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Showing posts with label Voter Registration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Voter Registration. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Advance Voting for the Primary Election begins Today!!!

Advance Voting begins today for the August 5th Primary Election and runs through August 4, at the Election Office in the Historic County Courthouse, 510 N. Main, Wichita. If you're a registered voter, all you'll need to bring is your ID and you can vote today on the ground floor of the Historic Courthouse. Note: The Courthouse Advance Voting site is open to registered voters from ALL voting districts.

Other advance voting locations will be open from noon to 7 p.m. on July 31 and August 1 and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on August 2!

Sedgwick County Election Office
510 N Main, Suite 101, Wichita

Jul 23 - 25:                8 AM - 5 PM
Jul 28 - 30:                8 AM - 5 PM
Jul 31 - Aug 1:           8 AM - 7 PM
Aug 2:                       9 AM - 4 PM
Aug 4:                       8 AM - 12 Noon


CLICK HERE for a complete list of all advance voting locations with dates and times of availability

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

The Sedgwick County Commission votes to add new voting machines

Long time readers of the blog will remember that back in August of 07, nearly a year ago, the Wichita Branch NAACP came together with a number of different organizations forming the Sedgwick County Voter Coalition. Our primary objective was to address the dramatic reduction of polling places and voting machines within Sedgwick County.

Story 1 : Coalition delivers formal request to the Commission

Story 2 : Commissioners agree to set aside $100,000.00 from the budget

Story 3 : Coalition presses the case, Commissioners agree to reconsider


Today, the Sedgwick County Commissioners voted to purchase new voting machines with the monies that the coalition had asked them to encumber for this purpose. They also noted that they will incorporate paper ballots at the polling places to provide additional voting capacity.

We didn't get all that we'd asked for, but certainly this is a positive step in the right direction. These additional machines and the incorporation of paper balloting will assist in the effort to ensuring that all who wish to vote are able to in a timely and convenient fashion.

We applaud the Commissioners willingness to be responsive to the concerns of the community and particularly those concerns raised by the Sedgwick County Voter Coalition...

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The 20 by 10 Voter Registration campaign bears fruit: Motor-Voter is back on track

Long time readers of this blog will remember that last summer, the Wichita Branch launched an ambitious Voter Registration campaign that we dubbed "the 20 by 10" campaign.


The Campaign was aimed at spurring compliance with the "Motor Voter" bill or NVRA (The National Voter Registration Act) of 1994, which was codified in Kansas law as statute 25-2352. We began our campaign by doing a comparative analysis of the number of licensed drivers and the number of registered voters. In that analysis, we found that a State-wide rate of disparity of approximately 20% (meaning there are about 20% more licensed drivers than there are registered voters). However, in Sedgwick County (which is the States most populous and most urban County) the disparity is actually 43%. We saw that as a clear indication that something was wrong... Not necessarily an act of malfeasance but at the very least there seems to be a structural or procedural impediment to fulfilling the spirit and intent of NVRA.

We then conducted an online poll of Drivers within Sedgwick County. Our poll simply asked: "When you obtained or renewed your Kansas Drivers License, were you given any information concerning Voter Registration?" The results were as follows:

YES - 0%
I think so - 0%
I don't recall - 7%
I don't think so - 28%
No I wasn't - 64%

Armed with this information, we requested a meeting with Secretary of State Thornburgh. We met and discussed the issue of voter registration, and specifically our concern that the DMV's in Sedgwick county were not in compliance with the statutory requirements of NVRA or Kansas State Law. After presenting our case and arguments, Secretary Thornburgh agreed with our reading of the statute and assured us that he would ensure that the DMV's throughout the State are providing Voter Registration information to all individuals who present themselves for licensing.

I am now pleased to report that the Kansas Motor Voter statute is back on track! In January 08, Secretary Thornburgh met with Secretary of Revenue Joan Wagnon and discussed the program and ways that new technologies might aid the process. (There had been some talk of moving towards an electronic voter registration system in the past, but those plans had been cancelled due to a lack of funding and resources) Secretary Thornburgh discussed the importance of the program and the need for compliance and offered assistance to the KDOR to help move the process forward.

Since that time, the DMV and the Department of Revenue, have worked to develop and implement a new system that will electronically process Voter Registrations & bring the State into compliance with the Motor Voter Statutes.

Here are the basics of the program: The driver's licence examiner will ask each applicant if they want to register to vote. If the person says yes, the examiner will ask three additional voter registration questions: (1) Are you a US citizen? (2) Will you be 18 by the next election? (3) Do you wish to declare a party affiliation? The new computer program will then assimilate the voting-related information with the name address and other information already collected for the driver's license, attach the digitized signature to the record, and send it in batches to the Agency central database for our voter registration system.

On behalf of the Wichita Branch NAACP, we would like to thank Secretary Thornburgh for meeting with us, and for being responsive to the issues and concerns of the community...


Tuesday, May 6, 2008

N.C. NAACP files formal vote-suppression complaint against Women's Voices, alerts U.S. DOJ of concerns

The North Carolina NAACP has filed a formal complaint of possible voter suppression against Women's Voices Women Vote, the D.C. nonprofit behind deceptive and illegal robo-calls made to state residents. The N.C. NAACP hand-delivered its complaint on Saturday May 3rd, to state Attorney General Roy Cooper and State Board of Elections Executive Director Gary Bartlett. It's also alerted the U.S. Department of Justice that it's collecting more information from its national network and is contemplating filing a formal complaint with that agency.

