MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE

2023 Regular Session

To: Apportionment and Elections

By: Representatives Porter, Summers

House Bill 66

AN ACT TO AMEND SECTION 23-15-19, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO PROVIDE THAT THE SECRETARY OF STATE SHALL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ENSURING THAT THE PUBLIC CAN ACCESS, THROUGH THE SECRETARY OF STATE'S WEBSITE AND THROUGH A TELEPHONE NUMBER, AN UP-TO-DATE LIST OF THOSE CRIMES, IDENTIFIED BY THE CODE SECTION NUMBER, THAT ARE DISENFRANCHISING AND THOSE THAT ARE NOT; TO REQUIRE THE SECRETARY OF STATE TO ENSURE THAT ALL OFFICIALS RESPONSIBLE FOR REGISTERING VOTERS HAVE UP-TO-DATE INTERNET BASED ELECTRONIC MEANS OF DETERMINING WHETHER A PERSON HAS BEEN CONVICTED OF A DISENFRANCHISING CRIME; TO AMEND SECTIONS 23-15-213 AND 23-15-223, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO PROVIDE THAT THE TRAINING REQUIRED OF ELECTION COMMISSIONERS AND REGISTRARS SHALL INCLUDE ADEQUATE TRAINING, INCLUDING ON AN UP-TO-DATE DATABASE, TO ENSURE THAT PERSONS ARE NOT DENIED THE RIGHT TO REGISTER TO VOTE AND CAST A BALLOT BASED ON A CONVICTION THAT IS NOT A DISENFRANCHISING CRIME, ACCORDING TO THE CODE SECTION NUMBER; TO BRING FORWARD SECTION 23-15-165, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, FOR THE PURPOSE OF POSSIBLE AMENDMENT; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.

     BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI:

     SECTION 1.  Section 23-15-19, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:

     23-15-19.  (1)  Any person who has been convicted of vote fraud or any crime listed in Section 241, Mississippi Constitution of 1890, such crimes defined as "disenfranchising," shall not be registered, or if registered the name of the person shall be removed from the Statewide Elections Management System by the registrar or the election commissioners of the county of his or her residence.  Whenever any person shall be convicted in the circuit court of his or her county of a disenfranchising crime, the county registrar shall thereupon remove his or her name from the Statewide Elections Management System; and whenever any person shall be convicted of a disenfranchising crime in any other court of any county, the presiding judge of the court shall, on demand, certify the fact in writing to the registrar of the county in which the voter resides, who shall thereupon remove the name of the person from the Statewide Elections Management System and retain the certificate as a record of his or her office.

     (2)  The Secretary of State shall be responsible for ensuring that the public can access, through the Secretary of State's website and through a telephone number, an up-to-date list of those crimes, identified by the code section number, that are disenfranchising and those that are not.

     (3)  The Secretary of State, working with the Mississippi Department of Corrections, if necessary, shall be solely responsible for ensuring that all officials responsible for registering voters have up-to-date Internet-based electronic means of determining whether a person has been convicted of a disenfranchising crime, according to the code section number. 

     SECTION 2.  Section 23-15-213, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:

     [Until December 31, 2022, this section shall read as follows:]

     23-15-213.  (1)  At the general election in 2020, there shall be elected five (5) election commissioners for each county whose terms of office shall commence on the first Monday of January following their election.  Each of the commissioners shall be required to attend a training seminar provided by the Secretary of State and satisfactorily complete a skills assessment, and before acting, shall take and subscribe the oath of office prescribed by the Constitution.  The training seminar and skills assessment shall include adequate training, including on an up-to-date database, to ensure that persons are not denied the right to register to vote and cast a ballot based on a conviction that is not a disenfranchising crime, according to the code section number.  The oath shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the chancery court.  Upon filing the oath of office, the election commissioner may be provided access to the Statewide Elections Management System for the purpose of performing his or her duties.  Such skills assessment shall only be required once every four (4) years.  While engaged in their duties, the commissioners shall be conservators of the peace in the county, with all the duties and powers of such.

     (2)  The qualified electors of each supervisor's district shall elect, at the general election in 2020, in their district one (1) election commissioner.  The election commissioners from board of supervisors' Districts One, Three and Five shall serve for a term of four (4) years.  The election commissioners from board of supervisors' Districts Two and Four shall serve for a term of three (3) years.  No more than one (1) commissioner shall be a resident of and reside in each supervisor's district of the county; it being the purpose of this section that the county board of election commissioners shall consist of one (1) person from each supervisor's district of the county and that each commissioner be elected from the supervisor's district in which he or she resides.

     (3)  Candidates for county election commissioner shall qualify by filing with the clerk of the board of supervisors of their respective counties a petition personally signed by not less than fifty (50) qualified electors of the supervisors district in which they reside, requesting that they be a candidate, by 5:00 p.m. not later than the first Monday in June of the year in which the election occurs and unless the petition is filed within the required time, their names shall not be placed upon the ballot.  All candidates shall declare in writing their party affiliation, if any, to the board of supervisors, and such party affiliation shall be shown on the official ballot.

