SENATE BILL REPORT
ESHB 2594
As Reported By Senate Committee On:
Government Operations & Elections, February 22, 2006
Title: An act relating to bilingual voting assistance.
Brief Description: Providing assistance to non-English speaking voters.
Sponsors: House Committee on State Government Operations & Accountability (originally sponsored by Representatives Hasegawa, McCoy, Santos, Pettigrew, Kenney, Hudgins, Upthegrove, Hunt, O'Brien, Haigh, Kagi and Dickerson).
Brief History: Passed House: 2/13/06, 55-43.
Committee Activity: Government Operations & Elections: 2/23/06, 2/22/06 [DP, w/oRec].
SENATE COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS & ELECTIONS
Majority Report: Do pass.Signed by Senators Kastama, Chair; Berkey, Vice Chair; Roach, Ranking Minority Member; Fairley, Haugen, Kline and Pridemore.
Minority Report: That it be referred without recommendation.Signed by Senator Benton.
Staff: Mac Nicholson (786-7445)
Background: Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act requires a state or political subdivision to provide registration notices, forms, instructions, assistance, and other materials relating to the electoral process, including ballots, in the language of an applicable minority group as well as in English. This law applies if more than 10,000 or over 5 percent of the total number of citizens of voting age in a county are members of a single minority language group and are limited in English proficiency. In Washington, four counties are required to provide voting materials in additional languages: Adams, Franklin, and Yakima counties must provide materials in Spanish, and King County must provide materials in Chinese. The provisions of section 203 expire in 2007.
Summary of Bill: A joint select legislative task force is established to increase voter participation for single-language minority groups. The task force is required to
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: Yes.
Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: Section 203 of the federal act expires and the state should preserve the provisions of the act in case Congress doesn't. Many non-English proficient citizens have registered to vote but have not exercised their right to vote, mainly due to language barriers. This bill will increase civic engagement.
Testimony Against: None.
Who Testified: PRO: Representative Hasegawa, prime sponsor; Shane Hamlin, Office of the Secretary of State; George Cheung, Raising Our Asian American Representation.