HOUSE BILL REPORT
ESSB 5499
As Passed House - Amended:
April 14, 2005
Title: An act relating to election reform.
Brief Description: Clarifying and standardizing various election procedures.
Sponsors: By Senate Committee on Government Operations & Elections (originally sponsored by Senators Kastama, Berkey, Fairley, Pridemore, Franklin, Haugen, Shin, Kohl-Welles, Doumit, Rasmussen and Keiser).
Brief History:
State Government Operations & Accountability: 3/23/05, 4/1/05 [DPA];
Appropriations: 4/2/05 [DPA(SGOA)].
Floor Activity:
Passed House - Amended: 4/14/05, 56-39.
Brief Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill (As Amended by House) |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON STATE GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS & ACCOUNTABILITY
Majority Report: Do pass as amended. Signed by 5 members: Representatives Haigh, Chair; Green, Vice Chair; Hunt, McDermott and Miloscia.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 4 members: Representatives Nixon, Ranking Minority Member; Clements, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Schindler and Sump.
Staff: Marsha Reilly (786-7135).
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS
Majority Report: Do pass as amended by Committee on State Government Operations & Accountability. Signed by 17 members: Representatives Sommers, Chair; Fromhold, Vice Chair; Cody, Conway, Darneille, Dunshee, Grant, Haigh, Hunter, Kagi, Kenney, Kessler, Linville, McDermott, McIntire, Miloscia and Schual-Berke.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 11 members: Representatives Alexander, Ranking Minority Member; Anderson, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; McDonald, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Bailey, Buri, Clements, Hinkle, Pearson, Priest, Talcott and Walsh.
Staff: Nona Snell (786-7153).
Background:
The basic structure for conducting elections is prescribed by law. As the state's chief election
officer, the Secretary of State (Secretary) is authorized to promulgate rules necessary to
conduct an election, including procedures to ensure consistency among the counties in
preparing ballots, operating vote tallying systems, and canvassing of primaries and elections.
The recent gubernatorial election was the closest statewide election in state history. After
two recounts and two court battles in front of the Washington Supreme Court, Governor
Gregoire was certified the winner by the Secretary. The margin of victory was 129 votes out
of over 2.8 million votes cast. An election contest was filed in superior court and is pending
as of this date.
Summary of Amended Bill:
The bill creates and/or amends a number of election statutes.
Training. The signature verification process must be based on guidelines established by the
Secretary in consultation with state and local law enforcement or certified document
examiners. Election personnel assigned to verify signatures must receive training on these
guidelines.
Absentee Ballots. The name and address of the absentee voter must be printed on the larger
return envelope. The return envelope must also have a secrecy flap that the voter may seal
that will cover the voter's signature and return address.
The declaration on the return envelope must inform the voter that it is illegal to vote if he or
she is not a U.S. citizen, if he or she has been convicted of a felony without restoration of
voting rights, and to cast a ballot or sign an absentee envelope on behalf of another voter.
Processing return envelopes of absentee ballots may begin upon receipt. These ballots must
be placed in secure locations from the time of delivery until opening. Except for Sundays
and legal holidays, counties with a population of 75,000 or more are required to canvass the
vote on a daily basis and counties with less than 75,000 population must canvass at least
every third day.
If the voter neglects to sign the absentee or provisional ballot envelope, the county auditor
must notify the voter by telephone of the procedure for completing the unsigned affidavit. If
the auditor is not able to personally talk with the voter by telephone, the voter must be
contacted by first class mail. A voice mail message is not considered as personally
contacting the voter. In order for the ballot to be counted, the voter must appear in person
and sign the envelope, or sign a copy of the envelope provided by the auditor.
If the handwriting on the absentee or provisional ballot envelope does not match the signature
on file, the auditor must follow the same procedures to contact the voter. In order for the
ballot to be counted the voter must appear in person and sign a new registration form, or sign
and return a new registration form provided by the auditor. However, the ballot may be
counted when the voter's name has changed but the handwriting is the same. In this instance,
the auditor must send the voter a change of name form. If the signature is not the same
because the voter used initials or a common nickname, the ballot may be counted if the
surname and handwriting are the same.
A voter must correct a missing signature or a mismatched signature by the day before the
certification of the primary or election. A voter may not cure a missing or mismatched
signature for purposes of counting the ballot in a recount.
A record must be kept of all ballots with mismatched signatures, including the date the voter
was contacted or notice was mailed, as well as the date the voter signed the envelope, a copy
of the envelope, or a new registration form. These records are public and may be disclosed
on written request.
Provisional Ballots. Provisional ballots must be printed on colored paper or imprinted with a
bar code that would identify the ballot as provisional.