     (4)  The petition shall have attached thereto a certificate of the county registrar showing the number of qualified electors on each petition, which shall be furnished by the registrar on request.  The board shall determine the sufficiency of the petition, and if the petition contains the required number of signatures and is filed within the time required, the president of the board shall verify that the candidate is a resident of the supervisor's district in which he or she seeks election and that the candidate is otherwise qualified as provided by law, and shall certify that the candidate is qualified to the chair or secretary of the county election commission and the names of the candidates shall be placed upon the ballot for the ensuing election.  No county election commissioner shall serve or be considered as elected until he or she has received a majority of the votes cast for the position or post for which he or she is a candidate.  If a majority vote is not received in the first election, then the two (2) candidates receiving the most votes for each position or post shall be placed upon the ballot for a second election to be held three (3) weeks later in accordance with appropriate procedures followed in other elections involving runoff candidates.

     (5)  Upon taking office, the county election commissioners shall organize by electing a chair and a secretary.

     (6)  It shall be the duty of the chair to have the official ballot printed and distributed at each general or special election.

     [From and after January 1, 2023, this section shall read as follows:]

     23-15-213.  (1)  There shall be elected five (5) election commissioners for each county whose terms of office shall commence on the first Monday of January following their election and who shall serve for a term of four (4) years.  Each of the commissioners shall be required to attend a training seminar provided by the Secretary of State and satisfactorily complete a skills assessment, and before acting, shall take and subscribe the oath of office prescribed by the Constitution.  The training seminar and skills assessment shall include adequate training, including on an up-to-date database, to ensure that persons are not denied the right to register to vote and cast a ballot based on a conviction that is not a disenfranchising crime, according to the code section number.  The oath shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the chancery court.  Upon filing the oath of office, the election commissioner may be provided access to the Statewide Elections Management System for the purpose of performing his or her duties.  Such skills assessment shall only be required once every four (4) years.  While engaged in their duties, the commissioners shall be conservators of the peace in the county, with all the duties and powers of such.

     (2)  (a)  At the general election in 2024 and every four (4) years thereafter, the qualified electors of the board of supervisors' Districts One, Three and Five shall elect in their district one (1) election commissioner.

          (b)  At the general election in 2023 and every four (4) years thereafter, the qualified electors of the board of supervisors' Districts Two and Four shall elect in their district one (1) election commissioner.

          (c)  No more than one (1) commissioner shall be a resident of and reside in each supervisor's district of the county; it being the purpose of this section that the county board of election commissioners shall consist of one (1) person from each supervisor's district of the county and that each commissioner be elected from the supervisor's district in which he or she resides.

     (3)  Candidates for county election commissioner shall qualify by filing with the clerk of the board of supervisors of their respective counties a petition personally signed by not less than fifty (50) qualified electors of the supervisor's district in which they reside, requesting that they be a candidate, by 5:00 p.m. not later than February 1 of the year in which the election occurs and unless the petition is filed within the required time, their names shall not be placed upon the ballot.  All candidates shall declare in writing their party affiliation, if any, to the board of supervisors, and such party affiliation shall be shown on the official ballot.

     (4)  The petition shall have attached thereto a certificate of the county registrar showing the number of qualified electors on each petition, which shall be furnished by the registrar on request.  The board shall determine the sufficiency of the petition, and if the petition contains the required number of signatures and is filed within the time required, the president of the board shall verify that the candidate is a resident of the supervisor's district in which he or she seeks election and that the candidate is otherwise qualified as provided by law, and shall certify that the candidate is qualified to the chair or secretary of the county election commission and the names of the candidates shall be placed upon the ballot for the ensuing election.  No county election commissioner shall serve or be considered as elected until he or she has received a majority of the votes cast for the position or post for which he or she is a candidate.  If a majority vote is not received in the first election, then the two (2) candidates receiving the most votes for each position or post shall be placed upon the ballot for a second election to be held three (3) weeks later in accordance with appropriate procedures followed in other elections involving runoff candidates.

     (5)  In the first meeting in January of each year, the county election commissioners shall organize by electing a chair and a secretary, who shall serve a one-year term.  The county election commissioners shall provide the names of the chair and secretary to the Secretary of State and provide notice of any change in officers which may occur during the year.

     (6)  It shall be the duty of the chair to have the official ballot printed and distributed at each general or special election.

     SECTION 3.  Section 23-15-223, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:

     23-15-223.  (1)  The State Board of Election Commissioners, on or before the fifteenth day of February succeeding each general election, shall appoint in the several counties registrars of elections, who shall hold office for four (4) years and until their successors shall be duly qualified.  The county registrar shall be the clerk of the circuit court, unless the State Board of Election Commissioners finds the circuit clerk to be an improper person to register the names of the electors in the county.  The State Board of Election Commissioners shall draft rules and regulations to provide for notice and hearing before removal of the circuit clerk, if notice and a hearing is practicable under the circumstances.

