top of page

Priority Legislation

Our coalition's priority legislation is chosen with broad input from various member organizations, election law experts, voting rights advocates, and community partners. The following bills, if passed into law, would remove barriers to voting and ensure equity in elections, and strengthen access to the ballot.

Are you an organization that would like to endorse our platform and work with us to advocate for these bills? Fill out our endorsement form HERE

Are you an individual who would like to advocate for these bills? Take action HERE.

emc SH.jpg

Same Day Voter Registration

HD.856 filed by Rep. Carmine Gentile

S.505 filed by Sen. Cindy Creem

No eligible voter should be turned away at the polls due to an error in or out- of-date voter registration. Same Day Voter Registration allows all eligible voters to register or update their registration in-person on Election Day or early voting days, doing away with the longstanding and arbitrary voter registration cutoff period. Learn more here.
 

  • SDR is now used in 22 states and D.C. 

  • Maine, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and New Hampshire have used SDR for decades.

  • SDR is mostly used by voters who need to update their registration, who would otherwise be excluded from participating on Election Day.

Fact Sheet HERE

Separating Municipal Census & Voter Registration

HD.2673 filed by Rep. Shirley Arriaga

S.503 filed by Sen. Cindy Creem

Not responding to the municipal census should no longer result in being dropped from the voting register. This change will maintain the municipal census for data collection and jury selection but no longer to change a voter's status. Instead, voters’ names will go on the inactive list if information that they have moved from the city or town is received from the U.S. Postal Service’s national change of address program, from the multistate Electronic Registration Information Center, or from official notice by another jurisdiction. Voters’ names will then continue to be removed from the inactive list if they fail to vote (or take other voting-related action) after two federal general elections.

  • Every year, thousands of Massachusetts voters go to vote in person, only to realize they're classified as "in-active voters." The primary reason is because they didn't fill out and return their annual municipal census, an unnecessary punitive measure.

  • Massachusetts is an outlier. All states are required under federal law to have a process for keeping voter rolls up to date. MA is one of few to connect the inactive voter list to those who fail to fill out the municipal census. Most states just use the USPS Change of Address form and ERIC States.

  • This bill will keep the inactive voter list and the municipal census, both which have value. It simply decouples them ensuring better access to voters on election day and less work for local election officials. 

Fact Sheet HERE

Disability Voting Access Oversight

HD.2136 filed by Rep. Kate Donaghue

S.504 filed by Sen. Cindy Creem

This bill would require the Secretary of Commonwealth to arrange inspection of all polling places and early voting sites at least once every four years, to ensure compliance with federal and state disability accessibility laws. Cities and town not in compliance must take immediate action to comply and file a compliance plan, and the Attorney General can enforce compliance in court.

  • Every year, voters with disability encounter various barriers to voting on Election Day. Automatic doors that don't work, AutoMARK machines that aren't set up, inadequate signage, and more.

  • Annual reporting will ensure accountability, accuracy, and further the public's trust in election administration.

Fact Sheet HERE

bottom of page