N.C. NAACP President Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II announced the filing of the complaint at a press conference held on Saturday May 3rd, outside the N.C. Department of Justice. He was joined by his group's attorney, Al McSurely, and Bob Hall of Democracy North Carolina. The state Attorney General's office is already investigating Women's Voices, but the N.C. NAACP and Democracy North Carolina want to be parties to that investigation. "When you mess with the right to vote, you're messing with everything that is fundamental in our democracy," Barber said.

Here is the full text of the group's complaint, dated May 2.

When it refers to "Ex. 1," that is the WVWV letter to Gary Bartlett available here [PDF]; "Ex. 2" directs readers to news reports at DailyKos, Facing South and NPR. "HKonJ" refers to Historic Thousands on Jones Street, a statewide coalition of some 70 social justice groups organized by the N.C. NAACP; Jones Street is where the state legislature is located in Raleigh.

RE: Voter Suppression Activity Targeting Black Voters in North CarolinaDear General Cooper and Mr. Bartlett:

On behalf of the North Carolina Conference of over 100 NAACP Branches across North Carolina, I file this formal complaint against an organization out of Washington, D.C. called Women's Voices Women Votes (hereafter "WVWV") that has engaged in a pattern of massive robo-calls and mass mailings that appear to be designed to suppress and dilute voter participation, with a peculiar focus on African Americans.

One of our HKonJ Partners, Democracy North Carolina, made a request to both agencies earlier this week, to investigate automated telephone calls with misleading information about the voting process made to African Americans. We now know the source of the calls to be WVWV and we know from this group's own admission in a letter faxed to Mr. Bartlett on 28 April 2008 that it knew these messages would confuse voters. The Attorney General has taken initial action to stop the illegal calls, but there needs to be a much more aggressive investigation into WVWV's intentions and aims and the effects of its massive efforts to confuse voters.

Who was targeted? Why? How could a national organization be ignorant of the dates of one of most important primaries in the history of our State? How could a national organization give such wrong-headed directions to unregistered voters during the exact same period when they could easily register through our one-stop early voting procedure? Does the evidence show that WVWV violated NC General Statute 163-275(17), which makes it a felony crime to communicate misleading information about the voting process with the "intent and the effect" "to intimidate or discourage potential voters from exercising their lawful right to vote." Democracy North Carolina joins with us in requesting a much more aggressive investigation of the actions of the group. Here are some of the areas we urge you to look into:

1. The WVWV told Mr. Bartlett in its 28 April 2008 letter that it was about to mail voter registration information to 276,118 unmarried women in North Carolina and that it was sending similar mailings to "unmarried women not just in North Carolina, but around the country." (See Ex. 1) A comprehensive examination of the mailing list must be done to determine how many of these letters went to "unmarried women" as opposed to African Americans and other people of color, how many of each group were registered or not registered, and which misleading message each group received.

2. Although in this same letter the WVWV said it was only targeting unmarried women, three days later, on 1 May 2008, after Democracy North Carolina had raised the issue of possible targeting of African Americans, the WVWV denied it only targeted unmarried women. In a written answer it said: "While our focus is on unmarried women, we have worked to target other under-represented groups through our project, the Voter Participation Center." (Ex. 2) To what extent does the WVWV discriminate in how it communicates to African Americans in contrast to unmarried women? We cite as one example the contrast in the automated telephone messages sent to black versus white households in late April.

To speed your investigation (it is probably too late to prevent or remedy the damage done to voter turnout during early voting and on Tuesday, May 6th, but we trust a solid investigation will prevent similar misfeasance in future elections), permit us to share with you the information we have gathered since we first became aware of the confusing robo-calls and mailings a few days ago:

1. WVWV admitted it made thousands of automatic calls to North Carolina residents on 24 and 25 April 2008. (See Ex. 2) On calls, apparently to white women, a woman said: "Hi. Just a reminder. Your voter registration form is in the mail to you. Your voice counts and your vote [indecipherable]. Sign it, date it and send it in. Thanks!"

2. An African American man, who identified himself as Lamont Williams (hereafter "Lamont") gave the following message to other homes: "Hello. This is Lamont Williams. In the next few days, you will receive a voter-registration packet in the mail. All you need to do is fill it out, sign it, date and return your application. Then, you will be able to vote and make your voice heard. Please return your registration form when it arrives. Thank you." According to WVWV, "Mr. Williams is a professional voice talent," and his calls only went to men and a woman was used to contact women."

3. Lamont's calls tell people that are registered that they are not and that the only way they can vote is to wait a few days, get a form in the mail, fill it out and mail it back in. As one commentator said, "Whether the result of deliberate design or massive negligence on the part of WVWV and/or its vendors in terms of the timing of the calls and the determination of who would be called, the end result is something which rightly raised suspicions about the intent of this program."

4. Contrary to North Carolina law, there was no identification of the organization who had paid for the call, WVWV, or its "project" organization, Voter Participation Center, nor did Lamont provide any way for the receivers of his misleading message to check on it, if they had questions.

5. Mr. Kevin Farmer, in Durham, N.C. has an original tape of Lamont's message, which was apparently aimed at a young African American male voter who had registered to vote for the first time in 2004, and whose 2004 telephone number was reassigned to the store where Mr. Farmer now works.

