Pennsylvania Conceals List of Polling Places

Pennsylvania state officials have decided not to publicize their list of polling places, citing concerns that terrorists could disrupt elections. The Department of State made its decision as a result of terrorist bombings that occurred just days before Spain’s national elections in 2004, spokeswoman Leslie Amoros said.

Critics say the policy runs afoul of the state’s open records law and makes coordinating statewide voter-mobilization strategies more difficult for candidates and political action committees. The state will still give out a specific polling place to a voter inquiry, but won’t release the comprehensive list.

Activists had already been fighting to get access to statewide lists of polling places. It had only been available on a county-by-county basis. “Some campaigns may lack the manpower to gather the information on a county-by-county basis, and some counties are more helpful than others in providing polling place locations,” said Stephanie Frank Singer, the founder of a Philadelphia consulting firm that provides customized lists and data collection for political campaigns and nonprofit groups. Singer said she learned of the policy from an acquaintance whose request for the list was denied a few months ago. She said she is considering challenging the decision.

A case in point this year is the anti-incumbent activist group PACleanSweep, which is urging voters to oust nearly all judges seeking retention because of the 2005 government pay raise debacle. PACleanSweep founder Russ Diamond said the organization obtained a list of all polling places last year as part of its campaign against incumbent lawmakers, although he said state officials have since told him that was a mistake.

“My thought was, ‘Well, the terrorists have won, and democracy takes a back seat,’ ” Diamond said.

Last year, Singer filed a Commonwealth Court lawsuit that sought to limit the cost of obtaining a list of registered Pennsylvania voters from the state. She withdrew the suit after the department agreed to charge a flat $20 fee for the whole list or any number of county lists; the cost was previously $20 per county, or $1,340 for a statewide list.

Singer said she has not decided how to proceed with seeking access to the list of polling places, but she said she would probably file a request for the information under the Right-to-Know Law and appeal to Commonwealth Court if it is denied.


Comments

Pennsylvania Conceals List of Polling Places — No Comments

  1. I ran into this problem when I was trying to find my new polling place when I moved this year. I hadn’t yet changed my address on my ID or with the post office, and they gave me a heck of a time.

  2. One more now standard domestic TYRANT machination using the excuse of alleged foreign danger.

    Democracy NOW in all EVIL gerrymander / plurality regimes — i.e. the gerrymander Congress and all State legislatures.

    Party Seats = Party Votes x Total Seats / Total Votes

  3. Remember that this is a state where county election officials only tabulate write-in votes if they feel like it, in violation of state law, and in 2004 they required that you (don’t laugh) actually write in the names of every presidential elector for Ralph Nader and Peter Camejo (or whichever slate for which you wanted to vote that was an official write-in slate in PA) in the tiny little space they gave you on the voting machin for write-in votes.

    I remember the Nader campaign was actually going to print up sticky labels with all their PA electors’ names on them in something like 4 pt. type to hand out to voters.

    As a moment’s thought should have made apparent to these people, “the terrorists” (whoever they are) could easily have obtained this information anyway with not only a few minutes searching on the web, but simply by contacting each county’s election office.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.