Provisional ballots may be issued to any voter who would otherwise be denied an opportunity
to vote a regular ballot, for any reason authorized by the Help America Vote Act. Provisional
ballots, like absentee ballots, must be issued with an inner security envelope and an outer
envelope. The outer envelope must include a place for the voter's name, registered address,
date of birth, reason for voting a provisional ballot, precinct number and location where the
voter has voted, and a space for the county auditor to list the disposition of the provisional
ballot. The outer envelope must also have the same declaration required for absentee ballot
outer envelopes, a space for the voter to sign the oath, and a summary of the applicable
violations and associated penalty provisions.
The county auditor is required to examine and investigate all provisional ballots received to
determine whether it can be counted. County auditors are required to provide information
regarding final disposition of provisional ballots through a free access system, such as a
toll-free telephone number or a web site.
Write-in provisions. A write-in vote for a candidate whose name appears on the ballot is a
valid vote, even if the voter also marked a vote for that candidate corresponding to the printed
name, such as for an overvote. The write-in votes need not be tabulated unless the difference
between the number of votes cast for the apparent winner and non-winner is less than the sum
of the total number of write-in votes cast plus over and under votes, or a manual recount is
conducted for that office.
Re-canvass and rejection of ballots. The canvassing board may recanvass ballots during the
initial counting process or during any subsequent recount if the board finds that election staff
has made an error regarding the treatment or disposition of a ballot.
A ballot is not considered rejected until the canvassing board has rejected the ballot
individually, or the ballot was included in a batch or on a report of ballots that was rejected in
its entirety by the canvassing board.
Recount provisions. The canvassing board determines the date at which a recount will be
conducted and the secretary may require that the amended abstracts be certified by each
canvassing board on a uniform date.
The vote difference necessary to trigger an automatic recount for statewide elections is
changed from 150 votes to 1,000 votes. Existing law also requires that the difference be less
than one quarter of 1 percent of all votes cast, and this remains unchanged. A recount under
these conditions must be conducted manually unless a mutually acceptable method is agreed
upon by the apparent winner and closest apparently defeated opponent.
Certification. The deadline for canvassing boards to complete the canvass and certify the
results of a general election is changed from 15 days to 21 days. After the Secretary receives
election returns from all counties, the Secretary must canvass and certify the returns of the
election as to candidates for state offices, federal offices, and all other candidates whose
districts extend into multiple counties. The Secretary must transmit a copy of the
certification to the Governor and Legislature.
Reconciliation provisions. No later than 30 days after the final certification, the county
auditor must prepare and make publicly available an election reconciliation report that
discloses, at a minimum, the number of ballots counted; the number of voters credited with
voting; the number of provisional and absentee ballots issued, counted, or rejected; the
number of federal write-in ballots counted; and the number of ballots sent to overseas voters
and the number of such ballots counted. The report may include any other information the
county auditor determines to be necessary to the process of reconciling the number of votes
counted with the number of voters credited with voting.
Election contests. An affidavit alleging that an error or omission has occurred or is about to
occur in the issuance of a certificate of election must be filed in court no later than 10 days
following official certification, or in the case of a recount, no later than 10 days after official
certification of the amended abstract. Existing law requires such an affidavit to be filed no
later than 10 days following the issuance of a certificate of election.
Transmittal of cumulative returns: Cumulative returns produced by the county auditors for
state, judicial, and federal offices must be immediately transmitted by electronic means to the
Secretary.
Criminal and civil infraction provisions: The bill creates the crime of destroying, altering,
defacing, or discarding a completed voter registration form or signature affidavit. The crime
is a gross misdemeanor. It is not a criminal act if the voter who completed the form destroys
it, or the county auditor or registration assistant destroys it as authorized by law.
The penalty for intentionally or knowingly double voting is a gross misdemeanor. However,
if that act is through recklessness or negligence, a class 1 civil infraction may be imposed
with a maximum fine of $250 per infraction. The county prosecuting attorney is authorized
to enforce such civil infractions.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date of Amended Bill: The bill takes effect January 1, 2006.
Testimony For: (State Government Operations & Accountability) (In support of original
bill) Some of the provisions in this election reform bill are also in the Secretary's request
bills. The Secretary's office just went through a lengthy process to standardize procedures.
Many of these measures are important to address in response to the last election. There is a
provision to add a secrecy flap on the return envelope of an absentee ballot so that a person's
signature and address are protected. There is also a provision that the Secretary supports to
require photo identification at the poll. The Secretary supports amendments that make
technical changes and would remove the burden from the counties to conduct a random
investigation of the database with county records. With the new database, the Secretary will
be responsible for updating and checking the database with other agency lists to check for
felons or deaths. The date changing the declaration of candidacy is more appropriate in the
bill changing the date of the primary.
