Office: 269-623-5175
Email: rgoebel@prairievilletwp-mi.gov
Phone: 269-623-4705
Email:
The Prairieville Township Precinct is at the Prairieville Township Hall 10115 S. Norris Road Delton, MI.
Do: Check your registration and find your polling place at Michigan.gov/Vote. If your registration is not up to date, visit your clerk’s office immediately with proof of residency.
Do: Bring photo identification with you. If you do not have photo ID, you will need to sign an affidavit before voting.
Do: Wear a mask and know that all election personnel are required to wear them. The state has provided masks, gloves, hand sanitizer, cleaning protocols and social distancing guidelines.
Do: Request use of the Voter Assist Terminal if you have a disability or would prefer to use it.
Don’t: Speak to anyone who says they are a poll watcher or challenger. They are not allowed to speak to voters. Report violations to an election worker immediately.
Don’t: Leave the polling place without voting. The law requires that anyone in line by 8 p.m. be allowed to vote.
Don’t: Allow anyone else to cast your ballot for you. It is your ballot and you must place it into the tabulation machine.
Report any voter intimidation, harassment or coercion you witness. Notify an election worker or contact the nonpartisan election protection hotline at 866-OUR-VOTE.
Do: Sign the back of the ballot return envelope. Your vote will not be counted without a signature that matches the one on file with your clerk.
Do: Hand-deliver your ballot to your city or township clerk’s office or a ballot drop box in your voting jurisdiction. Do this as soon as possible (no later than 8 p.m. on Nov. 3). Find locations at Michigan.gov/Vote.
Do: Track your ballot at Michigan.gov/Vote to ensure it was accepted. If it wasn’t, contact your clerk immediately.
Do: Know that all valid absentee ballots will be counted by bipartisan pairs of election workers.
Don’t: Mail your ballot after Oct. 19. To avoid postal delays, hand-deliver it to your clerk’s office or ballot drop box. Mail your ballot only if absolutely necessary.
Don’t: Ask anyone to deliver your ballot for you unless they are immediate family or a member of your household.
Vote early and in person at your city or township clerk’s office using an absentee ballot up until 4 p.m. the day before the election. Clerks begin counting absentee ballots on Election Day.