REALTORS® vote
Early, in-person voting begins today, Sept. 24, in Illinois for the 2020 General Election on Nov. 3. Find early voting polling locations in your area and check to see if you are already registered to vote.
Nearly 90 percent of Illinois REALTORS® are registered to vote and they traditionally turn out to the polls at higher numbers than other groups. Will that change this year?
There is no doubt the election this fall will be like no other. There are concerns about in-person voting and crowded polling places as the COVID-19 pandemic continues. However, a new Illinois law should help ease some of the anxieties about voting in November.
In June, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed into law election code changes designed to make it easier for Illinois voters to cast their ballot in the 2020 Election by mail as well as to provide more opportunities for voting. Here are some of the key changes:
- Election authorities are required to send vote-by-mail applications for the Nov. 3 general election to the 5 million Illinois voters who participated in the 2018 general election, the 2019 municipal elections or the March 2020 primary.
- The law requires voters who submit an application for a mail-in ballot before Oct. 1 to get their ballot no later than Oct. 6.
- The law also makes Nov. 3, 2020, a holiday for schools, a move which will free up school buildings to be used as polling places on Election Day.
- Early voting hours will be expanded to 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekdays and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the weekends and holidays.
- Election authorities will be allowed to provide curbside voting, in which voters can fill out the ballot outside of the polling place.
Elections matter to REALTORS®
Whether it’s the candidates we are supporting (through RPAC) or referendum on policies affecting us, we are engaged.
In regard to referendum, Illinois REALTORS® will be involved in attempting to block new home rule powers and increases in municipal real estate transfer taxes. At press time, there is a Home Rule referendum on the November ballot in Crestwood (south Cook County). The city of Chicago had considered an increase in the Transfer Tax, but did not pursue it this year. We are expecting more municipalities to possibly look at transfer tax measures in the 2021 municipal elections as the revenue forecasts become clearer.
Contact me or your local Governmental Affairs Director to learn more about these measures.
Rental housing: front and center
Housing issues are quickly evolving in today’s pandemic environment. The Governmental Affairs team of Illinois REALTORS® continues to track these issues and stay involved in policy discussions.
Most pressing has been the issue of evictions and the potential for a large number of filings in the near future. Much will depend on federal assistance measures. But local governments have stepped up as well with the city of Chicago, Cook County and other counties, including DuPage and Lake, creating rental assistance programs to help renters most impacted financially by COVID-19.
Additionally, some of the policy discussions, mainly in Chicago, have centered on new ways to help tenants in a variety of ways. Some of these new “protections” are pandemic-related and some are not. Illinois REALTORS® will continue to advocate for housing providers who are also feeling financial distress (loss of rental income) due to COVID-19.