In 2022 the Legislature provided funding in the operating budget to the University of Washington to establish a data repository to assist the state and all political subdivisions with:
The Washington State Election Database, housed at the Center for the Study of Demography and Ecology at the University of Washington, provides a publicly available data set on estimated racial demographics in electoral precincts of the state. The data covers all precincts from 2007 to 2022.
Database Codified. The Washington Election Database is codified to assist the state and all political subdivisions with evaluating whether and to what extent laws and practices with respect to voting and elections are consistent with public policy, implementing best practices in voting and elections, and investigating potential infringements upon the right to vote.
The operation of the database is to be managed by a director, employed by the University of Washington, with training and experience in demography, statistical analysis, and electoral systems. The director must appoint necessary staff to implement and maintain the database.
Database Contents. The database must maintain in an electronic format at least the following data and records, where available, for every election in every political subdivision in the state, for at least the previous 12-year period:
Upon the certification of election results and the completion of the voter history file, after each general election the Secretary of State must transmit copies of the following to the director of the database:
The director of the database and database staff must update election data in the database as soon as it is available from the Secretary of State, following certification of each election.
Except for information that identifies individual voters, the data, information, and estimates maintained by the database must be posted online and made available to the public at no cost.
Publications and Analysis. By January 1, 2025, the database must publish on its website and transmit to county auditors and the Secretary of State a list of political subdivisions required by the federal Voting Rights Act to provide assistance to members of language-minority groups and each language in which those political subdivisions are required to provide assistance. Each county auditor must transmit the list to all political subdivisions within their jurisdiction.
The database will complete regular analysis of ballot rejections and cures, identifying population subgroups with higher than average ballot rejection rates, and an annual report of ballot rejections will be posted online and made available to the public at no cost.
Database staff may work with the Secretary of State and county auditors to examine new practices and solutions for reducing ballot rejections and increasing ballot cure rates. Database staff may also provide nonpartisan technical assistance to political subdivisions, scholars, and the general public seeking to use the resources of the database.
PRO: This bill will codify the great work that the University of Washington is doing so the public continues to have access to this information. The bill does not open up any information that isn't already public. The database will build a strong collaborative relationship between the University of Washington, the Secretary of State, and counties and put Washington in the same class as many other states that maintain a publicly available dataset.
We need systems like this to manage large volumes of data. Centralizing the data into a repository saves time and resources. Having a neutral third party to collect and compile the data will positively serve the public.
CON: There is some concern about university staff injecting their political biases into the product and whether we are confident in having them as the steward of this data. We would like to see staff from each of the two major political parties included as part of the database work.
PRO: The database provides two key data services for the public: it uses GIS mapping for analysis of legislative districting to ensure compliance with state and federal law, and assembles and calculates language minority demographics for compliance with the federal Voting Rights Act. Texas and California also use their flagship public universities to produce these data sets. It's very expensive for practitioners to create this data through one-off consulting arrangements, so this adds great fiscal value for the state. The databases ensures that a neutral, nonpartisan entity collects this data to strengthen our democracy. The research will provide information to strengthen voting laws to increase participation and improve the voter experience. This makes the information accessible, helping researchers everywhere. The University of Washington and elections officials have a strong collaborative relationship.