6. Rev. and Mrs. Nelson Johnson received Lamont's message three times. Neither are unmarried women--they are African American civil rights activists in Greensboro.

7. When Lamont's messages were sent to hundreds of thousands of North Carolinians on April 24th and 25th the deadline to register for the May 6 primary had passed if you tried to register by mail. You could easily register--and Vote! by going to a one stop early voting place. WVWV focus has been on unmarried women. (See Ex. 1)

8. WVWV sent Mr. Bartlett its fax from the Institute of Women's Policy Research which has the same address, 1707 L Street NW, Suite 750, Washington, DC 20036 as the Women's Voices. The letter was dated April 24, but the fax was sent late in the afternoon of April 28, which was the same day the mailing was scheduled to leave the mail house for North Carolina.

9. In the letter to Mr. Bartlett, the WVWV explained its massive 276,118 mailing that was about to be sent, but did not mention Lamont's calls or any other calls, presumably to the same people, telling them to look for the mailer. (Ex. 1)

10. Copies of the mailing pieces were not sent to Mr. Bartlett for his review or even as a courtesy. Some of the messages on the mail pieces are misleading while others appear to misrepresent North Carolina law regarding the registration process. For example, some say, "The deadline for voter registration is approaching," but the mail-in deadline has ended two weeks earlier. Some say, "state law requires you to update your voter registration records," but voters who move within a county are allowed to vote without previously changing their registration.

11. WVWV has said they have tried to delay the 276,000 pieces of mail destined for North Carolina and that "a majority of the mail that was going to North Carolina will not be delivered, and our folks are continuing to try to make sure that as much of the NC mail as possible is held until a later date." (Ex. 2) Based on conversations with WVWV's vendors and postal officials on Friday, approximately 110,000 pieces are still being delivered this week, most heavily in Eastern North Carolina.

12. WVWV said it "was a mistake" for Lamont not to identify the sponsoring organization and "we regret the error and will ensure it does not happen again." WVWV has repeatedly been challenged on the inaccurate and misleading mass robo-calls and mass mailings in other states, and it merely apologizes, and says they will do better in the future. Months ago, we understand, WVWV pledged to identify the source of Lamont's calls. This promise was broken.

13. The robo-calls in N.C. were part of a massive set of calls and mailings in 24 states in late April 2008 that included Kentucky, West Virginia, North Carolina, and Oregon--all states where the voter registration deadline has passed and the primary is approaching. Two months earlier, on 6 and 7 February during other primary campaigns, Lamont, or someone acting for WVWV, made millions of calls in 22 states, including Virginia. At that time, the registration deadline had passed in Virginia and the primary was days away. The resulting chaos led to an investigation by the State Police and more promises from WVWV to change its deceptive practices.

14. WVWV says it was fully aware of the closing of the registration rolls in North Carolina, the availability of one-stop registration/voting, and other important voting factors that would influence the impact of its call/mailing operation. In its letter to Mr. Bartlett, WVWV apologized for the confusion its poor timing caused, but dismissed the timing as an "unfortunate coincidence."

15. Voters in Virginia, Oregon, Wisconsin, Kentucky and Michigan complained to the WVWV that the anonymous calls probably caused voter confusion and frustration. The Institute for Southern Studies found media or other reports about complaints regarding WVWV calls or mailings in at least 10 states in the past five months.

By copy of this letter we alert the U.S. Department of Justice that the NC NAACP is collecting more information through our national network in contemplation of filing a formal complaint about this issue. We also copy this letter to our National NAACP leadership, which has approved these complaints. Through our national organization, we will see information about how these confusing robo-calls and mailings affected minority voter participation in other states, such as West Virginia, Virginia and Kentucky, as we continue our discussions about our next steps to expose efforts to confuse and mislead voters in key primary states. We will also be consulting with two national Election Protection hotlines that are monitoring the primary election in North Carolina to evaluate whether their findings shed additional light on the actions of WVWV.

The letter is signed by Barber and copied to Julian Bond, chair of the NAACP's national board; NAACP Interim CEO Dennis Hayes; Angela Ciccolo, NAACP's interim general counsel; and Christopher Coates, acting chief of the U.S. DOJ's Voting Section.To listen to WVWV's Lamont call, click here. For the call with the woman's voice, click here.



Thursday, March 6, 2008

Sedwick County Voter Coalition presses the case: Commissioners agree to reopen discussion on adding more polling places

Long time readers of this blog may remember that back in August, the Wichita Branch and the other members of the Sedgwick County Voter Coalition began a campaign to increase the number of polling sites and voting machines to be used in the 08 Presidential Elections. (links - petition to the Sedgwick County Board of Commissioners : Commissioners earmark $100,000.00 for new voting machines : Voter Education Strategy

Yesterday, after a presentation by Branch and Coalition member Dr. Walt Chappell, the Sedgwick County Board of Commissioners agreed to restart discussions on the increase with a workshop to be held on March 25th. The County Election Commissioner has also agreed to participate in the workshop. Below, I've reposted an article from today's Wichita Eagle describing the presentation and decision along with a link to the Eagle site...

Reposted from the Wichta Eagle 03/06/08

BY DION LEFLER

With record voter turnout expected across the country this November, Sedgwick County officials have agreed to look at whether the county has enough places to vote.