     (2)  The county registrar is empowered to appoint deputy registrars, with the consent of the board of election commissioners, who may discharge the duties of the registrar.

     The clerk of every municipality shall be appointed as such a deputy registrar, as contemplated by the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA).

     (3)  The county registrar shall not be held liable for any malfeasance or nonfeasance in office by any deputy registrar who is a deputy registrar by virtue of his or her office.

     (4)  (a)  The Secretary of State, in conjunction with the State Board of Community and Junior Colleges, has developed and made available online a computer skills training course for all newly appointed registrars that shall be completed within one hundred eighty (180) days of the commencement of their term of office.

          (b)  The online computer skills training course shall include adequate training, including on an up-to-date database, to ensure that persons are not denied the right to register to vote and cast a ballot based on a conviction that is not a disenfranchising crime, according to the code section number.

     SECTION 4.  Section 23-15-165, Mississippi Code of 1972, is brought forward as follows:

     23-15-165.  (1)  The Office of the Secretary of State, in cooperation with the county registrars and election commissioners, shall procure, implement and maintain an electronic information processing system and programs capable of maintaining a centralized database of all registered voters in the state.  The system shall encompass software and hardware, at both the state and county level, software development training, conversion and support and maintenance for the system.  This system shall be known as the "Statewide Elections Management System" and shall constitute the official record of registered voters in every county of the state.

     (2)  The Office of the Secretary of State shall develop and implement the Statewide Elections Management System so that the registrar and election commissioners of each county shall:

          (a)  Verify that an applicant that is registering to vote in that county is not registered to vote in another county;

          (b)  Be notified automatically that a registered voter in its county has registered to vote in another county;

          (c)  Receive regular reports of death, changes of address and convictions for disenfranchising crimes that apply to voters registered in the county; and

          (d)  Retain all present functionality related to, but not limited to, the use of voter roll data and to implement such other functionality as the law requires to enhance the maintenance of accurate county voter records and related jury selection and redistricting programs.

     (3)  As a part of the procurement and implementation of the system, the Office of the Secretary of State shall, with the assistance of the advisory committee, procure services necessary to convert current voter registration records in the counties into a standard, industry accepted file format that can be used on the Statewide Elections Management System.  Thereafter, all official voter information shall be maintained on the Statewide Elections Management System.  The standard industry accepted format of data  was reviewed and approved by a majority of the advisory committee created in subsection (5) of this section after consultation with the Circuit Clerks Association and the format may not be changed without consulting the Circuit Clerks Association.

     (4)  The Secretary of State may, with the assistance of the advisory committee, adopt rules and regulations necessary to administer the Statewide Elections Management System.  The rules and regulations shall at least:

          (a)  Provide for the establishment and maintenance of a centralized database for all voter registration information in the state;

          (b)  Provide procedures for integrating data into the centralized database;

          (c)  Provide security to ensure that only the registrar, or his or her designee or other appropriate official, as the law may require, can add information to, delete information from and modify information in the system;

          (d)  Provide the registrar or his or her designee or other appropriate official, as the law may require, access to the system at all times, including the ability to download copies of the industry standard file, for all purposes related to their official duties, including, but not limited to, exclusive access for the purpose of printing all local pollbooks;

          (e)  Provide security and protection of all information in the system and monitor the system to ensure that unauthorized access is not allowed;

          (f)  Provide a procedure that will allow the registrar, or his or her designee or other appropriate official, as the law may require, to identify the precinct to which a voter should be assigned; and

          (g)  Provide a procedure for phasing in or converting existing manual and computerized voter registration systems in counties to the Statewide Elections Management System.

     (5)  The Secretary of State established an advisory committee to assist in developing system specifications, procurement, implementation and maintenance of the Statewide Elections Management System.  The committee included two (2) representatives from the Circuit Clerks Association, appointed by the association; two (2) representatives from the Election Commissioners Association of Mississippi, appointed by the association; one (1) member of the Mississippi Association of Supervisors, or its staff, appointed by the association; the Director of the Stennis Institute of Government at Mississippi State University, or his or her designee; the Executive Director of the Department of Information Technology Services, or his or her designee; two (2) persons knowledgeable about elections and information technology appointed by the Secretary of State; and the Secretary of State, who shall serve as the chair of the advisory committee.

     (6)  (a)  Social security numbers, telephone numbers and date of birth and age information in statewide, district, county and municipal voter registration files shall be exempt from and shall not be subject to inspection, examination, copying or reproduction under the Mississippi Public Records Act of 1983.

          (b)  Copies of statewide, district, county or municipal voter registration files, excluding social security numbers, telephone numbers and date of birth and age information, shall be provided to any person in accordance with the Mississippi Public Records Act of 1983 at a cost not to exceed the actual cost of production.

     SECTION 5.  This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2023, except for Section 2, which shall take effect and be in force from and after the passage of this act.