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Oregon Bill Would Allow 16-Year-Olds To Register To Vote

<p>A voter deposits a ballot into a Multnomah County drop box in this 2008 file photo. The county's voters will decide this election whether or not to keep electing sheriffs after a string of scandals have rocked the Multnomah County Sheriff's Office.</p>

File Photo

A voter deposits a ballot into a Multnomah County drop box in this 2008 file photo. The county's voters will decide this election whether or not to keep electing sheriffs after a string of scandals have rocked the Multnomah County Sheriff's Office.

Sixteen-year-olds could register to vote under a bill being considered by Oregon lawmakers.

But they wouldn't be allowed to actually vote until after they turn 18.

Right now, 17-year-olds can register to vote in Oregon. Supporters of the measure said many teens would automatically be ready to vote as adults because they’d be registered when they get their driver’s license.

Harrison Schreiber, a junior at Crescent Valley High School in Corvallis, told members of the Oregon Senate's Rules Committee on Monday the bill would make teens care more about public affairs.

"Giving 16-year-olds the ability to preregister allows an even younger subset of the population to begin thinking about what ideals and issues matter to them," he said.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 10 states and the District of Columbia already allow 16-year-olds to register to vote, including California, Colorado and Utah.

The committee also heard testimony on a measure that would require county elections offices to include prepaid envelopes so voters could return their ballots without purchasing a stamp.

One of the bill's sponsors, Democratic Sen. Richard Devlin of Tualatin, said people just aren't accustomed to buying stamps anymore.

"The reality is putting something in the mail is becoming a rarer and rarer occurrence," he said.

Senate Republican leader Ted Ferrioli of John Day questioned the need for the measure.

"I just have trouble believing that if somebody is a registered voter that during the three-week period between the ballot drop and the time that they are required to return their ballot," said Ferrioli, "that they wouldn't have an occasion to encounter any reasonable access point for postage."

Charlie Fisher of the Oregon State Public Interest Research Group was one of several advocates to testify in favor of the measure.

"Anything that can be done to expand people's access and broaden participation and lower barriers for people to exercise that right is one that should be applauded," said Fisher.

Similar measures have been introduced in the past with little success.

The cost of the proposal is unknown, since many voters would likely continue to use ballot drop-off sites, which don't require postage.

Copyright 2017 Oregon Public Broadcasting