-Caveat Lector-

STATUS REPORT ON PROBE OF ELECTION PRACTICES
IN FLORIDA DURING THE 2000 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION

<http://www.usccr.gov/vote2000/flstrpt1.htm>

U. S. COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
March 9, 2001
-------------------------------------------
The Commission has undertaken a formal investigation into
allegations by Floridians of voting irregularities arising
out of the November 7, 2000 Presidential election.  The
Commission has held two fact-finding hearings in Florida
to examine whether eligible voters faced avoidable
barriers that undermined their ability to cast ballots
and have their ballots counted in this closely contested
election.  The probe is intended to uncover, for example,
who made the critical decisions regarding resource
allocations for Election Day activities, why were these
decisions made and what specific impact these decisions
had on distinct communities.

  Voter disenfranchisement appears to be at the heart of
the issue.  It is not a question of a recount or even an
accurate count, but more pointedly the issue is those
whose exclusion from the right to vote amounted to a
"No Count."

  We emphasize that voting technology reforms and assurances
that uniform and accurate standards for counting and
recounting ballots shall be implemented are encouraging
and significant.  These measures standing alone, however,
are insufficient to address the significant and distressing
issues and barriers that prevented qualified voters from
participating in the Presidential election. It is our hope
that Florida officials, as well as officials in other
jurisdictions, will promptly resolve these major problems,
which they allowed to occur, instead of hoping with the
passage of time the public will forget.

  In total, over 100 witnesses testified under oath before
the Commission, including approximately 65 scheduled
witnesses who were selected for the two hearings due to
their knowledge of and/or experience with the issues
under investigation. The Commission heard testimony from
top elected and appointed state officials, including the
Governor, the Secretary of State, the Attorney General,
the Director of the Florida Division of Elections and
other Florida state and county officials.  A
representative of Database Technologies, Inc.
[Choicepoint], a firm involved in the controversial,
state-sponsored removal of felons from the voter
registration rolls also testified.

We also heard the sworn testimony of registered voters and
experts on election reform issues, election laws and
procedures and voting rights.  Also, the Chair and
Executive Director of the Select Task Force on Election
Reforms established by Governor Jeb Bush testified before
the Commission. Testimony was also received from the
supervisors of elections for several counties, county
commission officials, law enforcement personnel, and a
states attorney. In addition to the scheduled witnesses,
the Commission extended an opportunity for concerned
persons, including Members of Congress and members of the
Florida State Legislature, to submit testimony under oath
that was germane to the issues under investigation.
Significantly, the Commission subpoenaed scores of
relevant documents to assist with this investigation.

The evidence points to an array of problems, including
those in the following categories:

Key officials anticipated before Election Day,
that there would be an increase in levels of voter turnout
based upon new voter registration figures, but did not
ensure that the precincts in all communities received
adequate resources to meet their needs;

At least one unauthorized law enforcement
checkpoint was set up on Election Day resulting in
complaints that were investigated by the Florida Highway
Patrol and the Florida Attorney General;

Non-felons were removed from voter registration
rolls based upon unreliable information collected in
connection with sweeping, state sponsored felony purge
policies;

Many African Americans did not cast ballots
because they were assigned to polling sites that did not
have adequate resources to confirm voting eligibility
status;

College students and others submitted voter
registration applications on a timely basis to persons
and agencies responsible for transmitting the
applications to the proper officials, but in many
instances these applications were not processed in a
timely or proper manner under the National Voter
Registration Act ("motor-voter law");

Many Jewish and elderly voters received defective
and complicated ballots that may have produced "overvotes"
and "undervotes;"

Some polling places were closed early and some
polling places were moved without notice;

Old and defective election equipment was found
in poor precincts;

Many Haitian Americans and Puerto Rican voters
were not provided language assistance when required and
requested;

Persons with disabilities faced accessibility
difficulties at certain polling sites;

Too few poll workers were adequately trained and
too few funds were committed to voter education
activities;

The Commission's probe proceeds under the statutory duty
and authority of the Commission to investigate
allegations in writing under oath or affirmation relating
to deprivations � of the right of citizens of the United
States to vote or have votes counted" (PL 103-419).
This investigation is also conducted pursuant to our
statute which requires the Commission to investigate
allegations that "citizens of the United States are being
deprived of their right to vote and have that vote counted
by reason of their color, race, religion, sex, age,
handicap, or national origin�."

In our investigation, we use as our standard the
requirements of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act for
determining whether disparate impact or disparate
treatment amounting to disenfranchisement has occurred.
We understand clearly that violations of the Voting
Rights Act do not require proof of deliberate or
intentional discrimination against citizens, if
differential results, disenfranchising those who the
statute was designed to protect are the result. Practices
can be illegal when they have the effect of restricting
opportunities for people of color, language minorities,
persons with disabilities, and the elderly to participate
fully in the political process and to elect candidates of
their choice.

The Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended, was aimed at
subtle, as well as obvious, state regulations and
practices that had the effect of denying citizens their
right to vote because of their race.  Perhaps the most
invidious barriers to the right to vote were the
seemingly neutral restrictions developed by states that
had debilitating and devastating results on black voter
registration.

Congress has enacted additional measures to further
protect the voting rights of persons of color, immigrants,
the elderly, and those with disabilities from invidious
discrimination.   For example, an amendment to the Voting
Rights Act in 1975 permanently restricted the use of tests
and devices for voter registration nationwide.  The 1975
amendments also include rights for language minorities,
mandating bilingual ballots and oral assistance with voting.
In 1983, the Voting Rights Act was amended to clarify that
the proof of discriminatory intent is not required under
Section 2 claims, thus making disparate impact claims valid.
Congress also enacted the National Voter Registration Act
after finding that "discriminatory and unfair registration
laws and procedures can have a direct and damaging effect
on voter participation in elections for Federal office
and disproportionately harm voter participation by
various groups, including racial minorities."  Further,
several laws have been enacted pertaining to the
accessibility of the election process to persons with
disabilities.

[These laws are described in an appendix to this
statement].

  We are deeply troubled by our preliminary review which
points to differences in resource allocations, including
voting technology, and in voting procedures that may have
operated so that protected groups may have had less of an
opportunity to have their votes counted. We will conduct
complete disparate impact and treatment analyses before
the report is completed, and our final conclusions will
take into account the results of these analyses.

However, it appears at this phase of the investigation
that the evidence may ultimately support findings of
prohibited discrimination.  Two particular sources of
fruitful inquiry are the questionable uses of Choicepoint
data and resource allocation issues.  We are attempting
to document whether and, if so, how long state, county
and local officials knew that certain differences in
resources and procedures might impact more harshly
African Americans and members of other protected groups.

The staff is continuing their analysis of the voluminous
testimonial and documentary evidence compiled during this
investigation.  Ultimately, the Commission will pinpoint
whether each of the problems identified resulted from
deliberate, or harmful, yet not deliberate, discrimination,
or were caused by neither.

We emphasize that the implementation of voting technology
reforms and uniform and accurate standards for counting
and recounting ballots would be encouraging and
significant.  These measures standing alone, however,
will not address the significant and distressing issues
and barriers that prevented qualified voters from
participating in the Presidential election.

In the final analysis, new recounts of old ballots are an
academic exercise.  Voting is the language of our
democracy and regrettably, when it mattered most, real
people lost real opportunities to speak truth to power in
the ballot box.  This must never occur again.  As Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. once stated:  Social justice shall
not roll in on wheels of inevitability.

It is our hope that Florida officials, as well as
officials in other jurisdictions- where barriers existed,
will promptly resolve these major problems that occurred
on their watch.

[For appendix see website.]

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