Election 2012: How Do You Get a Valid Pennsylvania ID?
With the new voter ID law in effect for November's general election, here's all you need to know about getting the proper identification needed to vote.
Starting with the November general election, Pennsylvania law will require voters to show an acceptable photo ID to vote at the polls.
Bucks County, with 25,449, and Montgomery County, with 44,952, fall into the top five counties that have registered voters without photo IDs.
All identification used for voting must have an expiration date and be current, except for Pennsylvania driver's licenses or non-driver photo identification, which are valid for voting purposes one year past their expiration.
Voters who do not have an acceptable form of photo identification for voting can get one for free at any PennDOT driver license center. What you need to do depends on whether you previously had a PennDOT-issued driver's license or ID.
Here is everything you need to know if you're planning to cast your ballot this fall.
Acceptable IDs include:
- A Pennsylvania driver’s license or PennDOT photo ID card (valid for voting 12 months past expiration date).
- U.S. passport.
- U.S. military ID (active duty and retired military IDs may designate an expiration date that is indefinite). Military dependents’ IDs must contain a current expiration date.
- Employee photo identification issued by the federal government, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania county or Pennsylvania municipal government.
- Photo identification issued by an accredited Pennsylvania public or private institution of higher learning.
- Photo identification issued by a Pennsylvania care facility, including long-term care facilities, assisted living residences and personal care homes.
- If you have a religious objection to being photographed, acceptable IDs include the following: Pennsylvania valid without-photo driver’s license or PennDOT valid without-photo identification card.
Voters Who Had a Previous PennDOT License or ID
If you are a registered voter who previously had a PA driver's license or PennDOT photo ID card that has been expired more than one year:
- Visit a PennDOT driver’s license center with a completed application for Initial Photo Identification Card (Form DL-54A). There is no need to bring any supporting documentation since identity and residency were previously validated by PennDOT.
- You should provide your current address on the application. Obtain and sign an affirmation form, affirming that you do not have another acceptable form of ID for voting purposes. The form is available on PennDOT’s website or at a driver’s license center.
- If you still have your expired Pennsylvania driver’s license or PennDOT photo identification card, bring it along to the driver’s license center. However, if you no longer have it, PennDOT will be able to determine if you have an expired product.
- If you have a Pennsylvania driver’s license or PennDOT photo identification card that expired prior to 1990, you should call PennDOT’s customer call center at 1-800-932-4600 to verify whether your record is still in PennDOT’s system.
Voters Who Never Had a PA Driver's License or ID Card:
If you have never had a Pennsylvania-issued ID and don't have an acceptable alternative ID, here's what you do:
- Visit a PennDOT Driver’s License Center with a completed application for Initial Photo Identification Card (Form DL-54A).
- Bring a Social Security card and either a certificate of U.S. citizenship, certificate of naturalization or birth certificate with a raised seal.
- Bring two proofs of residency, such as lease agreements, current utility bills, mortgage documents, W-2 form, tax records.
Students, Homeless, Others
- For students at least 18 years of age, accepted proofs of residency include the room assignment paperwork (considered a lease) and one bill with their dorm room address on it. Bank statements, paystubs and credit card bills are all acceptable.
- Other individuals who may not have any bills, leases or mortgage documents in their name may bring the person with whom they are living along with that person’s driver’s license or photo ID to a driver’s license center as one proof of residence plus at least one more piece of official mail with their name and address.
- Homeless individuals can use the address of a shelter as their residence, provided they visit a driver’s license center with an employee from the shelter who has an employee photo identification issued by the shelter and a letter on the shelter’s letterhead indicating that the homeless individual stays at the shelter.
