Students and employees at all University of North Carolina system campuses will be able to use their school identification cards for the state's voter ID mandate that begins in 2020 with the March primary.

The State Board of Elections announced on Tuesday the approval of cards for students, or for students and employees, at 12 of the 17 UNC schools, including four local universities: North Carolina A&T, UNC Greensboro, UNC School of the Arts and Winston-Salem State.

IDs for these schools had been rejected in March because a board leader decided they fell short of security standards set in a law implementing the photo ID mandate, which was added to the state constitution in a November 2018 referendum.

The General Assembly altered the ID rules last spring, and schools with rejected cards could reapply in time for the 2020 elections. For example, the process was changed so that a student could provide the photograph to be affixed to the ID. Otherwise, the facial image could be taken only by the school or the school's contractor.

Before Tuesday's approvals by board Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell, students at large campuses such as UNC-Chapel Hill, UNC-Charlotte, East Carolina University and N.C. A&T State University wouldn't have been able to show their school IDs to vote.

University IDs were considered a critical alternative for young people who lacked a driver's license, which had already been designated in state law as a qualifying identification card along with passports, military ID cards and others. But public and private colleges, charter schools and local and state government agencies had to go through the separate ID confirmation process.

With other approvals announced in mid-March and early November, the board said over 150 types of photo ID can now be used next year. Most of North Carolina's 850 schools, government agencies and tribes eligible to have their ID cards approved chose not to apply.

Qualifying IDs will have to be used for both in-person and traditional absentee voting. A law approved this fall clarified how voters of mail-in ballots will have to provide a copy.

Those who don't show photo ID while voting in person can cast a provisional ballot that will be counted if a person brings an acceptable ID later to the county elections board office. In-person or mail-in voters can sign affidavits declaring a "reasonable impediment" prevents them from offering a qualifying ID. Free photo IDs are available. More details will be made soon to North Carolina households.

Lawsuits challenging the voter ID requirement are making their way through state and federal courts. A federal judge scheduled a hearing next week on a motion by state and local NAACP chapters to block the ID mandate for the 2020 elections, saying it would discourage black and Latino citizens from voting.
 

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