Commissioners agreed to hold a workshop on increasing the number of polling places after a presentation Wednesday by Walt Chappell, who plans to run again after losing a narrow 2006 race to state Rep. Brenda Landwehr.

The idea of more polling places also has support from the Sedgwick County Voting Coalition, a network of 27 voting-rights groups that includes the League of Women Voters. [-and the Wichita Branch NAACP-]

County Election Commissioner Bill Gale said later that he plans to attend the workshop.
But the number of polling places is one of the least important factors in increasing turnout and getting voters through the process efficiently, he said.

Debacle or success?
The 2006 election was the first major test of the voting system after Gale reduced polling sites from 208 to 63. Based on the same turnout numbers, Chappell said the election was a debacle, while Gale characterized it as a success.

Chappell said he thinks the cut in polling places suppressed voting in his 91st District race.
He presented commissioners with spreadsheets showing that 809 fewer votes were cast in the district in 2006 than in the last gubernatorial election in 2002.

"Hundreds of voters were unable to vote in 2006 because the lines were too long, there was not enough parking and it takes too much time for each voter to cast their ballot on the electronic voting machines," he said. Comparing 2002 to 2006, Chappell's report showed a decline in voting in 13 of 24 House districts.

Overall, voting was essentially flat -- a .004 percent increase -- despite a big jump in voters in growing suburban districts west and north of Wichita, the report showed. After the 2006 election, Chappell challenged the accuracy of the county's touch-screen voting machines. A manual recount found no errors.

Commission concerns
On Wednesday, Gale looked at Chappell's turnout numbers and came to a different conclusion.
He said the fact that more people voted at 63 polling places than at the 208 that preceded them shows the new system works. He predicted it will work a lot better than the old system did in the 2004 presidential election, when near-record turnout swamped the smaller polling sites and some voters faced two-hour waits.

The new voting machines are faster than the old ones, and paper ballots will be available to move voters through if lines become excessive, he said. An expansion of early voting sites from two to 16 since the 2004 vote also has eased pressure on election day, he said.
Chappell asked that the county add at least 20 more polling places in the most heavily affected areas. Gale said adding polling places now would confuse voters, who are used to their new sites after the 2006 election and last year's special election on casino gambling. "One of the more frequent calls I used to get was, 'You changed my polling place again?' " Gale said. "Those weren't friendly calls." Chappell looked mildly surprised when commissioners agreed to further talks.

"We do have some concerns about this," said Commission Chairman Tom Winters. The discussion has been set for the commission's regular staff meeting March 25. It is open to the public and will begin at 9 a.m. in the commission room at the county courthouse, 525 N. Main, Wichita.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

The NAACP Legislative Report Card for the 110th Congress: Was your Representative representing you?


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Monday, December 3, 2007

NAACP Voter Empowerment training conducted in Baltimore over the weekend

This past weekend (Nov 30th & Dec 1st) the NAACP and the NAACP Voter Fund conducted a Natioinal Voter Empowerment training in Baltimore Maryland for Youth and College leaders and for State Political Action chairs. Representatives from 27 States were on hand to receive what turned out to be a very comprehensive training on strategies to maximize and protect our vote.

On Friday:
Angela Ciccolo, esq., NAACP Interim General Council, provided training on the applicable Federal Laws and the Legal Do's & Dont's of Voter Registration. Richard McIntire, NAACP Communications and PR Specialist, provided a Media Workshop dealing with interview strategies for print, radio, and television. Stephanie Brown, NAACP Youth & College Division Director, provided training on outreach to the 17-25 year old demographic and on the NAACP YC's new "Vote Hard" campaign to be rolled out in '08. We then had a session where State Conference Representatives and Youth & College Leaders were able to address one another and share best practices from across the Country. Later that evening, we were addressed by NAACP Interim President Dennis Hayes and Regional Director (Reg's 1, 3, &4) Rev. Gill Ford.

On Saturday:
Claude Foster of the NAACP Voter Fund talked about the increased and enhanced accountability standards the NAACP will now employ. Hillary Shelton, NAACP Washington Bureau Chief, and Alethea Bonello, NAACP Regional Youth Field Director, reviewed the NAACP's National legislative and advocacy agenda for 2008, and talked about the construction of candidate "Report Cards" and questionairres. They specifically addressed the Do's & Dont's for Non-profits (C3's and C4's) who engage in non-partisan 'Get out the Vote' activities. Tonya Clay, Esq. and Michelle Jawando, esq. of the People for the American Way (Pictured Below), gave a presentation on Election Protection highlighting methods and activities used to suppress the vote that NAACP activists should be on the look out for and should effectively guard against. And we wrapped up with a presntation from Mary Peeler and Claude Foster of the NAACP National Voter Fund who talked about the process of drafting an effective Voter Empowerment campaign.


