All registered R.I. voters to receive this notice in the mail as early as Monday

Voters fill out ballots at the polling site at George Hanaford School in East Greenwich on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024.
Voters fill out ballots at the polling site at George Hanaford School in East Greenwich on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024.
Laura Paton/Rhode Island Current
Share
Voters fill out ballots at the polling site at George Hanaford School in East Greenwich on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024.
Voters fill out ballots at the polling site at George Hanaford School in East Greenwich on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024.
Laura Paton/Rhode Island Current
All registered R.I. voters to receive this notice in the mail as early as Monday
Copy

Rhode Island has not sent a voter list maintenance mailing to all active registered voters in over 15 years. That changes as early as Monday, Nov 3, when voters across the state should start receiving a notice in a white envelope with yellow markings and an “Official Election Mail” decal.

The enclosed letter asks recipients to review the information on their voter record and update any inaccurate or outdated information online at vote.ri.gov or by mail using the form on the back of the letter.

Reviewing and responding to the mailing will help ensure the accuracy of Rhode Island’s voter list and that voters are eligible to vote in the 2026 elections, according to the office of Secretary of State Gregg M. Amore.

If voters receive a letter addressed to someone who does not live at their address, they are asked to write “Not at this address” above the address on the envelope and return the envelope to their mail carrier.

State and local election officials receive voter list maintenance information from several agencies, including the Division of Motor Vehicles, the Department of Health, and the U.S. Postal Service’s National Change of Address program.

A voter’s registration becomes inactive when a piece of official elections mail is returned to the sender as “undeliverable.” If an inactive voter does not cast a ballot in one of the next two federal elections, their voter registration can be removed from the voter list, according to federal and state law.

Election officials have removed 107,738 voters from the state’s voter list through these voter list maintenance processes since Amore took office in January 2023.

Voters who need assistance updating their record can call the Department of State Elections Division at (401) 222-2340 or their local Board of Canvassers’ office. For more information on the mailing and a list of frequently asked questions, visit sos.ri.gov/mailing.

This story was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

Though Mayor Brett Smiley said he plans to veto the Providence Rent Stabilization Act, city councilors appear to be one vote short of a veto-proof supermajority. Councilor John Goncalves, who has not taken a public position on the legislation, is seeking to delay the vote
Mayor Roberto DaSilva points to school investments, new housing projects, and a post-bridge recovery as key to easing costs and reshaping the city’s future
Museum curator Melaine Ferdinand-King says the museum will highlight the cultural and historical contributions of Black Rhode Islanders
Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee lauded the bystanders who stopped a mass shooting in Pawtucket and called the team ‘an inspiration for all Rhode Islanders’
A Providence chef and cocktail bar move into the final round of the 2026 James Beard Awards
Without stoves or modern tools, participants learned to prep a full 18th-century meal over an open flame in a historic Rhode Island home