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Can you do that in other states? In Pennsylvania we can only return our own and, if you get designated by another person by filling out a form, and even then you can only be one person's designated person.
I'm in Cali, so I don't know with other states.
My local registrar just has a box out front and I've dropped off ballots there at 3am before. It's locked, but it looks like a USPS envelope drop off box, but it's the registrar's. So just shove them in the slot. And then I get a text the following day or two saying it's been collected and counted.
No one checks anything. I've even gone one time where it was drive-through style and I just rolled my window down and gave them to one of the dozen or so poll workers.
As long as the envelope is sealed and signed properly by the voter, I don't see a reason it'd be contested. And when it all gets counted if there's a discrepancy then it'll get flagged and that individual who signed it will be contacted.
Been doing the drop offs for years now, for all elections. Never had a problem.
Our boxes also look like a postal box, just with a very narrow drop slot.
I think all ours are indoors at libraries and district courthouses.
There were some lawsuits here about people forgetting to date the ballots and I think that is why there's a person there now to supervise drop offs.
Last year was noticeably different though with all the signs out front and people were stuck waiting as everything was being looked at during busy times because we didn't have many drop off sites for how many people live here and they're only open during business hours.
We got emails when our ballots have been received and then again when they're counted.
I get that you can’t actually fill out their ballot (like you can’t do that with Power of Attorney.) but you are talking about physically delivering the envelope you can only do for yourself and one other designated person? So if someone is unable to drop off their ballot due to a disability, there can only be one designated person to drop it off for them and only them?
I went back and reread it, and it says there's an exemption if you all live in the same household. So I think if you live with your parents you can be designated for both of them, but if they live separately from you, you could only do one.
County drop box rules
And then from the agent form:
Last time I voted, they had signs all over the grass saying "One Person, One Ballot" and someone was guarding the box and checking envelopes.