Greg Moore, Executive Director of the NAACP National Voter Fund, talked about the 7 strategic objectives for the coming election season. They are:
  1. Reducing barriers to African American voter participation and to increase African American citizen participationin the electoral process - especially urban, young, and new voters
  2. Strengthening the Voter Registration initiatives, techniques, and coordination techniques and standards of State and Local units of the NAACP and any other allied Religious, Civil Rights, and/or Community based organizations
  3. To utilize Media and PR strategies to convey messages to African Americans on key issues related to Civil Rights, stressing the importance of the electoral process and the need for the to participate in the political process
  4. To develop an Election Protection and Poll Monitoring program utilizing the MYVOTE1 voter protection hotline, and to begin to identify and establish a network of election observers at the grassroots level who would assist in the NAACP's Voter Protection Program
  5. To develop model programs, in coalition with other advoacy groups, that are designed to register recently re-enfranchised voters
  6. To develop lessons learned and best practices documents for use in future programming that identifies key challenges in registering and mobilizing African Americans and evaluates the NAACP and NAACP Voter Fund's program activities' impact on voter registration and turnout rates
  7. Take innovative steps to identify and restore the voter registrations of drop-off voters, lost registrants, and purged voters.
The Youth & College Leaders and State Conference representatives will begin training their local and State units at the next quarterly meetings this January. If any of you are interested in participating in this training or have an interest in getting involved with Voter Registration and Empowerment, please contact your local NAACP unit or State Conference Political Action Chair.
K Myles and Interim President Dennis Hayes

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

NAACP meets with Secretary of State Thornburgh about Voter Registration and NVRA

The Wichita Branch NAACP met yesterday with Kansas Secretary of State Thornburgh to discuss the issue of voter registration. We dealt specifically with our concern that the DMV's in Sedgwick county are not in compliance with the statutory requirements of NVRA or Kansas State Law.

As we'd reported here in an earlier post, the statute reads that every Kansas driver's license application and non-driver identification card application (including any renewals) shall serve as an application for voter registration.

This should mean that with very few exceptions (those who are too young, have prior felonies and are still on paper, or who simply opt out) the overwhelming majority of all licensed drivers within the State should already be registered voters.

So after doing a comparison of the number of licensed drivers against the number of registered voters, we found that there is a State-wide rate of disparity of around 20% (meaning there are about 20% more licensed drivers than there are registered voters). However, in Sedgwick (our most populous County) the disparity is actually 43%.

This seems to be a clear indication that something is wrong... Not necessarily an act of malfeasance but at the very least there seems to be a structural or procedural impediment to fulfilling the spirit and intent of NVRA.

We also shared the results of our poll with Secretary Thornburgh. Our poll question simply asked, "When you obtained or renewed your Kansas Drivers License, were you given any information concerning Voter Registration?" The results were as follows:

YES - 0%
I think so - 0%
I don't recall - 7%
I don't think so - 28%
No I wasn't - 64%

The Driver's license application is being used as a Voter Registration form, but as allowed by statute, Kansas requires that a person wishing registered to vote also completes a second form. While the DMV's do have the additional Voter Registration forms and information on hand, they have not been presenting it to the applicants unless it is requested.

We presented our case that per our reading of the statute, this information is to be presented to the applicants and not simply maintained on site. The intent of NVRA, upon which our Kansas Statute (25-2352) is based, is that persons who present themselves for licensure would be registered to vote if eligible. We've found that people are currently being given the voter registration application (which is integrated into the Driver's license application) yet the signature page is not presented unless it is specifically requested, and no information is given to the individuals about the process or their options. People leave the DMV unregistered and without knowing that they even had the option to register. We stated that it was our understanding that this practice was not consistent with State or Federal law.

The Secretary agreed with our reading of the statute and assured us that he will ensure that the DMV's throughout the State are providing Voter Registration information to all individuals who present themselves for licensing.

We will continue to monitor the situation and continue our polling of applicants. Once this change is made, the first step in our 20 by 10 campaign will be officially underway...

KM

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25-2352
Chapter 25.--ELECTIONS
Article 23.--REGISTRATION OF VOTERS

25-2352. Registration of voters as part of application for driver's license or nondriver identification card.

(a) (1) Each Kansas division of motor vehicles driver's license application and nondriver identification card application (including any renewal application) submitted to a division of motor vehicles office in Kansas shall serve as an application for voter registration unless the applicant fails to sign the voter registration application. [emphasis mine]

An individual who completes the application for voter registration and is otherwise eligible shall be registered to vote in accordance with the information supplied by the individual.

(2) An application for voter registration submitted under subsection (a)(1) shall be considered as updating any previous voter registration by the applicant.

(b) The voter registration section of the application:
  1. May require [see above] a second signature or other information that duplicates, or is in addition to, information in the driver's license or nondriver's identification card section of the application to prevent duplicate voter registrations, and to enable Kansas election officials to assess the eligibility of the applicant and to administer voter registration and other parts of the election process
  2. Shall include a statement that specifies each eligibility requirement for voting, contains an attestation that the applicant meets each such requirement, including citizenship, and requires the signature of the applicant, under penalty of perjury;
  3. Shall include a statement that, if an applicant declines to register to vote, the fact that the applicant has declined to register will remain confidential and will be used only for voter registration purposes;
  4. Shall include a statement that if an applicant does register to vote, the office at which the applicant submits a voter registration application will remain confidential and will be used only for voter registration purposes;
  5. Shall be made available by the division of vehicles (as submitted by the applicant, or in machine-readable or other format) to the secretary of state and county election officers, as provided by rules and regulations adopted by the secretary of state; and
  6. Shall be transmitted to the county election officer not later than five days after the date of acceptance.

(c) The motor vehicle driver's license and nondriver identification card form used for change of residence address shall also serve as a notification of change of residence address for voter registration for elections, unless the registrant states on the form that the change is not for voter registration purposes.

