
The Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot requires that the submitter sign the form prior to sending to the State or local election official. This signature is used by State and local election officials to verify the voter’s signature on a previous voter registration card, ballot request form and other election materials. There is no provision for State and local election officials to use digital signatures as a substitute for the handwritten signature.
4. Non-duplication
The voter uses the form when they have requested an absentee ballot from their State, but have not received one close to Election Day. Voters are not required to use the form however it may be necessary to use this form multiple times in an election cycle.
Uniformed service and overseas voters in States that allow the form to be used to apply for voter registration may end up using the form more than once for the same election if they do not receive their requested ballot and follow up again with the FWAB as a backup ballot.
6. Less Frequent Collection
Voters are not required to use this form and it serves solely as a backup ballot for voters who do not receive their requested State ballot with enough time to vote and return it to the State ballot return deadline.
In States where the FWAB is accepted as a voter registration and ballot request form, the applicant may use this form as in lieu of the Federal Post Card Application. The applicant would be required to update and resubmit this information annually, whenever they change their mailing address or as otherwise required by State law. If the information is not submitted annually or whenever they change their mailing address, the applicant may not receive ballots for elections for Federal office in that calendar year.
7. Paperwork Reduction Act Guidelines
This collection is consistent with the guidelines delineated in 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2).
8. Consultation and Public Comments
a. On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, the Federal Register notice for the redesign of the Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot was published. It can be found on page 68666. Public comments were collected through Tuesday, January 20, 2015.
Based on the comments received, no changes or updates are necessary.
The majority of comments were wording tweaks to the Block headings which either did not suggest alternative wording or provided ambiguous wording which could be confusing to users. Some commenters asked for an online fillable form which is currently available along with an automated form completion assistant at the FVAP.gov website.
Comments requesting clarification of the Instructions section either did not substantially change the existing language or added additional language which could cause confusion as they referred to items not required by any state to accept the form.
The final group of comments was directed at the assistance and information available on-line, which are maintained and updated based on the hardcopy form and state-specific information.
A supplemental document as part of the submission contains every comment received, its corresponding comment ID and adjudication. Comments on the Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot which were mistakenly submitted as part of the comments for the Federal Post Card Application are included in the supplement.
b. The Services, Department of State and GSA were approached regarding the availability of requested information. The FVAP Post Election Survey and Election Assistance Commission surveys help identify the frequency of collection. FVAP stakeholders from overseas citizen groups and State and local election offices were contacted for original feedback on the 2011 Federal Postcard Application. Additionally, stakeholders were made aware that the form is available for usability testing during the Federal Register process. More information will be added after that time.
The intent to return language on the FPCA remains on the form due to the October 2008 National Association Secretaries of State (NASS) Survey of State Statues that shows the majority of States have intent as a prerequisite for obtaining a State ballot.
10. Confidentiality
The information is collected and retained by the individual States, counties and municipalities and is not in the possession of the Federal government.
11. Sensitive Questions
The respondent’s complete or partial Social Security Number is required to meet State voter identification requirements. Some States request, but do not require, the respondent to provide information regarding their race or ethnicity. This information is used by those States to provide information to the Department of Justice to comply with the Voting Rights Act, 52 U.S.C. §§ 10301 to 10508, or to determine the respondent’s eligibility to vote in some special elections.
12. Respondent Burden, and its Labor Costs
a. Estimation of Respondent Burden
The estimated burden cost is $6,381,000. Based on the number of ballots cast in the 2012 Presidential general election (as reported by the Election Assistance Commission) by UOCAVA voters, it is estimated that 1,200,000 citizens could potentially use this form annually. It is estimated that the respondent will require 15 minutes to complete the form. Post election information from the 2014 general election is not yet available.
b. Labor Cost of Respondent Burden
The burden cost is estimated based on 1,200,000 individuals completing the form in 15 minutes at an hourly rate of $21.02. The hourly rate is the average hourly wage or salary rate for the American worker as published by the Department of Labor in their document, USDL-14-1673.
13. Respondent Costs Other Than Burden Hour Costs
14. Cost to the Federal Government
The information is not collected and processed by the Federal government. The cost of collecting and processing the information is borne by the individual State and local election offices as part of providing voter registration and election services to citizens claiming their State as legal residence.
15. Reasons for Change in Burden
Until the 2013 version of this form, it did not require OMB review under the Paperwork Reduction Act. Therefore, this existing collection of information, by State and local governments (not the Federal government) has been without an OMB Control Number and without identifying an annualized cost to the respondents.
16. Publication of Results
The information collection will not be published for statistical use, outline plans for tabulation, statistical analyses, and publication.
17. Non-Display of OMB Expiration Date
We are requesting continued approval to omit the expiration date. These forms are stocked by Federal and non-government agencies for distribution to and use by uniformed services, their eligible family members and overseas voters. If the form contains the OMB expiration date, voters who use this form for registration may believe they will continue to receive absentee ballots beyond what is allowed by State law. This confusion would disenfranchise citizens.
Additionally, requiring the form to be revised and reissued on a triennial basis would incur unnecessary expense to agencies in cases where the previous versions of the form would meet the requirements of UOCAVA. Information found on the form is still often accepted by States since all necessary ballot information and voter affirmation is provided. Voters who may only have access to an “expired” form may not realize they cannot use that form for State voter registration purposes and be disenfranchised.
18. Exceptions to "Certification for Paperwork Reduction Submissions"
No exceptions to the Certification for Paperwork Reduction Submissions exist.
B. COLLECTIONS OF INFORMATION EMPLOYING STATISTICAL METHODS
Not applicable.
File Type | application/msword |
Author | Patricia Toppings |
Last Modified By | Scott Wiedmann |
File Modified | 2015-03-19 |
File Created | 2015-03-17 |