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Voter Registration Modernization

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Title: Voter Registration Modernization


1
Voter Registration Modernization
  • David Becker John Lindback
  • Project Director, Elections Initiatives Senior
    Officer, Elections Initiatives
  • Pew Center on the States Pew Center on the
    States

2
The Pew Charitable Trusts
  • The Pew Charitable Trusts is driven by the power
    of knowledge to solve todays most challenging
    problems. Pew applies a rigorous, analytical
    approach to improve public policy, inform the
    public and stimulate civic life. We partner with
    a diverse range of donors, public and private
    organizations and concerned citizens who share
    our commitment to fact-based solutions and
    goal-driven investments to improve society.
  •  
  • An independent nonprofit, Pew is the sole
    beneficiary of seven individual charitable funds
    established between 1948 and 1979 by two sons and
    two daughters of Sun Oil Company founder Joseph
    N. Pew and his wife, Mary Anderson Pew.

3
(No Transcript)
4
The Pew Center on the States
  • Pews Center on the States (PCS) works to advance
    state policies that serve the public interest.
    PCS conducts credible research, brings together
    diverse perspectives and analyzes states
    experiences to determine what works and what does
    not.
  • Childhood health
  • Corrections and public safety 
  • Early education
  • Economic competitiveness
  • Elections 
  • Government performance 

5
Pew Election Initiatives
  • Track record of bi-partisan work with officials
  • Our process research then recommendations
  • Three priority areas
  • - Military and Overseas Voting
  • - Voting Information Project
  • - Voter Registration Modernization

6
Voter Registration Modernization (VRM)
  • Bringing Voter Registration into the 21st Century

7
The need for modernization
  • Accuracy
  • Cost
  • Efficiency

8
Accuracy
  • The single greatest factor predicting whether
    voters will have a voter registration problem is
    mobility
  • Between 2007 and 2008, more than 1 in 8
    Americans moved, with more than 1 in 4 young
    Americans moving
  • Individuals who have moved within the previous
    two years are much more likely to encounter
    registration problems
  • It is estimated that at least 15 of the records
    in the voter rolls are no longer valid, being
    either duplicates or outdated (people moving, new
    voters, new citizens, deaths)
  • Preliminary research appears to show that
    approximately 1 out of 5 records of valid voters
    contain at least one inaccurate piece of data
    (same as Canada, where 20 of list becomes
    outdated annually)
  • The system is rife with data entry errors,
    leading to problems at the polls and returned
    mail

9
Cost
  • Approximately one-third of local election office
    budgets across the country are devoted to
    building and maintaining voter registration lists
  • Forsyth County, Georgia (102,424 voters) spent
    half its 1.4 million budget on the registration
    process in 2008
  • Franklin County, Ohio (848,013 voters) spent 1
    million on personnel costs for voter registration
    in 2008
  • Los Angeles County, California (4,341,135 voters)
    spent over 13 million on voter registration
    costs in 2008
  • Paper-based system requires the printing of
    millions of paper forms
  • Must be processed by hand, often by dozens of
    temporary employees
  • Inaccurate information leads to returned mail
    and processing costs
  • These costs are part of overall 30-35 increase
    in budgets since HAVA

10
Cost
The Oregon experience
  • Pew is examining what it costs Oregon taxpayers
    to maintain a list of approximately 2 million
    voters.
  • A forthcoming Pew study indicates it costs more
    than 4 per voter to maintain a voter
    registration list in Oregon in 2008. The state
    built its new system for approximately 10
    million.
  • Costs are incurred at both the local government
    level (counties) and at the state level.
  • The taxpayers are footing the bill at all three
    levels of taxation federal, state and local.

11
Efficiency
  • Various studies estimate that only about 70-75
    of eligible voters are captured by the current
    system
  • 9 million citizens did not register in 2008
    because of residency rules or registration
    deadlines
  • 3 million voters experienced a problem with
    voter registration in 2008 general election
  • 2.2 million votes were lost due to voter
    registration problems in the 2008 general
    election
  • Nearly half of all provisional ballots which
    went uncounted were rejected due to voters not
    appearing on the rolls

12
Efficiency
  • Heavy reliance on political campaigns and
    third-party voter drives
  • Crush of registrations received near/at the
    deadline that overwhelm election officials
  • Military voters registering from afar
  • Military voters were about twice as likely to say
    they couldnt vote because of registration
    problems
  • National Voter Registration Act (Motor Voter)
    compliance
  • Paper- and mail-based system
  • Government-run registration, but unevenly
    implemented
  • Voter confusion more than 1 in 4 voters either
    do not know how to change their registration or
    think that the postal service or election office
    automatically updates it
  • Almost half of all voters are unaware that they
    can register or update their registration at
    motor vehicles offices

