Originally published February 20, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified February 20, 2007 at 9:01 PM
More than 176,000 names removed from voter rolls
More than 176,000 names were removed from the state's voting rolls last year under a new statewide voter database that...
The Associated Press
OLYMPIA -- More than 176,000 names were removed from the state's voting rolls last year under a new statewide voter database that was developed to help counties find duplicate registrations and dead voters, Secretary of State Sam Reed said today.
The purge of illegal registrations is the result of the new system that has consolidated all 39 separate county systems into one database in January 2006.
Reed said that from Jan. 1, 2006 to Dec. 31, 176,373 names were removed from the state's database of about 3.2 million registered voters:
• 39,814 duplicate voter registrations. Reed said these often happen when a voter moves across county lines, forgets to notify the local election office and then reregisters somewhere else. Under the new database, screenings for duplicate registrations are automatically conducted each day, and reports of duplicate registrations are generated for the counties. The counties confirm each record before canceling the duplicate registration.
• 40,105 deceased voter registrations. The database searches daily for names of deceased voters against databases from the Department of Health and the Social Security Master Death Index.
• 4,500 felon voter registrations. A screening for the names of felons is conducted quarterly, using a list from the Department of Corrections to identify possible matches and notices from County Clerks to County Auditors. Potential matches generated from the Department of Corrections list receive a notification letter, giving the person 30 days to respond.
• 91,954 active and inactive voter registrations, because voters move to other states or request cancellations of their voter registrations.
"We're doing a good job of preventing problems," Reed said. "We really are improving the integrity of the system itself."
Reed said that he would be working with officials in California, Oregon, Idaho and Montana to see how they can all cross-check their voter rolls.
The database brought the state into compliance with the 2002 Help America Vote Act, which required better voting systems, improved voter access and statewide voter registration lists by Jan. 1, 2006.
Last month, Reed launched an oversight program of the database that requires election staff to review the database each month and research each possible match. Staff must also work with counties to collect missing information from voter registration records.
Reed said that elections officials also search for people who may have voted twice following each primary and general election. A search of the November found 61 pairs of records that appeared to be matches, but all but one pair were researched and resolved, such as cases of separate people having the same name and birth date.
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One case in King County has been forwarded to the Prosecuting Attorney's Office.
Reed said that just because a high number of names were removed doesn't mean that there is anything fraudulent going on -- its just that cross-database information makes it easier to quickly catch duplication registrations and voters who have recently died.
He said that for January and February of this year, so far 118,000 inactive voters, who haven't voted in the past four years, were removed from the rolls.
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