To find the driver license center nearest you or get more information on the voter ID law, visit www.VotesPA.com or call 1-877-VOTESPA (1-877-868-3772).
donna smith
11:26 am on Sunday, July 8, 2012
Republicans will be sorry one day
Juan Sanchez
5:02 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
I think, Ms Smith, Republicans and Democrates are sorry right now! Not someday. Our present leader and his administration hasn't done a d thing he promised in the 4 years he's been in office. I will not be voting for him again. I am not stupid.
a m mulroney
10:16 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
As Juan says-----ditto
Patti McGorrey
12:16 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
You need to show ID for so many lesser things, why not for something as important as voting!
Jeff Lugar
12:46 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
It's a shame it's politically motivated, but we should've always needed ID to vote. You should need at least as much ID to pick your leaders as you do to rent a keg tap or a hotel room.
Richard Harwood
2:18 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
My mom can't walk. How is she supposed to get her photo. We went to get ID (she couldn't get there) and "they" wouldn't even talk to us!
KevinP
2:54 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
Who are "they" and how did she get there if she couldn't get there? This doesn't make sense.
Tired of Hypocrisy
3:13 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
Oddly enough, if your 'Mom can't walk', how does she get out of the house, into a car, to the polling place, to the doctors, etc. Obviously someone transports her and why can they not transport her to a Motor Vehicles Office to get a photo ID? It is easy, take a number, wait your turn. If 'they won't talk to you', call you local representative, I'm sure they will talk to you and assist in getting a photo ID for your mother. There is still four months before it is needed, plenty of time. Good luck!
Mike Shortall
4:11 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
An absentee ballot requires no ID, which makes claims of political motivation and disenfranchising voters sound really, really lame as responses to a common sense law.
George Marasco
6:57 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
@Mike Shortall, you're wrong. You now have to show a photo ID to apply for an absentee ballot.
http://www.votespa.com/portal/server.pt/community/how_to_vote/13515/voting_by_absentee_ballot/
Scroll down to where it says "What I need to know about voting by Absentee Ballot due to the Voter ID Law?"
freeandequalpa
8:20 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
Actually, you do not need a photo ID to obtain an absentee ballot. All you need is a social security number: www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/http;//www.portal.state.pa.us;80/portal/server.pt/gateway/PTARGS_0_160329_1240045_0_0_18/AbsenteeBallotApplication.pdf
However, only those who are out-of-town on business or physically incapable of voting in-person are permitted to vote by absentee ballot. And if you obtain an absentee ballot but are unexpectedly able to vote in person on election day, you must go to the polls, void your absentee ballot, and vote in-person (look at the warning on the bottom of the application in the link above). Which raises the question: Why is it that voters who are qualified to vote absentee do not need a photo ID to vote, but voters who vote in-person must have a photo ID?
a m mulroney
10:17 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
wheel chair ???????????????????
Juan Sanchez
4:52 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
I think e verify and voter ID are essential in this day and age of open borders. If the borders were closed we wouldn't have to show any ID. Everyone should be happy about showing ID for any reason at anyplace. If they object, then obviously, they are not suppose to be here. Duh.
freeandequalpa
8:21 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
Non-citizens are permitted to obtain a driver's license in PA (http://www.dmv.state.pa.us/licensing_master/identity.shtml). So how will requiring voters to show a photo ID at the polls prevent non-citizens from voting?
a m mulroney
10:07 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
right on !!!!
Hatboro Hatter
6:44 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
This should be a Federal Law! You shouldn't be able to walk up at a polling place say I'm Joe Blow and sign a registration book and cast a vote with out being able to actually prove your Joe Blow. It's just common sense
freeandequalpa
8:22 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
In PA, your signature must match the authorized signature in the poll book.
a m mulroney
10:08 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
yep !!
