" NEWS Election law allows out-of-state " students to vote at Mich. polls The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 1, 2004 - 5 VOTING Continued from page 1 you needed a Michigan driver's license. I didn't know you could use a student ID. I feel like some people would try to vote but be confused about what they need to bring to the polls." Students can also contact the Secretary of State's Office and obtain a sticker with their current school address, which they can put on their driver's license. The ID restriction applies only to first-time voters who registered by mail, and to voters who changed their addresses by mail, Silfven said. Pete Woiwode, LSA senior and co-chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Voice your Vote Commission, said he thinks the law is unfortunate because it turns a lot of stu- dents away from voting. "The problem with the law is less the application of it and more the confusion it has caused," Woiwode said. "It is a law that hampers student voting rights and puts a myth out there that students can't vote where they go to school." To clear up the confusion, Voice your Vote has attempt- ed to inform students of the law upon registration. Mary Bejian, field organizer for the American Civil Lib- erties Union of Michigan, said, "If students do not have proper ID at the polling station, they can still fill out a bal- lot and sign a legally binding statement saying that they live in city where they are voting." Bejian added that it is crucial for students to know that in Michigan they cannot vote by absentee ballot in their first election if they register by mail. They must go to the polls where they are registered. Bjian also described an instance in Washtenaw County during a previous election in which students were told they could not vote without a Michigan driver's license. Because of this misinformation, some students left the polling site and did not vote, Bejian said. "The only person who can tell anyone they can't vote is an official election inspector. If anyone is approached and harassed, they need to report it to an official," she added. "No one can tell anyone that they can't vote." She stressed that every student should go to the polls on Nov. 2, regardless of their residency status. "Voting has gotten a bit more complicated, but it is important for stu- dents to vote." MIKE HULSEBUS/Daily LSA senior Jeff Rezmovic helps Engineering freshman Jonathan Ko register to vote on the Diag yesterday. ELECTIONS ROUNDUP MSA commission registers more than 5,000 student voters Compiled from staff and wire reports. The deadline for registering to vote in Michi- gan is fast approaching - students have until Monday to either register with the city clerk's office or to postmark their mail-in registration forms. With the looming deadline has come an increased flurry of activity, both on campus and across the state. Among the highlights: Thousands of students registering to vote The Michigan Student Assembly's Voice your Vote Commission, a nonpartisan group, said it * has registered about 5,000 students since the start of the semester. Additionally, the College Democrats report- ed registering more than 1,000 people for the upcoming election, while the College Repub- licans have signed up about 150 voters. The Republicans said the lower numbers were due to the fact that most of the students at the Univer- sity are liberal. All three groups said they are registering students no matter where their political sympa- thies lie. "It's important to register people in general," College Democrats member Susanna Groves said. "We will register anyone who wants to vote." College Republicans chair Allison Jacobs also said her group does not solicit students' party affiliations, though most of the students who have approached the group about register- ing have themselves been members of College Republicans. Democrats sue Michigan Secretary of State The Michigan Democratic Party has sued Secretary of State Terri Land, the state's top election administrator, over a memo sent to local officials in June. In the memo, Land said vot- ers cannot cast provisional ballots - which are given to voters with questionable eligibility and inspected after the election - if they vote in the wrong precinct, or subdivision of a community. The state has one week following the election to confirm the voters' eligibility. The Democratic Party says votes must be counted if they are cast in the voter's city or township of residence, even if the voter goes to the wrong polling place. The 2002 Helping Americans Vote Act, passed to clamp down on voter fraud, man- dates that election officials refer to state law in order to determine the validity of a provisional ballot. The Secretary of State's Office has said it is in full compliance with federal law. A hearing on the litigation has been scheduled for Oct. 13. Ann Arbor group accused of handing in fake forms Public Interest Research Group in Michi-. gan. an Ann Arbor-based nonpartisan advocacy group, is the subject of controversy over faked voter registration forms. Eaton County Clerk Fran Fuller said all of her office's fraudulent registrations - many of which lacked driver's license numbers and at least one that was filed on behalf of a dead man - were from PIRGIM. Part of the problem may be the group's incen- tive system, which awards employees who register more voters. PIRGIM's state director Brian Imus said the group is being more vigilant in confirm- ing that all registrations are legitimate. Agency would only aid black businesses DETROIT (AP) - Council members in this major- ity-black city have aligned themselves with an econom- ic development plan that says immigration hurts blacks and calls for a publicly funded development agency that would benefit only black business owners. The plan was commissioned by the Detroit City Council and its basic tenets were endorsed by a major- ity of the members. And though it seems unlikely to be implemented because it lacks the mayor's support, it has prompted intense debate in recent weeks. Many community leaders say it sends the wrong message about a city struggling to revitalize itself. The plan was drafted by Claud Anderson, author of a popular book on black economic empowerment. Anderson, a former Detroit resident who abandoned a plan in 1997 to go after a casino license in the city, was paid $112,000 for the report and says he could be involved as a developer in the projects he proposes. Anderson gained a following in the black commu- nity with his 2001 book "PowerNomics: The National Plan to Empower Black America," which spent more than two years as No. 1 or No. 2 on the best-seller list of Essence magazine, which tracks sales at black- owned bookstores. His plan for Detroit calls for the creation of an all- black business district - dubbed "African Town" by some proponents after ethnic neighborhoods such as Detroit's Greektown and Mexicantown. Under the proposal, the city would use $30 million set aside from Detroit casinos for minority business development to fund grants and low-interest loans. "Blacks are the majority in Detroit, yet they are continually treated like a minority," Anderson wrote in the plan. The plan, which was submitted to the council in June, gained widespread attention only this month after Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick met with Anderson. However, a Kilpatrick spokesman says the mayor does not support the development plan and was merely giv- ing Anderson the same attention he would give any -potential investor in the city. City Council, on the other hand, has passed two related resolutions in July. 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