Mass RMV to Remove Option for Customers to Opt Out of Automatic Voter Registration

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BOSTON — The Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles (RMV) is announcing that effective Jan.1, 2023, the RMV is no longer allowed to offer the option for customers to opt out of automatic voter registration. 
 
The opportunity for driver's license and ID applicants to decline automatic voter registration is no longer possible in accordance with "The VOTES Act," a new election reform law which was passed by the Massachusetts State Legislature on June 22, 2022.
 
On each business day, the RMV will be required to transmit to the Secretary of the Commonwealth, specific applicant information on all eligible transactions with the RMV meeting the select criteria of persons attesting to U.S. citizenship and providing proof of lawful presence. Information that is sent to the Secretary of the Commonwealth will include the applicant's name, date of birth, address, attestation of citizenship, and an electronic signature.
 
RMV customers will be allowed to decline voter registration after receiving the acknowledgment notice from their respective municipal election officials.
 
The RMV has revised its driver's license and ID applications and the "Voter Registration Receipt" to reflect the new changes referenced above. To learn more, go online to: Automatic Voter Registration.
 
The RMV recommends all customers needing to conduct transactions, go online to see if an online transaction is possible, or to prepare for an in-person visit if necessary:  RMV's Online Service Center.
 

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Dalton Health Board Extends Vote on Blighted Home

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The Board of Health last Wednesday agreed to extend its vote on condemning 27 Mountain View Terrace to the October meeting. 
 
Roberta Steele and her niece, Kathleen Winterstein, who lives in Utah, have been working since June to develop a plan to address the home's condition. 
 
Steele has been cited several safety issues with the home, including clutter blocking egresses, a collapsing roof and porch, mold throughout the house, especially in the basement where there is water damage, and the lack of water, electricity, and gas. 
 
Neighbors have complained that rats coming from the "abandoned" property have infested their homes.
 
Winterstein has provided the board with invoices and a projected timeline of the work and board Chair Robert Kinzer had wanted to see action, invoices, and a plan by last week's meeting. 
 
"Things do come up and my background is a criminal prosecutor and a defense attorney. It gets suspicious when things are always brought up at the last minute," Kinzer said. 
 
"[When] there's mysterious circumstances, but I haven't seen anything personally that makes me question it, other than the timing of it."
 
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