[EL] Line Standers --not just heroic but Hiatoric
Gaddie, Ronald K.
rkgaddie at ou.edu
Thu Nov 8 11:04:52 PST 2012
Jack, this exactly how my county ran their early voting sign-in, complete with photo Identification. They had five stations and were moving a voter every twelve seconds.
Ronald Keith Gaddie, Ph.D.
Professor of Political Science
Editor, Social Science Quarterly
The University of Oklahoma
455 West Lindsey Street, Room 222
Norman, OK 73019-2001
Phone 405-325-4989
Fax 405-325-0718
E-mail: rkgaddie at ou.edu
http://faculty-staff.ou.edu/G/Ronald.K.Gaddie-1
http://socialsciencequarterly.org
________________________________
From: law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu [law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu] on behalf of Jack Santucci [jms346 at georgetown.edu]
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2012 12:53 PM
To: Thomas J. Cares
Cc: Election Law
Subject: Re: [EL] Line Standers --not just heroic but Hiatoric
Here's an idea I've heard very little about (and plan to write more on later).
I ran a precinct in DC. We had four check-in lines at which each clerk had a paper pollbook. Each pollbook contained one fourth of the precinct's voter registry. When a voter checks in, he or she signs the pollbook.
Sometimes the line for one chunk of the alphabet is longer than the line(s) for (an)other chunk(s). This drove voters mad. I repeatedly had to fend off waiters' insistence on my restructuring the lines, breaking up the pollbooks into different segments of the alphabet, etc. Of course, all of that would have been ridiculous because (1) it would have risked confusing my swamped check-in clerks, (2) would have risked having unbound pages of pollbooks flying around the precinct, and (3) would have ignored the fact that, every time a voter walks into the precinct, there is an effectively equal probability that he or she will enter any of the four lines.
This third point is most important. At 9 AM, people are irate about the length of the L-R line. An hour later, complaints focus on the A-D line. An hour later, it's the E-K line that's got everyone all angry.
The obvious solution: replace paper pollbooks with laptops on an in-precinct intranet. Each laptop contains the entire precinct voter file. No more alphabet-break-specific lines. When a voter checks in and e-signs on one laptop, the fact that he or she has voted is updated on all of the laptops. Super efficient.
I seriously wonder whether Ezra Klein (or many others with strong opinions on how to improve election administration) has ever actually administered an election.
Jack Santucci
Washington, DC
On Thu, Nov 8, 2012 at 1:36 PM, Thomas J. Cares <Tom at tomcares.com<mailto:Tom at tomcares.com>> wrote:
I have doubts that any of the five ideas in the WaPo article Rick link<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/11/08/five-ways-to-cut-long-election-lines/>ed to would dramatically improve wait times.
I wonder if we could do something bigger, like just mail everyone a vote-by-mail ballot, and have the federal government fully subsidize return postage for all VBM ballots. Voters could discard the ballots and vote at the polls as if they'd never received them, or mail them, or return them to any polling place in their county.
With this, I'd bet less (maybe a great deal less) than one-third of ballots would actually be filled out at polling places, and that the overwhelming majority would either mail their ballot or simply drop it off at a polling place on election day (with the convenience of being able to go to one near their job, or favorite grocery store, and not necessarily the one in their home precinct - and not having to wait!).
I suspect the argument against this would be the potential for fraud (I'm not sure that's meritorious though; diligent implementation could probably prevent fraud).
There's a good argument for better early voting policies, but a disadvantage to early voting is that something may happen in the last days of the campaigns that could cause an (objective) voter to change their mind on at least one thing on their ballot (I'm a permanent vote by mail voter, but whenever I'm certain I'm going to be in LA County on election day, I hold my ballot until the election to allow for that contingency). It would certainly seem helpful if all voters had the automatic option to fill out their ballot at home and quickly drop it off on election day.
Thomas Cares
On Thu, Nov 8, 2012 at 8:01 AM, Roy Schotland <schotlan at law.georgetown.edu<mailto:schotlan at law.georgetown.edu>> wrote:
We haven’t sung enough about the Line Standers, who stand among the all-time proof of how much people –as grass-roots as can be-- care about the Right to Vote.
Roy A. Schotland
Professor Emeritus
Georgetown Law Center
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