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The deadline to register for an election always falls 30 days prior to Election Day. To qualify to vote, a person must: be a U.S. Citizen; at least 18 years old by Election Day and a resident of the same voting precinct at least 30 days prior to the election. You will need to register to vote or change your registration if you are: new to the area, have recently moved, or have changed your name.
Phone ahead for office hours, please bring two forms of identification with you when you go to register.
Arlington Heights Village Hall
33 S. Arlington Heights Rd., Arlington Heights 847-368-5540
Buffalo Grove Village Hall
50 Raupp Blvd., Buffalo Grove 847-459-2511
Des Plaines City Hall
1420 Miner St., Des Plaines 847-391-5300
Mount Prospect Village Hall
100 S. Emerson St., Mount Prospect 847-392-6000
Prospect Heights Village Hall
14 E. Camp McDonald Rd., Prospect Heights 847-398-6070
Wheeling Village Hall
255 W. Dundee Rd., Wheeling 847-459-2608
Wheeling Township Hall
1616 Arlington Heights Rd. Arlington Heights 847-259-7730
Rolling Meadows Courthouse
2121 Euclid Ave., Rolling Meadows 847-818-2850
If you would like to have a Deputy Voter Registrar visit your home or place of work to register you to vote, please call the Wheeling Township Democrats.
Where and How: Eligible absentee voters can cast their ballot:
"In person" Starting 3 weeks before election day.
At the County Clerk's Office, 69 W. Washington St., 5th Floor. (8:00 to 6:00 M-F; Sat. 9:00 to 4:00; Sun. 9:00 to 2:00).
In your village clerk's office (or in certain smaller villages and unincorporated areas, your township clerk's office.)
"By mail"
Starting two months before election day you may request an application
Under Illinois law, if you registered by mail, you can't receive an absentee ballot in the mail the first time you vote. Instead you must vote in person the first time.
Your signed application must reach our office at least five days before the election or we can't legally send you a ballot.
When we receive your e-mail, we will send you an application. You will have to return it, signed, before we can send a ballot, which you will have to return. These four mailings will take time. If you can vote in person, you should try to do so.
You may vote absentee if you are:
*College students living away from home can sign up for the Student Absentee Voter program as a way to make it easier to vote in upcoming elections.
Once you sign up as a Student Absentee Voter, you automatically receive an application for an absentee ballot for each election in the next two years. The application can be sent to your school address or to your home address for your parents to forward to you.
Your Illinois State Board of Elections advises that you, the voter, are the chief safe guard against vote fraud. And you can play a major role in helping to guarantee fair and honest elections.
Is a clear intent or action aimed at depriving a voter of his right to vote or falsifying actual votes cast. Voters can play a major role in helping to guarantee clean elections by being on the alert for unusual activities at or near polling places and reporting irregularities to election authorities.
Some of the more common methods of fraudulent activity include:
IF A VOTER SPOTS SOMETHING THAT SHOULD NOT BE HAPPENING AT THE POLLS, THEY SHOULD REPORT IT IMMEDIATELY TO THE ELECTION JUDGES AND/OR APPROPRIATE AUTHORITIES.
The following are telltale signs that you should be suspicious of:
ANY OF THE ABOVE TELLTALE SIGNS SHOULD BE REPORTED IMMEDIATELY TO THE ELECTION JUDGES AND/OR THE APPROPRIATE AUTHORITIES.
Many voting irregularities are often misconstrued as vote fraud. These occur as a result of misunderstanding election laws or through malfunction of voting devices.
The judges of election are the sole authority in the polling place on election day -
No person, except a judge, may handle or touch election supplies and materials
A police officer may be in the polling place to preserve order and carry out lawful directions given by the judges
Pollwatchers are official observers only. They may observe the conduct of the election before, during, and after the polls close. All pollwatchers must present valid credentials upon entering the polling place.
Electioneering, or any type of campaigning, must not take place in or within 100 feet of the entrance to the polling place during voting hours.
*Source - Illinois State Board of Election
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