(d) The voter registration portion of the motor vehicle driver's license and nondriver identification card applications and change of address forms used shall be subject to approval by the secretary of state for purposes of voter registration under this section.

(e) Following the line fixed for the signature of the applicant on the application for voter registration, a statement shall be printed stating that the penalty for submission of a false voter registration application is a maximum presumptive sentence of 17 months in prison.

(f) The secretary of state is hereby authorized to adopt such rules and regulations in the manner prescribed by law as may be necessary for the administration of the provisions of this section.

History: L. 1993, ch. 140, § 1; L. 1996, ch. 187, § 14; Apr. 25.




Monday, October 22, 2007

Thank you to our Supporters...

This past weekend we hosted the Annual convention of the Kansas State Conference which concluded with our Annual Freedom Fund Banquet. This is the one major fund-raising event held by the branch each year and we would not be successful as a branch were it not for the tremendous showing of support we receive each year from our local community.

This year, thanks to your generous support and commitments, we have reached our annual fund-raising goals. To show you that you support is well placed, I would like to present to you a brief listing of our accomplishments for 2007. This is the return on your investment.

Membership

  • Submitted a list of 25 College students to be chartered as the WSU NAACP College chapter
  • Wichita Youth Council President Amani Myles was elected Vice-President of the Kansas State NAACP Youth Council.
  • Wichita Youth Council Treasurer Kyron Cox was elected treasurer of the Kansas State NAACP Youth Council.
  • Wichita Youth Council Secretary Isaiah Myles was elected to the Executive Committee of the Kansas State NAACP Youth Council.

Enhancing Advocacy Training

  • On September 22nd, I traveled to Salina Kansas and spoke with students from Brown-Mackie College about legislative advocacy and the NAACP. All of the students in attendance joined the Salina Branch that evening.
  • Hosted a reception for 5 women from the nation of Kenya who were visiting the United States with the “Kenyans working for Good Government” program.

Policy Advocacy

  • Branch Vice President/District 1 City Councilperson Lavonta Williams has done a wonderful job of advocating for the citizens of her district which encompasses the predominately African American Central Northeast community.
  • President Myles now serves on the Wichita Airport Advisory Board and the Community Corrections board
  • Marvin Stone now serves on the Juvenile Corrections board
  • Charles Coleman now serves on the Cultural arts funding board
  • Walt Chapel now serves as the Chairman and VJ Sessions as the Vice-Chair of the City of Wichita Racial Profiling Advisory Board.
  • Loren Breckenridge now serves as the Chairman and Kenya Cox as the Vice-Chair of the City of Wichita’s Task Force to deal with small and disadvantaged businesses.
  • Kevin Myles continues to serve on the Kansas State Racial Profiling Task Force.
  • Emile McGill continues to serve on Governor Sebelius' 2010 Kansas Education Committee

Criminal Justice

  • Worked with the WSU African American Student Association (soon to become the WSU branch NAACP) and participated in a Jena 6 forum which was held at the Rhatigan Center on September 19th.
  • Helped to plan and moderated a State-Wide Racial Profiling Task Force town-hall meeting in Wichita on September 20th.
  • Kevin Myles has been named to serve on the State Wide Racial Profiling Task Force’ Officer training Sub-committee which will begin meeting this month
  • Filed a complaint with the FBI and DOJ on behalf an African American woman who was allegedly beaten by an officer of the Wichita PD.
  • Filed a complaint with the FBI and DOJ on behalf of two Hispanics who allege Police misconduct and use of excessive force
  • Filed 3 new racial profiling cases with the Kansas Human Rights Commission
  • Filed a formal charge against the KC Gas station for selling drug paraphernalia in violation of the new Kansas statute that we drafted. Police went in and seized 3,000 pieces of Paraphernalia. And because the station is within 1,000 feet of Allison Middle School, the owners were both arrested on felony counts.
  • Successfully handled Federal Mediation on behalf of employees of the VA Hospital

Educational Excellence

  • Participated in a panel discussion along with Wichita State University Vice-President, the USD259 General Counsel, and the President of USD259 on the campus of WSU on the Supreme Court’s deseg ruling.
  • On 9/5 I attended the Superintendent’s “State of the District” address
  • On 9/8 I spoke at the Parent to Parent Support group’s annual Breakfast about Parental involvement
  • Held separate meetings with representatives of the District and the School Board to discuss the district’s intent with regard to busing
  • Keynoted the Kansas and Missouri Associations of Private and Career Colleges annual conference
  • Met with the Kansas Education Commissioner and delivered a copy of our 4-point plan to End the Achievement gap.
  • Started the Ron A. Walters Leadership Academy for youth between the ages of 12 and 16.
  • Participated along with the Wichita Alliance of Black School educators and the Parent to Parent Support Group in two “Youth Speak-Out” forums. The forms were attended by 300 African American Students and their parents.
  • Partnered with the Wichita Branch NAACP Youth Council and the Wichita Black Arts Festival Committee to host a Youth Teen-Summit dealing with the negative terms and images in Youth and hip-hop culture

Political Empowerment

  • Wrote a county supplemental budget request and worked as a member of the Sedgwick County Voter coalition to get the Board of County Commissioners to earmark $100,000.00 for the purchase of new voting machines to replace some of those the removed when we switched to touch screen machines.
  • We are currently working with the Sedgwick County voter coalition and it’s 25 member organizations on a multi-organizational voter education program
  • Scheduled a meeting with Secretary of State Ron Thornburgh to discuss the National Voter Registration Act and the non-compliance of our Departments of motor vehicles.
  • Reached out to other organizations with similar interests to build a coalition to press for changes in the law affecting Voter Registration. (Now known as our “20 by 10” campaign)
  • On February 10th, we co-sponsored a Legislative Town Hall meeting with the Kansas African American Affairs Commission, Representatives Goudeau and Miller, Senators Betts and Haley, and the Urban League.

