Buckley Air Force Base   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

Home > Voting

vote
tabInformation and Articles 
For the latest voting information, visit the Federal Voting Assistance Program.

FVAP News Releases

Department of Defense Voting Information Center
24-hour answering service:

DSN: 425-1584
Commercial: 703-588-1584
Toll Free: 1-800-438-VOTE (8683)
tabMilitary Voting Questions and Answers 
Why is voting different for military members and their families?
Voting in the U.S. is controlled and conducted by state governments who have various rules, whether it's voting early for early, by absentee or at local polls if a local voter is temporarily gone on election day. Military voting is different because extended or overseas absences can prevent service members from using normal state voting rules. A special law, called the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, or UOCAVA, requires that states and territories allow certain groups to register and vote absentee in federal elections.

What if I am deployed?
While a few deploying or deployed members may be able to vote at their local polls prior to departure or will return in time to vote at their local polls, most deployed members must use the absentee voting process if they want to vote. Local briefings during deployment processing should encourage deploying members to take a copy of two voting forms with them: the SF-76 Federal Post Card Application and the SF-186 Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot. Unit voting assistance officers can help. The SF-76 is L available at the Federal Voting Assistance Program.

Who is eligible to vote under the UOCAVA law?
All members of the U.S. uniformed services on active duty including Merchant Marines, their family members and U.S. citizens residing outside the U.S.

Do all military members vote under the UOCAVA law or can I vote locally?
Military and family members stationed/working in their voting residence city and state may vote locally at the polls or use their state's absentee process. Each state has specific residency and voter registration requirements. State rules and most required forms can be found at the FVAP website by searching your "state name" and entering the words "voting" or "election." Even if it is not one's home state, military members may vote in the state or territory where they are stationed if they change their legal residence to that state or territory. Even if service members live on a military installation, just registering to vote at their new location will often result in a change in legal residence. Because there are legal and tax obligations that may be incurred, people should visit their base legal office for advice on local and state tax policies. Voters using UOCAVA protections continue to remain voting and tax residents of their home state without regard to the places their duty has taken them.

Where is my "legal voting residence?"
For voting purposes, the "legal voting residence" can be the state or territory where the service member last resided prior to entering military service or the state or territory that a servicemember has since claimed as the legal residence. Military and family members can choose to change their legal residence every time they change permanent duty stations. Military members and their families can have different legal voting residences. A legal officer should be consulted before legal residence is changed because there are often other factors to consider.

Absentee Voting Information

How do I vote by absentee ballot?
Complete and mail the Federal Post Card Application Form (SF-76). Contact your installation voting assistance officer through your base operator for more information.

Where do I get the form?
The SF-76 can be obtained from a unit voting office. It is also available online at the Federal Voting Assistance Program website.

How do I complete and send the form?
Many states have specific rules. You can also look up those requirements in the Voting Assistance Guide at http://www.fvap.gov/vao/guide.html. Depending on the rules of the state, voters can mail or use electronic means for registering and requesting ballots. Although there is a deadline, some states allow late registration.

Since my family members are not in the military, can they vote absentee?
The law entitles eligible family members of military members to vote absentee. Family members are considered to be in the same absentee voter category as military members and generally should follow the same procedures. Family members of military members residing overseas, who are U.S. citizens and who have never resided in the U.S. usually claim a parent's legal status as their own if that parent is a U.S.citizen.

Is more help available?
Yes. Call the Installation Voting Assistance Officer at 720-847-9891.
tabUnit Voting Assistance Officers 
460th Space Wing
Capt. Dennis Wu
Capt. Elvis Santiago

460th Operations Group
Master Sgt. Kevin Dunaway
2nd Lt. Christopher Barnes
Staff Sgt. Paul Herrera

460th Operations Support Squadron
1st Lt. Juan Perez
Master Sgt. Scott Frasier

8th Space Warning Squadron
2nd Lt. Mike Reinitz
Senior Airman William Merilatt

11th Space Warning Squadron
Tech. Sgt. Jason Riggs
Tech. Sgt. Joshua Sutfin

460th Space Communications Squadron
Master Sgt. Shaun J. Weimer
Senior Airman Christopher Cianfrone-Adams

460th Security Forces Squadron
Capt. Michael Keys
1st Lt. David Bruton

460th Civil Engineer Squadron
1st Lt. Mercy Te'o
Staff Sgt. Fernando Bejarano

460th Force Support Squadron
Tech. Sgt. Jennifer Parker
Staff Sgt. Lilian Thompsett

460th Contracting Squadron
Airman 1st Class Clint Shields
Airman 1st Class Jacob Horton

460th Logistics Readiness Squadron
Senior Airman Tierra Baugh
Staff Sgt. Steven Bouquet

460th Medical Operations Squadron
Staff Sgt. Timothy Moore
Staff Sgt. Laquanya Mason-Coyner

566th Intelligence Squadron
Staff Sgt. Steven Johnson
Master Sgt. Melanie Ludtke

566th IS Alpha Flight
Airman 1st Class Richard Haney
Airman 1st Class Melissa Scott

566th IS Bravo Flight
Master Sgt. Melanie Ludtke

566th IS Charlie Flight
Senior Airman Ken Beckstead
Airman 1st Class Anastasia Meade

566th IS Delta Flight
Senior Airman John McBeth
Airman 1st Class Scott Knaur

566th IS Echo Flight
Tech. Sgt. Jared Poole
Master Sgt. Jason Skiles

566th IS Golf Flight
Airman 1st Class Lauren Rogers
Senior Airman Charles Piper

566th IS India Flight
Staff Sgt. Brian Hall

566th IS Juliet Flight
Staff Sgt. Anthony Beauchamp

566th IS Kilo Flight
Staff Sgt. Steven Johnson

ARPC Headquarters
Tech. Sgt. Jessie Quick

AFTAC Det. 45
Senior Airman Samuel Scott
Airman 1st Class Jeffrey Gonzalez

Det. 1
Capt. Brian Bishop
Staff Sgt. Chad Carpenter

Air Force ROTC
Tech. Sgt. Jennifer Heffelfinger

FMCoE
Tech. Sgt. Eric Shevy

743rd Military Intelligence Battalion
1st Lt. Natasha Bond

U.S. Marine Corps
Warrant Officer Everett Hemphill

 Inside Buckley AFB

ima cornerSearch

tabVoting Resources
The Buckley Voter's Assistance Office is located in Bldg. 347, Rm. 103 on East A-Basin Avenue. The office is open 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Installation Voting Assistance Officer
720-847-9891 // DSN: 847-9891
Email: vote@buckley.af.mil

Register to vote in Colorado
Register to vote in another state

General Resources

AF Voting Instruction
AF Voting Plan
Voting Assistance
Locate a Voter Assistance Office
Voting Inspection Checklist
Military Postal Service
County Search
DOD Voting Guidance

Other Resources
Ballot Register / Request
2012 Election Dates
Voting Site by US Branch
tabVote Quote
Honor the past, support the future- Vote!

"Nobody will ever deprive the American people of the right to vote except the American people themselves, and the only way they could do this is by not voting."

        - Franklin D. Roosevelt            
           32nd U.S. President           

Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     USA.gov     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing