
 
		How to vote early 
 BY BEN VERDE 
 For the second year in a row, and in the lead up to one  
 of the most consequential elections in American history,  
 Brooklynites will get the chance to vote early starting this  
 Saturday. 
 With questions over the state’s handling of mail-in  
 ballots during the June primary, voting early is a great  
 way to avoid crowded poll sites and ensure your ballot is  
 counted. 
 Brooklyn voters will have 10 days to vote early — from  
 Oct. 24 through Nov. 1 — at 27 sites across the borough before  
 Election Day on Nov. 3. To fi nd out which early voting  
 site you are assigned to, visit fi ndmypollsite.vote.nyc. 
 The following sites in Kings County will be  
 used as poll sites: 
 •Carey Gardens Community Center (2315 Surf Ave.) 
 •FDR High School (5800 20th Ave.) 
 •Kings Theatre (1027 Flatbush Ave.) 
 •Brooklyn College (2946 Bedford Ave.) 
 •Park Slope Armory YMCA (361 15th St.) 
 •Council Center for Senior Citizens (1001 Quentin Rd.) 
 •Williamsburg Community Center (195 Graham Ave.) 
 •Barclays Center (620 Atlantic Ave.) 
 •Masonic Temple (317 Clermont Ave.) 
 •Taylor Wythe Community Center (80 Clymer St.) 
 •Dance Atlantic Studio (2796 Fulton St.) 
 •PS 68 (956 E. 82nd St.) 
 •Youth Center (2739 Harway Ave.) 
 •St. Dominic’s (2001 Bay Ridge Pkwy.) 
 •BOE location (5201 Ave. N) 
 •Our Lady of Perpetual Help (552 59th St.) 
 •Fort Hamilton High School (8301 Shore Rd.) 
 •Bushwick Campus (400 Irving Ave.) 
 •IS 33 (70 Tompkins Ave.) 
 •New York City College of Technology (285 Jay St.) 
 •Saratoga Village (940 Hancock St.) 
 •Van Dyke Community Center (392 Blake Ave.) 
 •Vandalia Center (47 Vandalia Ave.) 
 •God’s Battalion Church (661 Linden Blvd.) 
 •St. John’s Recreation Center (1251 Prospect Pl.) 
 •Joesph A. Miccio Community Center (110 W. 9th St.) 
 Polls will be open the following days and  
 hours: 
 Oct. 24 and Oct. 25: from 10 am to 4 pm 
 Oct. 26: from 7 am to 3 pm 
 Oct. 27 and Oct. 28: from 12 pm to 8 pm 
 Oct. 29: from 10 am to 6 pm 
 Oct. 30: from 7 am to 3 pm 
 Oct. 31 and Nov. 1: from 10 am to 4 pm 
 To ensure public safety amid the ongoing coronavirus  
 pandemic, all poll workers are required to wear masks and  
 masks will  be  provided  to  voters who need  them. There  
 will fl oor markers to help maintain social distancing and  
 antiviral wipes will be available as needed. Voters will be  
 able to keep the pens they use to fi ll out their ballots and  
 voting machines will be cleaned regularly with antiseptic  
 wipes. 
 To confi rm that you are registered to vote, visit:  
 COURIER LIFE, OCT. 23-29, 2020 5  
 Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis and Rep. Max Rose will face off in the contentious District 11 congressional  
 race in November.  File photo by Tom Callan / Max Rose for Congress 
 Malliotakis: If elected to congress, Malliotakis  
 said she would focus on investing in  
 local infrastructure to update the subway system  
 and restore the state and local tax deduction  
 known as SALT, which allows some home  
 owners to get deductions on their local property  
 taxes.  
 She also would also propose putting a lockbox  
 on  certain  federal  funding  for  city  and  
 state entities, such as the NYPD, to make sure  
 that the funding is used as it was intended, she  
 said. 
  % CHANCE TO WIN 
 Rose: If reelected, Rose said he would  
 prioritize  addressing  the  COVID-19  pandemic  
 by  investing  in  public  heath  infrastructure  
 and scaling up testing and treatment. 
  To mitigate the economic fallout,  
 Rose said he will work to earmark federal  
 aid for healthcare institutions and for state  
 and local governments.   
 He also said he would commit to a significant  
 multi-trillion bill to update the country’s  
 transportation infrastructure and invest  
 in green energy. 
 THE VERRAZZANO TOLL 
 Malliotakis:  Malliotakis said state efforts  
 to give Brooklyn residents a discount on  
 the Verrazzano Bridge toll — which is the most  
 expensive in the country at $19 roundtrip —  
 have  failed because  some Brooklyn  legislators  
 don’t want to reduce the funds for mass transit,  
 which the toll pays for. 
 “The problem with getting some type of relief  
 is that there isn’t the will from our colleagues in  
 some parts of Brooklyn,” she said.  
 Rose:  Rose  said  he  has  authored  two  
 bills in congress that would help lower tolls  
 nationwide. One bill introduced in May  
 would allow the MTA to use toll revenue  
 not just to fund public transit, but to provide  
 discounts to locals. Another bill introduced  
 in May would allow commuters who  
 spend more than $1,000 annually on the toll  
 to receive a tax credit. Neither bill has come  
 for a vote as of Oct. 21. 
 ABORTION 
 Malliotakis:  Malliotakis  is  pro-life  
 with  the  exceptions  of  the  life  of  the  mother,  
 rape, or incest, she said, but added she doesn’t  
 hold black-and-white views on abortion.   
 “I don’t think this is a black-and-white issue. 
  I think it’s very personal to people. I would  
 consider myself pro-life, my voting record is as  
 such,” she said, noting her no vote on a state bill  
 that would legalize late-term abortions.  
 Rose: Rose  said he  is  completely pro- 
 Choice and doesn’t believe in any abortion  
 restrictions. 
 “I ardently believe that a woman should  
 have the right to make decisions about her  
 own reproductive health and about her  
 body, with the consultation of a doctor of  
 course, but she has the abject 100-percent  
 right to make those decisions,” he said.   
 TOP PRIORITIES 
 As of press time, FiveThirtyEight gives Rose a 72% chance,  
 and Malliotakis a 28% chance.