Other

  • We are continuing to meet as a member of the WYEP partnership and as a member of the African American Coalition
  • On July 11th the Branch received a National Thalheimer Award from NAACP Chairman Julian Bond for outstanding branch activities.
  • The Wichita Branch Health Committee participated along with representatives of City and County Government, local hospitals and safety net clinics, in a County-wide Health Access Summit intended to develop strategies to make quality health care accessible to everyone.

So on behalf of the Wichita Branch of the NAACP, we would like to say thank you to all of you in the local community and the business community who have given time and/or resources to our organization. Thanks to your support, we will continue to serve this community with integrity and purpose for years to come.


KM

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Wichita Branch is launching its Voter Registration "20 by 10" campaign!

About week ago I posted information about the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) and the disparity we found when comparing the number of licenced drivers in the State against the number of registered voters. Since then we conducted an informal poll on the AA-Roundtable, a local networking E-list.

Our poll question simply asked, "When you obtained or renewed your Kansas Drivers License, were you given any information concerning Voter Registration?"

The results were as follows:

YES - 0%
I think so - 0%
I don't recall - 7%
I don't think so - 28%
No I wasn't - 64%

We are continuing to gather information through personal interviews and observation of the operations at the DMV, but at the same time, we are pleased to annouce the beginning of what we are calling our "20 by 10" campaign. The idea is to add an additional 20,000 registered voters in the State of Kansas by the year 2010.
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We will accomplish this through targeted procedural and legislative advocacy efforts designed to make the State's statute and practices reflect the spirit and intent of the NVRA.

We will be meeting with Secretary of State in a couple weeks on this issue. Additionally, we've reached out to our Sedgwick County Voter Coalition partners, namely the League of Women Voters, to make this a more collaborative effort. Pending the outcome of our discussions with the SOS, we are also prepared to put together some draft legislation for the upcoming Kansas Legislative session.
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If you would like more information on Voter Registration, the "20 by 10" campaign, or if you'd like to register to vote, please send us an email at: politicalaffairs@wichitanaacp.org
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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Wichita Branch and Kansas State NAACP Political Action committee to meet with Secretary of State Thornburgh concerning Voter Registration

This summer, the Wichita Branch NAACP was beginning to gear up for our Voter Registration efforts. Our plan was to engage in a large scale effort where we would attempt to reach more of our community than ever before. We reviewed block maps and discussed walking door to door and registering everybody in zip codes 67208, 67214, and 67220.

Before we launched, we followed the old adage that you should always "measure twice and cut once" and researched quite extensively to see if there was anything that we were missing. As it turns out, perhaps there was...

Below you'll see the actual text of our State Statute concerning Voter Registration. It was passed in 1994 and enacted into law as a direct result of the 1993 National Voter Registration Act or (NVRA).

The statute states that every Kansas driver's license application and non-driver identification card application (including any renewals) shall serve as an application for voter registration.

This should mean that with very few exceptions (those who are too young, have prior felonies and are still on paper, or who simply opt out) the overwhelming majority of all licensed drivers within the State should already be registered voters.

So we checked the Secretary of State's website and the Department of Motor Vehicles and did a comparison of the number of licensed drivers against the number of registered voters. Our review found that State-wide there is a disparity of about 20%, meaning there are about 20% more licensed drivers than there are registered voters. While we expected there would be some disparity due to the classes of exceptions, 20% seems a bit high...

However, in Sedgwick (our most populous County) the disparity is actually 43%. This seems to be a clear indication that something is wrong... Not necessarily an act of malfeasance but at the very least there seems to be a structural or procedural impediment to fulfilling the spirit and intent of NVRA.

Upon finding that, we went back to the Statute to look for any imprecise language that could have created the structural impediment. What stood out was the next highlighted section which says that the Voter Registration section of the application may require duplicate information and additional signatures...

That section (25 2352 B1) is in clear contradiction to NVRA Public Law 103-31, section 5, (c)(2)(a) which reads:

(2) The voter registration application portion of an application for a State motor vehicle driver's license--
(A) may not require any information that duplicates information required in the driver's license portion of the form (other than a second signature or other information necessary under subparagraph (C));

and Subparagraph C follows with:

(C) shall include a statement that--
(i) states each eligibility requirement (including citizenship);
(ii) contains an attestation that the applicant meets each such requirement; and
(iii) requires the signature of the applicant, under penalty of perjury;

Now I know how it was done. When the Kansas Statute was passed, a loophole was created by language in our subsection (b)(1) that says the additional information is necessary to prevent voter fraud. But that's a bogus argument that we can easily demonstrate...

