Posts by Doug Chapin
Virginia Pollworkers Can Soon Choose to Work For Free If They Want To – And Many Might
Pollworkers in Virginia will soon have the option of waiving the (admittedly small) compensation they receive for their service. It will be interesting to see how that option – which is aimed more at tax-simplification than cost-cutting – affects the composition of the Election Day workforce and the cost of elections.
Read MoreIt's Complicated: Early Voting Rates Down in Ohio
Early voting is down in Ohio in advance of tomorrow’s presidential primary. Figuring out why isn’t just the stuff of punditry – it could also help election officials better allocate their resources. Unfortunately, figuring out why isn’t likely to be easy given the various moving parts in Ohio this go-round.
Read MoreElection Stunts: Just Because You Can(ine) Doesn't Make It Right
This dog’s owner thinks it’s a crime how easy it was to register him to vote. This dog’s owner is about to find out that he may well have committed a crime to prove it.
Read MoreBreaking the (Piggy) Bank: Crowd-Financed Projects Seek to Step Into Election Funding Void
Crowd-financed projects aimed at specific election challenges – like Dana Chisnell’s design field guides and Faye Anderson’s Cost of Freedom voter ID app – could be the next frontier in shoring up hemorrhaging state and local election budgets.
Read MoreVoter ID, Recall Drama Means It's ON, Wisconsin
Wisconsin’s 2012 recipe of voter ID and a statewide recall election could mean a wealth of real-world data on the impact of ID requirements as well as its interaction with Election Day registration. It will likely be exhausting, however.
Read MoreFaulty NYC Scanner Misreads Votes, Earns Bronx Cheer
Nothing is as amazing to behold as a newspaper on an outrage rampage – and right now the New York Daily News is pounding the Board of Elections over its (puzzling) inaction in the face of evidence of a faulty Bronx ballot scanner in the 2010 election.
Read MoreIndiana Supreme Court Confronts Key Question in Disputed Elections: Now What?
The Indiana Supreme Court will decide this week what to do with the office of Secretary of State in the aftermath of former Secretary Charlie White’s felony convictions. As in any disputed election, the Court’s choices are limited – and each one is unattractive in its own way.
Read MoreDesign for Democracy's New Election Design Recommendations: Not Just for Designers
AIGA’s Design for Democracy has a new list of top 10 election design recommendations. This list is valuable for designers but also for policymakers who should examine whether existing laws and old habits are getting in the way of good design.
Read MoreSummit County, OH Funding Debate Yields Rich Vein of Spending Data
Summit County, OH is involved in a budget battle between the election board and county legislators about the 2012 budget. The latest salvo in that battle – a pile of data comparing election spending in several counties – is a valuable window into the cost components of election administration.
Read MoreDeltaphobia: Change is Hard, Especially in Elections
Wisconsin’s first primary under the new voter ID law went smoothly overall, but the problems that did occur are illustrative of how hard it is to change in any endeavor – but especially elections.
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