(With concerns on original bill) There are some costs associated with absentee envelope
requirements. The county auditors are supportive of changing the certification date of the
general election to 20 days after the election. Extra days help when adding extra provisions.
The requirements that licensing agents ask applicants the questions regarding citizenship and
age are needed to help make the requirements clear. It has happened many times that a
person who is applying for citizenship has misunderstood the statements and has
inadvertently registered to vote. Asking the question if he or she is a citizen will help with
this problem. The bill provides consistency for how provisional and absentee ballots are
treated. Requiring counties to duplicate a ballot will have a fiscal impact. It takes more time
to duplicate.
Your Vote Counts has submitted a position paper on election reform and best practices. One
is a document that sets forth our position on the Secretary of State bills and what we think
should be considered. There is a supplement to that paper that raises other concerns.
Another paper covers voter identification at the polls and suggested legislative language
regarding poll worker leave from employment in order to obtain a larger pool of poll workers,
especially for dual language skills. We oppose mandatory checks with Citizenship and
Immigration Services (CIS) for a variety of reasons. Voting is a right, not a privilege; it
should be as easy as possible, encouraged rather than discouraged. Some of the provisions
will have the effect of disenfranchising voters. Washington has a history of being voter
friendly. Many of the provisions are fixing things that are not broken. For instance, voter
identification at the polls was not a problem at the last election. The complaints were about
felons and deceased persons voting. The CIS keeps records on naturalized citizens onlythey
do not have a list of "aliens." Plus CIS will take a very long time to respond. Random
purges are also a concern. Having a stale address does not make you an ineligible voter. We
do not want to have someone's right to vote taken away because they forgot to submit a
change of address. Will there be a notice to the voter that their registration is being purged?
Being registered to vote in two different states is not a crime. It should only be a problem to
vote in more than one state. The Help America Vote Act only requires identification for
people who register by mail and who are first time voters. It will create problems at the polls
because it adds additional work to an already busy environment. Many of the provisions can
be done through rulemaking. Restoring felons rights should be automatic when they have
finished their time. Proprietary software should not be allowed. Election day registration
should be allowed.
Provisional ballots, as well as absentee ballots, should be distinguishable. Discretion to poll
workers is too broad to determine if someone can vote a provisional ballot. Members of the
armed forces should not be allowed to vote after election day. Records of mismatched or
missing signatures should be public. Third parties can assist in getting these problems
resolved. There is a problem in the wording of the criminal penalties section of the bill. The
way it reads, it is a felony to be registered to vote in more than one state. The Secretary
`should consult with adult literacy specialists in the design of forms. We oppose
identification requirementsa signature match should be sufficient.
The Governor has two concerns. There is a requirement that some form of identification be
shown at the polls but it doesn't specify what forms. The Governor supports the direction
taken by New Mexico. New Mexico, just three days ago, passed a voter identification
requirement that allows oral identification at the polls by stating "this is my name, this is my
date of birth, this is the last four digits of my social security number." The lists of missing
signatures or mismatched signatures should be public. Third parties are very helpful in
resolving these issues.
The American Civil Liberties Union would like to include in the bill a notice to people who
have lost their voting rights. There is currently no notice and there should be something that
says "you have lost the right to vote and this is how you get it back."
Testimony For: (Appropriations) The fiscal impact in the fiscal note was stricken from the
bill because the county voting process review component is included in HB 1749, which is
making its way through the process. It is also included in the Senate's budget in the amount
of $350,000.
The bill changes the ballot process but the costs are minimal. More time is allowed to
process ballots and absentee ballots, and more time is allowed for auditor's staff to property
process ballots.
The bill requiring absentee ballots to arrive by election day did not have enough support.
Auditors support the bill
Testimony Against: (State Government Operations & Accountability) None.
Testimony Against: (Appropriations) None.
Persons Testifying: (State Government Operations & Accountability) (In support of original
bill) Senator Kastama, prime sponsor; Sam Reed, Secretary of State; and Katie Blinn and
Shane Hamlin, Office of the Secretary of State.
(With concerns on original bill) Antonio Ginatta, Executive Policy Office; Lonnie
Johns-Brown, League of Women Voters; Michael Slater, Project Vote; Bob Terwilliger,
Snohomish County Auditor; Evelyn Arnold, Chelan County Auditor; Corky Mattingly,
Yakima County Auditor; Pat McCarthy and Kim Wyman, Washington State Auditor's
Association; David Anderson and Christine Mrak, Your Vote Counts; and Jennifer Shaw,
American Civil Liberties Union.
Persons Testifying: (Appropriations) Katie Blinn, Office of the Secretary of State.