Relating to registration as service worker for Bureau for Children and Families
Establishes a legal framework to elect town officers in unorganized towns, defining how votes are held, counted, and certified for residents and local officials.
Establishes a legal framework to elect town officers in unorganized towns, defining how votes are held, counted, and certified for residents and local officials.
SB 215 (introduced January 2025) is a bill proposing to establish or clarify voting procedures for elections of town officers in unorganized towns or places. The bill’s stated purpose is to set out how officers for towns that are currently “unorganized” (i.e., lack an incorporated municipal government or established local election procedures) are to be nominated, voted for, and certified.
The bill intends to provide a legal framework so that residents of unorganized towns or places can elect town officers in a consistent, legally recognized manner. The goal is to ensure clarity and uniformity where local electoral mechanisms may not currently exist or are ambiguous.
The actual bill text was not included in the materials you provided. Based on common legislative approaches to this subject, SB 215 is likely to address some or all of the following:
- Definitions (what counts as an “unorganized town or place” and who qualifies as a voter).
- Method of election (e.g., Australian ballot, voice vote at a town meeting, paper ballot).
- Nomination process and candidate eligibility.
- Absentee and provisional voting rules for residents of these areas.
- Roles and responsibilities of county clerks, secretaries, or other state/local officials in administering the election.
- Ballot timing, posting/public notice requirements, and canvass/certification procedures.
- Procedures for filling vacancies and contesting results.
- Transition rules where an area moves from “unorganized” to “organized.”
No fiscal analysis or implementation details were included. Depending on the bill’s specifics, impacts could range from minimal (clarifying existing informal practices) to modest (administrative costs for ballots, notices, staff time, or training). The bill may require coordination between state and county election offices.
Note: This summary is based on the bill title, introduction and referral information supplied. The full bill text was not provided; the “Key provisions” above list likely topics rather than confirmed provisions. For a definitive description, obtain and review the enacted bill language or the committee-reported draft.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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