Can Convicted Felons and Homeless People Vote?

Question by jitterbug: Can convicted felons and homeless people vote?
Im asking because just now on tv, they stated that people in Ohio are going to drug rehabs and homeless shelters to pick people up to vote. Is this legal?

Best answer:

Answer by John S
Don’t people have to have an address to register vote? If you are homeless you wouldn’t have one.

Where I live you have to register to vote & have to provide proof of where you live. How would homeless people do that?

Give your answer to this question below!

 


 

Narconon Arrowhead Drug Rehab News – Ohio – www.stopaddiction.com Narconon Arrowhead Drug Rehab News Story. This is a helpful news segment with facts about drug addiction. The Narconon Arrowhead program has over a 70% success rate. Call 1-800-468-6933

 

Ohio priest starts prison sentence for tax fraud

Filed under: drug rehabs in ohio

AKRON, Ohio (AP) — A northeast Ohio Catholic priest who embezzled money from an alcohol and drug rehabilitation center he founded began serving his six-month prison sentence this week in a tax fraud case. The Rev. Samuel Ciccolini started serving …
Read more on Albany Times Union

 

Octomom Checks into Rehab

Filed under: drug rehabs in ohio

Nadya admitted herself into the Chapman HouseDrug Rehabilitation Center in Southern California over the weekend after acknowledging she's become dependent on Xanax … an anti-anxiety drug … which she began taking to “deal with stress.” Suleman's …
Read more on Opposing Views

 

BCH Cardiac Rehab certified, proves standard of excellence

Filed under: drug rehabs in ohio

BCH Cardiac Rehab certified, proves standard of excellence. The Cardiac Rehab … drops so do number of workers. In the ever confusing world of unemployment rates, statistics and spins there is both good news and bad news on the Ohio employment front.
Read more on WBCO

 

Officials showing optimism in Ohio's prescription drug battle

Filed under: drug rehabs in ohio

During the past decade in Ohio, the number of dispensed doses of prescription opioids, such as the brand names OxyContin or Opana, grew at about 20 percent annually, according to Orman Hall, director of the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug … They …
Read more on Lancaster Eagle Gazette