New Mexico Administrative Code
Title 1 - GENERAL GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
Chapter 10 - ELECTIONS AND ELECTED OFFICIALS
Part 35 - VOTER RECORDS SYSTEM
Section 1.10.35.12 - USE OF GOVERNMENTAL AND OFFICIAL BUILDING AS MAILING ADDRESSES ON VOTER REGISTRATION CERTIFICATES
Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 18, September 24, 2024
A. Upon written request from an Indian nation, tribe or pueblo, the secretary of state may designate a government or official building for use for mailing addresses on voter registrations for members of that Indian nation, tribe or pueblo. The written request must comply with Subsection D of Section 1-21A-1 NMSA 1978.
B. The written request designating the government or official building shall be submitted to the secretary of state in March or April of any year. It shall include the common name for the building, the mailing address of the building, and the name(s) and phone number(s) of lead person(s) charged with the oversight of election mail at the building.
C. Upon receipt of a written request, the secretary of state shall perform a security evaluation of the building to ensure: the building has a space to safely keep the official election mail in a locked and number-sealed ballot box or envelope.
D. The secretary of state shall respond in writing within 60 days of the request.
E. An approved designation will take effect at the general election or regular local election of the year in which the request was approved.
F. Election mail shall only be provided to the voter to whom it is addressed. The lead person(s) charged with the oversight of election mail at the building shall maintain a log of election mail that includes:
G. If the request is approved and upon implementation, the secretary of state shall send a notification of new designations in writing and shall provide an updated list of approved government and official buildings by county to each county clerk with an Indian nation, tribe or pueblo in the county.
H. If a county clerk receives a voter registration certificate that lists a government or official building on Indian nation, tribe or pueblo land by common name only, the county clerk shall not reject the certificate and, if the certificate is otherwise in the proper form, shall mail information to the voter using the address for the government or official building.