Posted Thursday, July 6, 2017 1:24 pm

Volusia County, FL - Volusia County's Supervisor of Elections, Lisa Lewis, has responded to the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity's request for Florida voter information.

The Commission, created by President Donald Trump, seeks publicly available information such as:

Full first and last names and middle initials or names

Address

Date of birth

Political Party

Last four digits of your social security number

Voter history beginning in 2006

Inactive, active or canceled status

Felony Convictions

Voter registration in another state

Military Status

Overseas citizen information

In a letter to Florida's Secretary of State, Ken Detzner, that Lewis attached to her release, the Vice Chair of the Commission, Kris W. Kobach, says the information will be given to President Trump in a report to show if there is anything that may interfere with election processes.

After getting calls and emails to her office, Lewis clarified that in Florida, the following pieces of information are not public record in Florida:

Florida Driver License Number

Florida Identification Card Number

Social Security Number

Signature

Where registration took place

Lewis also said that the voter history that the Commission requested is a list of elections a voter has voted in, not a list of who a voter voted for. Her office wrote in their release that they hope this will not discourage people from registering to vote or voting and that Volusia County always makes sure that votes count.

In the letter from Kobach, the preferred deadline for states to respond is by July 14. According to a statement from Kobach released by the Office of the Vice President on July 5, 20 states have agreed to provide information and 16 states have told the Commission that they are considering it. Kobach says that reports indicating that 44 to 45 states have refused to participate are 'fake news' and that so far, only 14 states and the District of Columbia have declined.

Florida has been reported as reviewing the request.

If you have questions, Lewis' office says you can reach the Department of Elections at 386-736-5930, 386-254-4690 or 386-423-3311.

Copyright Southern Stone Communications 2017.