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Eligible Californians of all backgrounds — including those experiencing homelessness — can vote in the June 7 primary election.
Election officials and advocates for unhoused people say it’s not well known that people without a permanent address can register and cast a ballot. But over the past four decades, state and federal courts have ruled that homeless people cannot be denied the right to vote simply because they lack a roof over their head.
The courts have found unhoused residents can register by listing a shelter, landmark, park or street corner close to where they sleep as their address.
Despite the rulings, as few as 10% of homeless people vote in elections, compared with 54% of the country’s voting-age population, according to an article by Dora Kingsley Vertenten, a professor of public policy at the University of Southern California.
Seated on a bench at Cesar Chavez Plaza where many homeless Sacramentans gather, Chris Williams says he believes most unhoused residents don’t vote because they’ve been let down by politicians who make promises but don’t come through.
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But election officials have mailed only about 450 ballots to unhoused residents, mainly those who live at shelters or use a service provider’s address, Haynes said. Officials are encouraging unsheltered homeless people to register and vote at any county voting center by submitting a general location such as a park or a nearby intersection as their address.
“We can issue them a ballot in their name, in that specific precinct so that they can cast a ballot for the election,” Haynes added.
Listing “Cesar Chavez Plaza” or “Fremont Park” would be sufficient for people who live at those Sacramento locations, she said.
The same process applies in Yolo County where elections staff provided this guidance for unhoused residents:
“If you are unsheltered or homeless, you only need a description of where you live,” the county’s election website states. “If you do not have a street address, provide an exact description, including cross streets. If applicable, identify the corner or area where you live. For instance: ‘Northwest corner of 1st St and Court St.’”
The Secretary of State’s Office issued a fact sheet in 2020 reminding the public that Californians experiencing homelessness have the right to vote. You can find contact information for election offices in all 58 counties here.
Historically, voting rights have been tied to the possession of personal property, according to Samantha Abelove, a program manager at the California Voter Foundation. But the law “never actually stated that unhoused [people] could not vote and a ruling by the California Court of Appeals in 1985 proved that to be true,” she wrote in an email.
“This ruling, along with several other rulings around the same time, seem to be pivotal in changing the narrative around who was able to vote,” Abelove added.
Bob Erlenbusch, director of the Sacramento Regional Coalition to End Homelessness, said it’s important to encourage unhoused people to vote. (Full Story)