Published in the Poughkeepsie Journal.
Recently, President Obama announced the creation of a federal
commission to help improve citizens’ voting experiences at the polls.
Here’s an obvious suggestion for improvement in New York: Make our
ballots easier for voters to use.
In your
polling place in November, things may have looked a little bit different
than in the past. For the first time, New Yorkers used optical scanning
machines and paper ballots to vote in a presidential election. Many
voters, particularly older voters and those with impaired vision, found
the paper ballots difficult to read and use. This is because they did
not change to reflect our new voting system: Our ballot requirements
stayed the same while our ballot size shrunk significantly. As a result,
voters faced a crowded and confusing ballot that at best made the
voting experience more difficult and at worst invalidated otherwise
legitimate votes.
New
York’s ballots are governed by strict, outdated guidelines intended for
the retired mechanical voting machines. These rules do not allow best
practices for paper ballots, and led to our 2012 ballots containing
complicated instructions, outdated symbols, small text size and
confusing oval placement. Unfortunately, without a change in New York’s
codified election law, local election officials are prevented from
improving the voter experience in their community.
There
can be little question that poor ballot design leads to a far more
negative experience for voters. As a 2010 statewide survey by the League
of Women Voters found, up to 20 percent of voters had problems
completing the paper ballot. Poorly designed ballots can invalidate
votes and interfere with the integrity of our election process. The
Brennan Center has estimated that design defects in ballots and voter
instructions contributed to the loss of several hundred thousand votes
in the last two federal elections. Evidence suggests that low-income and
elderly voters particularly bear the brunt of poorly designed ballots,
raising fundamental issues of access to the political process.
We can do better.
The
Voter Friendly Ballot Act of 2013, sponsored by state Assemblyman Brian
Kavanagh and endorsed by the AARP, the Brennan Center for Justice, and
many other organizations concerned with voting rights, would set new
standards to ensure that New Yorkers can vote with confidence while
preserving flexibility for local election administrators. Voter
instructions would be shortened and clarified, legibility would be
increased by reducing the maximum number of languages appearing on the
ballot, and text size would be made more readable, among other
improvements.
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