Beyond these issues, we began talking with people about their renewals at the DMV and thus far no one we've asked remembers receiving any information on Voter Registration. Now you will see when you look at the language in the statute, there's another linguistic loophole that reads "unless the applicant fails to sign the voter registration application".
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The problem is, if you don't receive the application, or if you see a form that basically duplicates the information you've already completed and you understand that the additional form is both optional and 'unnecessary' then chances are you will leave the DMV un-registered.

The NVRA also stipulated that all States make Voter Registration available at facilities that offer public assistance. That section of NVRA is not reflected in our State Statute at all.

In my dual capacity as Chairman of the Kansas State NAACP Political Action Committee, I have called and arranged a meeting with Secretary of State Thornburgh next month to discuss Voter Registration in the State and we are preparing to put something together for the next Legislative session.

In the interim we are gathering additional information and polling folks from the community about their DMV experiences. In that effort, we need your help... We're asking everyone in the community if you received Voter Registration information when you obtained or renewed your Kansas Driver's License. Please email us at Voting@wichitanaacp.org and let us know...
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If we just closed the disparity between Sedgwick County and the rest of the State we could potentially add about 20,000 voters to the rolls (and we wouldn't have to wear out our shoes in the process)

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25-2352
Chapter 25.--ELECTIONS
Article 23.--REGISTRATION OF VOTERS


25-2352. Registration of voters as part of application for driver's license or nondriver identification card.
(a) (1) Each Kansas division of motor vehicles driver's license application and nondriver identification card application (including any renewal application) submitted to a division of motor vehicles office in Kansas shall serve as an application for voter registration unless the applicant fails to sign the voter registration application. [emphasis mine] An individual who completes the application for voter registration and is otherwise eligible shall be registered to vote in accordance with the information supplied by the individual.

(2) An application for voter registration submitted under subsection (a)(1) shall be considered as updating any previous voter registration by the applicant.
(b) The voter registration section of the application:
(1) May require [see above] a second signature or other information that duplicates, or is in addition to, information in the driver's license or nondriver's identification card section of the application to prevent duplicate voter registrations, and to enable Kansas election officials to assess the eligibility of the applicant and to administer voter registration and other parts of the election process;
(2) shall include a statement that specifies each eligibility requirement for voting, contains an attestation that the applicant meets each such requirement, including citizenship, and requires the signature of the applicant, under penalty of perjury;
(3) shall include a statement that, if an applicant declines to register to vote, the fact that the applicant has declined to register will remain confidential and will be used only for voter registration purposes;
(4) shall include a statement that if an applicant does register to vote, the office at which the applicant submits a voter registration application will remain confidential and will be used only for voter registration purposes;
(5) shall be made available by the division of vehicles (as submitted by the applicant, or in machine-readable or other format) to the secretary of state and county election officers, as provided by rules and regulations adopted by the secretary of state; and
(6) shall be transmitted to the county election officer not later than five days after the date of acceptance.

(c) The motor vehicle driver's license and nondriver identification card form used for change of residence address shall also serve as a notification of change of residence address for voter registration for elections, unless the registrant states on the form that the change is not for voter registration purposes.
(d) The voter registration portion of the motor vehicle driver's license and nondriver identification card applications and change of address forms used shall be subject to approval by the secretary of state for purposes of voter registration under this section.
(e) Following the line fixed for the signature of the applicant on the application for voter registration, a statement shall be printed stating that the penalty for submission of a false voter registration application is a maximum presumptive sentence of 17 months in prison.
(f) The secretary of state is hereby authorized to adopt such rules and regulations in the manner prescribed by law as may be necessary for the administration of the provisions of this section.

History: L. 1993, ch. 140, § 1; L. 1996, ch. 187, § 14; Apr. 25.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

The Sedgwick County Voter Coalition begins work on a collaborative Voter Education Strategy

First, let me give you guys a little background. Last year (06) Sedgwick County switched to Electronic Voting Machines. When they made the switch, they reduced the number of voting machines by 70%!

We were all relatively unfamiliar with the new machines and unclear on the potential impact, so we decided we'd give it a chance. We decided to closely observe that next election cycle. So during the Wichita Mayoral election, several members of our Political Action committee volunteered to serve as Poll watchers. Other organizations with similar concerns did the same. While we didn't observe any irregularities, we did notice two distinct problems... First, there were a large number of people who didn't know where there new polling place was. And the second was that there were some areas that were clearly underserved with polling places and machines. Some precincts had voter to machine ratios as high as 549:1

Shortly thereafter Ernestine Krebiel and Betty Ladwig of the League of Women Voters called together a meeting of organizations who were interested in election issues and we 'compared notes'. From that meeting, the Sedgwick County Voter Coalition was born.

Last month, the coalition was able to get the Board of County Commissioners to earmark $100,000.00 from the '08 budget for the purchase of new voting machines. And on Monday night, we (the coalition) met and agreed that we would work together to draft a new multi-organizational Voter Education Campaign that will provide information about Polling Places, Advance Voting, Advance Ballots, and other election options.

Organizational members of the Sedgwick County Voter Coalition include the Wichita Branch NAACP, the League of Women Voters, the Urban League of Kansas, the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, MANA de Wichita, the Wichita Machinists Union, Church Women United, the Global Learning Center, the Kansas Sunshine Coalition, the Democratic Party of Sedgwick County, the GOP Club of Sedgwick County, Republican Women of Sedgwick County, Kansas Latino Democratic Caucus, the Peace & Social Justice Center, AARP of Kansas (Wichita Chapter), and others...