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  • 3
    Nov
    2012
    7:02pm, EDT

    NJ voters displaced by Sandy will get chance to vote by email

    Officials predict voter turnout will take a hit in the Northeast as residents deal with the lingering problems from Sandy. William Biamonte, an elections commissioner for Nassau County, New York joins a special edition of NewsNation to discuss.

    By NBC News staff

    New Jersey election officials said Saturday that registered voters displaced by Hurricane Sandy will be able to vote by email -- an electronic process used by state residents who are overseas and service members, but a first for voters living in the state, NBCNewYork.com reported.

    The directive is intended to help first responders kept away from home and their local polling places as well as those displaced by the storm.

    More post-storm coverage at NBCNewYork.com

    Election officials said they will also accept paper ballots through Monday, Nov. 19, as long as they're postmarked by Nov. 6, NBCNewYork.com reported.


    "To help alleviate pressure on polling places, we encourage voters to either use electronic voting or the extended hours at county offices to cast their vote,” said Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno.

    Gov. Chris Christie said Friday that his administration is making sure residents can vote, even if their polling stations are without power or no longer exist. The state also will allow residents to drop by their county clerk's office to vote. A specially created text number will allow a voter to see if his or her polling place is still open.

    NBCNewYork.com described the email voting system:

    Essex County Clerk Chris Durkin told NBC 4 New York the program is being run on an honor system, relying on voters to only use the system if they truly can't get to his or her polling place.

    The procedure, according to Durkin, will be to call or email the county clerk to get a ballot application emailed to you.

    Once filled out, you email it back, then get the ballot itself emailed to you.

    Durkin said you fill the ballot out and email it back, where it will be printed, held several days and cross checked to make sure you didn't vote some other way.

    Since officials couldn't figure out a way to confirm a voters name and print the completed ballot witout an election worker looking the voters' choices while handling the ballots, voters will have to check off a waiver of privacy. 

    It's going to be a long road ahead for millions of families in New York and New Jersey. Morning Joe takes a look back at the week that was Hurricance Sandy.

    219 comments

    This is just flat out wrong and does not have adequate safeguards to prevent it from turning into a massive fraud. These e-mailed ballots are too easily altered. This also completely destroys that anonymity of the person voting.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, election, sandy, decision-2012, hurricane-sandy
  • 21
    May
    2012
    9:39pm, EDT

    Obama to tornado-ravaged Joplin: 'You've grown up quickly'

    Nearly one year after the tornado that devastated Joplin, Mo., President Obama delivers the commencement speech for Joplin's high school graduation ceremony.

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    A year after a deadly tornado flattened the city of Joplin, Mo., in 32 minutes, taking with it 161 residents and thousands of homes, President Barack Obama told the city's graduating high school seniors Monday night that the country can learn from their persevering spirit.  


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “That story is part of you now,” Obama said at Joplin High School's commencement ceremony at Missouri Southern State University. “You've grown up quickly over the last year. You've learned at a younger age than most that we can't always predict what life has in store for us. No matter how we might try to avoid it, life can bring heartache. Life involves struggle. Life will bring loss.”

    On May 22, 2011, an EF-5 tornado – the strongest ever measured – ripped through Joplin, claiming among its victims one graduating senior returning home from commencement and six other public school students. It also destroyed 7,500 buildings, including Joplin High School.


    When Obama last visited, one week after the tornado a year ago, the area was declared a federal disaster area. It was the deadliest tornado in six decades.

    Joplin: Before and after tornado cleanup

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Joplin High School was destroyed in a tornado a year ago Tuesday that claimed 161 residents. President Barack Obama gave the keynote address to the 428 graduating seniors on Monday night.

    "It's bittersweet," senior student Taylor Camden told Reuters after the seniors finished a commencement practice on Friday. "It's going to be a sad, emotional day for a lot of people just to be at graduation. We all lost something, and everyone here lost their high school."

    After the tornado, every high school student received a MacBook laptop, courtesy in part to a $500,000 donation from the United Arab Emirates. Singer Katy Perry sponsored the prom in part and someone else organized a prom dress drive. The girls received free makeup. One woman who lost her home and business, made 1,500 cupcakes for the prom.

    Read President Barack Obama's remarks

    “I imagine that as you begin the next stage in your journey, you will encounter greed and selfishness; ignorance and cruelty.  You will meet people who try to build themselves up by tearing others down; who believe looking after others is only for suckers," Obama said.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    President Barack Obama with Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, left, and Superintendent C.J. Huff, right, applaud the Class of 2012 at the Joplin High School commencement ceremony on Monday.

    “But you are from Joplin. So you will remember, you will know, just how many people there are who see life differently; those who are guided by kindness and generosity and quiet service.”

    PhotoBlog: Rebuilding Joplin

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    From left, Morgan Osburn, David Hoosier and Kim Hoosier spend a quiet moment together in front of a memorial built for their friend Lance Hare who was killed by a tornado that hit Joplin, Mo. a year ago.

    Rachel Berryhill, who took shelter in a bathroom with her family when the tornado tore the roof off their house, already lives that mantra. She told Reuters that she no longer stresses about the small things in life, like the style of clothes she wears.

    "I've become more caring, more attached to people," she said. "I'm trying to live my life in a better way."

    On Monday evening, Deborah Allen watched her eldest grandson graduate with a happy but also heavy heart.

    “This day is joyful," she said. "Tomorrow will probably be a time of sadness for a lot of people."

    Melissa Rogers, whose twins Devin and Danielle were graduating, said she watched Joplin grow stronger over the last year.

    “It wasn’t that we didn’t know it before, we didn’t really have the opportunity, but since the tornado we’ve just all really come together,” she said. For Rogers, too, the event stirred up emotions. She lost two loved ones in the storm.

    Teachers and students told the St. Louis Dispatch that fights and disciplinary violations declined dramatically.

    Throughout the prepared speech, Obama wove in stories of the city’s efforts to rebuild, noting that at the first town hall meeting, residents were handed Post-It notes and asked to write down their hopes for the city’s future. More than 1,000 notes covered a wall, inspiring the city’s planners today.

    In the last year, two-thirds of the destroyed homes have received building permits to rebuild, according to Reuters, and the city has rebuilt with help from thousands of volunteers.

    The president praised those volunteers, telling of a man from Japan who flew in because Americans had helped after the tsunami, of a busload of football players who drove in to dig through the rubble, and of a 9-year-old boy who donated $360 from a car wash he had organized. He praised the schools superintendent, who decided to keep students in Joplin, fashioning a school out of a vacant box store at the mall, according to the St. Louis-Dispatch. A food court doubled as the cafeteria.

    “There are so many good people in the world,” Obama said to the 428 graduating seniors. “There is such a decency, a bigness of spirit, in this country of ours. Remember that.  Remember what people did here. And like the man from Japan who came to Joplin, make sure to pay it forward in your own life.”   

    Joplin, Mo., marks the anniversary of the deadly tornado that ripped the town part. WCNC's Jinah Kim reports.

    Reuters and NBC's Ali Weinberg contributed to this report.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    380 comments

    Great speech, Mr. President. To the rest of you, your nastier side is showing. PS - I'm being kind to you fools who never, ever have anything to say but vitriol.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, barack-obama, tornado, joplin

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