Monday, August 26, 2019

do not get the dumb white girl blues

simply  call the nys board of elections , ask your wuestions, file. your complaints, watch how thenassau county police play ny elec law 3-110

you do not need a gun

simply  call the ny state board of ections

and laugh at the nassau otb employees who do not choose to call the ny state board of elections because they direct their questions to laura campione ,  phil frld sn and or the tramsters local  707 kevin mccaffrey fairy tale  plan





LONG ISLANDPOLITICSSPIN CYCLE

Nassau County allows paid time off for voting

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NY Election Law 3 110

Section 3-110 Time allowed employees to vote
1. A registered voter may, without loss of pay for up to three hours, take off so much working time as will enable him or her to vote at any election.
A registered voter may, without loss of pay for up to three hours, take off so much working time as will enable him or her to vote at any election. 2. The employee shall be allowed time off for voting only at the ...



New York State Election Law. § 3-110. Time allowed employees to vote. 1. A registered voter may, without loss of pay for up to three hours, take off so much working time as will enable him or her to vote at any ...
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Apr 10, 2019 · On April 1, 2019, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced amendments to the state’s fiscal year 2020 budget, which includes, among other things, an amendment to its Election Law entitling employees in New York to three hours of paid time off to vote. The amendment to New York ...
Missing: 3110 ‎| Must include: 3110
Ensuring pre-election registration deadlines are consistent with timing of legal public holidays. Sec. 1053. Use of Postal Service hard copy change of address form to remind individuals to update voter registration.
New York (State)., Clarence Frank Birdseye · 1890
Containing the Text, Carefully Compared with the Original, of All the General Statutory Law of the State in Force on ... 2117 fees of, see Fees. legalizing informal acts of. . . ..2871, 2885 misconduct, under ...
New York (State). Legislature. Assembly · 1920 · New York (State)
Election Law — Continued: rm.jury duty, election ofiicers exempt (Int. No. 77 2) . . . 367 lists, secretary ... fall, holding (Rec. No. 813). .3110, 3270, 3283 1554 1506 126 primaries, fall, judicial district ...
“public official” means an officer (including the President and a Member of Congress), a member of the uniformed service, an employee and any other individual, in whom is vested the authority by law, rule, ...
Robert C. Wigton · 2013 · Political Science
... Law: Implementing the Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Law of 2002,” 6 New York University ... 3110. 144. McConnell v. Federal Election Commission, 251 F. Supp. 2d 176 (D.D.C. 2003). See also ...
Martha Brockenbrough · 2018 · Young Adult Nonfiction
This Whole Narrative Is a Way of Saving Face for Democrats Losing an Election That Everyone Thought They Were Supposed. ... Accessed August 17, 2018. https://www.law.cornell.edu/ uscode/text/5/3110. 248.


Nassau County Executive Laura Curran seen Jan. 17,
Nassau County Executive Laura Curran seen Jan. 17, 2019 in Mineola Photo Credit: Howard Schnapp 
For the first time, Nassau County government employees are getting paid to vote.
Citing changes to state election law, Nassau told employees last week they could take as many as three hours of work time at the beginning or end of their shifts “without loss of pay” to vote in Tuesday’s primary.
Employees were required to notify their department heads two working days before the election.
A June 19 memo from county Human Resources Director Kerrin Huber to all Nassau department heads said employees wanting time off to vote had to fill out a “Time Off Request Form.”
According to the form provided by county spokeswoman Chris Geed, employees had to state they were "a registered voter eligible to vote on election day” with the date of the election written in, and they were requesting time off without loss of pay for the purpose of voting. The employees had to specify how much time they would need, but the form notes that it cannot exceed three hours.
Employees had to sign and date the form which also states, “I declare that the foregoing time off is necessary to enable me to vote.”
Geed did not immediately have the number of county employees who requested the paid time off, which is on top of their already accrued vacation and personal time. She said information about the election law change has been posted in the county since April.
Longtime Republican elections lawyer John Ciampoli said the election law was amended as part of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s budget this spring.



Ciampoli said the three hours paid time off to vote applies to all employers, public and private. He said the law requires employers to post a notice at least 10 days before the election and the notice must remain posted until the close of polls on election day.
Ciampoli said he did not know how the three-hour paid time off fits in with New York’s early voting initiative, which gives voters as many as 10 days before the election to cast their ballots.

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