Snerk. I've done that. (The procedure I got was the Clerk of Elections asking if I was going to be home at such-and-such a time as she was going to be going by my house on her way to turn in the time cards, and if not, she'd bring it to the next meeting we would both be at and I could sign it then.)
I'm not surprised that you forgot. We don't have to sign anything at the end of the election day to get paid any more. There used to be paperwork to do for that and then they'd send our checks out the next time the county commissioners signed checks, usually weeks later. People often forgot to do the paperwork and people were annoyed at how long it took to get paid. Now they make up the checks for the people they expect to be working ahead of time and actually deliver them when they come to check on how things are going during the day and then we joke for a while about how we can all leave since we've been paid. In general, I don't think getting paid provides much motivation for working at our elections. $100 for over 14 hours of work with no real breaks is not exactly good pay.
Pretty good. :) We get $10/hr for work or training, $12 if precinct chair or co-chair. Lots of people only work part of the day, so a flat-rate doesn't work....
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Date: 2011-10-13 03:38 pm (UTC)I sometimes wonder how different it would be here south of the border if our local, state, and federal systems were to acquire such a tradition.
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Date: 2011-10-15 11:40 am (UTC)--Dave "
--Dave "<sfx: hands doing the BOOM motion near lips>" DeLaney