§ 21-2-215 - Main office of board of registrars; location; business hours; additional registration places; educators to serve as deputy registrars; training; registration cards and papers
               	 		
O.C.G.A.    21-2-215   (2010)
    21-2-215.    Main office of board of registrars; location; business  hours; additional registration places; educators to serve as deputy  registrars; training; registration cards and papers
      (a)  For  the purpose of taking and processing applications for registration and  for the purpose of registering electors, such number of registrars or  deputy registrars as shall be designated by the chief registrar shall be  stationed in the main office of the board of registrars.
(b)  In  those counties in which the registrars have a main office separate from  other county offices, the main office shall be in the courthouse or  other public building at the county site. In those counties in which the  registrars do not have an office separate from other county offices,  the office of the chief deputy registrar or other office designated by  the board of registrars which is accessible at all times during normal  business hours shall be deemed to be the main office of the board of  registrars.
(c)  The main office of the  board of registrars in each county shall remain open for business during  regular office hours on each business day, except Saturday. The main  office, or such other offices, shall be open at such designated times  other than the normal business hours as shall reasonably be necessary to  facilitate registration and at such other hours as will suit the  convenience of the public.
(d)  The board of  registrars may designate additional registration places throughout the  county on a temporary or permanent basis. These additional offices for  registration will have fixed hours of operation. All voter registration  places shall be places open to the general public and frequented by the  general public. Such places for temporary or permanent voter  registration may include, but shall not be limited to, any of the  following: churches, synagogues, governmentally funded and managed  public housing facilities, public social agencies, public child care  centers, public recreation centers, public buildings and shopping  centers, multifamily apartment complexes, child care centers, and  educational facilities, provided that such places are in fact open to  and frequented by the general public.
(e)  Additional  registration places and the hours of operation shall be advertised in a  newspaper of general circulation in the county or in the form of a  public service announcement on radio or television one or more times at  least three days prior to the first day for registration.
(f)  The  State Election Board shall adopt rules and regulations setting forth  criteria governing the selection of voter registration places in  conformity with the provisions of subsection (d) of this Code section.  Boards of registrars shall not adopt rules nor utilize procedures  inconsistent with such rules and regulations adopted by the State  Election Board; provided, however, that nothing contained in this  subsection shall supersede the ultimate authority of local boards in  selecting additional voter registration sites.
(g)  Each  principal or assistant principal of every public or private high  school, the president of every public or private college or university,  the president of each state supported technical institute in this state,  and the designee of such principal, assistant principal, college or  university president, or state supported technical institute president  shall be a deputy registrar of the county in which the school, college,  university, or institute is located for the purpose of receiving voter  registration applications from those qualified applicants who are  enrolled students within the principal's school or the president's  college, university, or institute or who are employed by the private  high school, the school system, the college or university, or the state  supported technical institute, notwithstanding the fact that such  students or employees are not residents of the county in which the  school, college, university, or institute is located. Such principals,  assistant principals, presidents, and their designees shall inform their  students and employees of the availability of such voter registration  and shall provide reasonable and convenient procedures to enable such  persons who are qualified applicants to register. The principal of each  public or private high school, the president of each public or private  college or university, and the president of each state supported  technical institute are authorized to invite other deputy registrars to  the school, college, university, or institute for the purpose of  conducting voter registration. All such deputy registrars authorized by  this subsection shall receive annual training by the board of registrars  of the county in which such deputy registrar shall work.
(h)  The  completed registration cards in the custody of the board of registrars  and the other papers of the board of registrars shall be secured and  maintained in the main office of the board of registrars, with the  exception that completed registration cards may be retained temporarily  at permanent additional voter registration places established under this  Code section but shall be transmitted to the main office as  expeditiously as possible by a registrar or deputy registrar or by  United States mail. In no event shall the completed registration cards  be temporarily retained beyond the end of the next business day.  However, in counties in which a computer system for the electronic  imaging of the entire voter registration card or the signature of the  voter is operational and permits the registrars to view the signature of  the voter electronically, the completed registration cards may be  stored in a secure area outside of the main office of the board of  registrars, provided that such cards may be retrieved within a  reasonable time in the event that the actual card is needed. The  electronic image of the voter's signature may be used by the registrars  in the same manner as the original signature on the voter registration  card to verify absentee ballot applications, absentee ballots,  petitions, and other documents which require the registrars to compare  the signature of the voter on the document to the signature on the  voter's registration card.
(i)  The board of  registrars shall enter into the state-wide voter registration system  credit for voting by qualified electors to the Secretary of State within  60 days of a primary or election for the purpose of maintaining the  list of electors and voter history.