13
Voter Registration Modernizationmeans
  • Keeping lists current
  • Reducing costs, such ballots returned by USPS
  • Minimizing the need for third-party drives
  • Helping voters not on polling place lists
  • Addressing issues that feed litigation
  • Reducing opportunities for fraud

14
Voter Registration Modernization
  • Pew will be releasing a report early in 2010
    demonstrating that it is possible, using current
    technology, to implement a voter registration
    system that will be more accurate, more cost
    effective, and more efficient, by
  • Automatically putting eligible voters onto the
    voter rolls using data in existing governmental
    databases
  • Automatically updating existing voter records
    using new data captured in other databases and
  • Providing for a failsafe that will allow
    eligible voters who slip through the cracks or
    have inaccurate data to correct that so they can
    cast a ballot at the polls.

15
Improving Accuracy
  • Reduction or near-elimination of duplicate
    registrations
  • Instant updating of records with most recent
    information, such as tax records, motor vehicle
    records, other government data
  • Substantial reduction in returned mail
  • Minimize registration problems at the polls

16
More Cost Effective
  • Automated system means fewer staff and resources
    needed to create voter records, once
    infrastructure in place
  • Significantly reduced paper or printing costs
  • List maintenance costs vastly reduced, as updates
    occur automatically

17
Cost
The Canadian experience
  • In 1996, Elections Canada (its federal elections
    agency) built its National Register of Electors
    for 13.3 million CAD for 20 million voters.
    Costs included the price of building computer
    systems, acquisition of computer hardware and
    software and similar costs from provincial data
    sources.
  • Today, the permanent register cost approximately
    5 million per year to maintain.
  • The permanent register is estimated to have
    saved Canadian taxpayers approximately 130
    million over the six elections following its
    introduction.

18
Cost
Experiences in the States
  • Online registration In Maricopa County, AZ, a
    paper registration form costs at least 83 cents
    to process, versus only 3 cents per online
    registration
  • By eliminating paper and coordinating with DMV
    better, Delaware was able to reduce labor costs
    by 200,000 annually

19
Increased Efficiency
  • Much higher percentage of eligible voters on the
    rolls
  • Significantly reduce reliance on outside
    registration groups
  • Significantly reduce lost votes
  • No more rush at the registration deadline
  • More accurate information on location of and
    contact information for military voters,
    streamlining UOCAVA voting
  • Over half the states have some sort of failsafe
    for at least some voters
  • The NVRA effectively becomes obsolete
  • Fewer lawsuits

20
The push for modernization
  • Congress is acting US Senate Committee on
    Rules Administration is expected to introduce a
    major bill addressing VRM this session
  • Committee on House Administration has considered
    several bills to modernize registration
  • Many states have considered or adopted
    legislation to modernize their voter registration
    systems

21
  • Pew is committed to addressing the challenges,
    technical and otherwise, in modernizing our
    system, by promoting innovation in the states
  • Bringing together technical experts and state
    election officials to address challenges
  • Toronto meeting
  • Producing research
  • Pilots in the states

22
  • Pew has convened a VRM design working group, made
    up of state and local election officials
  • from 21 states,
  • as well as academics and technical experts
  • Blueprint for VRM design to be released in the
    first quarter of 2010
  • Pilots to follow in multiple states
  • Those states in the first wave of pilots will
    receive financial and technical assistance from
    Pew

23
  • VRM Design
  • A central data warehouse the Electronic
    Registration Information Center (ERIC) where
    states would submit data to be matched, and would
    receive data reports on individuals consistent
    with state policy
  • Data sources might include existing voter files,
    motor vehicles data, military data, NCOA data,
    Social Security death records, and widely
    available commercial data
  • Reports that could be processed
  • Definitely eligible but unregistered voters
  • Potentially eligible but unregistered voters
  • Voters who died
  • Voters who moved

24
Architecture The Big Picture
Data Sources
The Central Service
Subscribers
Reports
A
1
B
2
Matching
Lookups
In basket
Systems
Audit Log
Database
C
3
Files
D
4
Changes/feedback
Transactions
Matching and Memory
Specific Use
25
  • David Becker
  • Project Director, Election Initiatives
  • The Pew Center on the States
  • dbecker_at_pewtrusts.org
  • John Lindback
  • Senior Officer, Election Initiatives
  • The Pew Center on the States
  • jlindback_at_pewtrusts.org
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