George Marasco
7:07 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
The law would make sense if there was an actual problem with voter fraud. There is not. http://www.truthaboutfraud.org/
Mike Turzai, the PA House majority leader, admitted this law was passed in an effort to ensure Romney wins Pennyslvania. http://videocafe.crooksandliars.com/karoli/shameless-republican-brags-about-voter-id-w
Estimates were just released this week that this law will disenfrancise almost 10% of Pennsylvania voters. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-06/pennsylvania-voter-id-law-may-bar-9-from-presidential-election.html
This law is a sham. It creates far more problems than it solves, mainly because there is NO problem with voter fraud. It's nothing more than a means of disenfranchising wide swathes of the population who have historically voted Democratic.
a m mulroney
10:14 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
No fraud---search some past Phila results (vot early, vote often
Names of people who have died are not immediately removed--could be but are not
anyone can copy a signature generally because no on looks
I have seen people go into booth with n "not able to vote people (read not competent) guess who really voted.
If this law makes Romney win then (de facto) non eligible people were scheduled to vote
LASTLY---READ HOW EASY IT IS TO GET PHOTO ID..ONLY THE TERRIBLY TERRIBLY LAZY ARE DISENFRANCHISED
Mike Shortall
11:37 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
You're not looking hard enough if you believe the line that "there is no voter fraud" - including direct impersonation at the polls.
freeandequalpa
8:44 am on Monday, July 9, 2012
Mike Shortall writes: "You're not looking hard enough if you believe the line that 'there is no voter fraud' - including direct impersonation at the polls.."
Please provide links to the evidence of direct impersonation fraud in PA that you have found.
freeandequalpa
8:22 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
The voters who sued to challenge the PA Photo ID Law -- all citizens (one a veteran) who are registered to vote and have been voting for years -- do not have have and, more importantly, cannot obtain one of the approved forms of photo ID. Therefore, they are disenfranchised by the law. You can read more about it here: http://freeandequalpa.wordpress.com/summary-of-applewhite-petition/
freeandequalpa
8:23 pm on Sunday, July 8, 2012
Disenfranchising voters to solve a non-existent problem makes no sense. The fact is, there is no evidence that voter impersonation fraud -- the only type of fraud a requirement that voters show ID can prevent -- is actually occurring. If voter impersonation was widespread or even happening occasionally, you would expect to see evidence that voters showed up at polls only to learn that someone already had voted for them. You also would expect to hear evidence that, every once in a while, an impersonator is caught because the poll workers or poll watchers know the voter that the impersonator is attempting to impersonate or the impersonator is unable to convincingly forge the real voter's signature. But I have not seen any such evidence.
Also, it would be extremely easy to perform an empirical study to determine if voter impersonation fraud was occurring: (1) check the poll books to see whether people who died before any given election signed in to vote; (2) contact a statistically significant number of voters who signed in to vote at any election and ask whether they in fact voted; and (3) check to see whether anyone who fraudulently registered to vote actually signed in to vote. The Legislature should have undertaken this study to determine that voter impersonation fraud actually is occurring before spending millions of dollars of our taxpayer money to solve what appears to be a non-existent problem.
marty smith
6:16 am on Monday, July 9, 2012
WOW.... I wonder if my BJ.s store card can be proper ID. It has my picture on it?
freeandequalpa
8:46 am on Monday, July 9, 2012
Not sure if this comment is tongue-in-cheek, but, no, your BJ's card is not acceptable. Here is a list of acceptable photo IDs:
http://www.votespa.com/portal/server.pt/community/preparing_for_election_day/13517/voter_id_law/1115447
bill murphy
4:29 pm on Monday, July 9, 2012
So why would someone not be able to get an ID card from the state? I do not understand how someone who cares that much about voting would not allready have some form of valid ID to use at the polls. Oh and I maybe mistaken but cant you be considered a vagrant and fined for not showing ID to police if they ask? Seems like a lot of hub bub over a comon sense law. But then again comon sense is not so comon.
marty smith
5:58 pm on Monday, July 9, 2012
I call all this just " conversational gymnastics " Hey common sense where are you?
someone in southampton
2:24 pm on Tuesday, July 10, 2012
when I first moved up here, I was ask for ID before I could vote. now my signature is on the books. I don't see what the big deal is