Every once-in-awhile what is considered the omnibus elections bill presented
each regular session to the Louisiana Legislature contains something
significant to the way in which elections are conducted in the state. Most
years it only makes technical and procedural changes that significantly alters
things little. But this time out, one of these minor changes may have big ramifications
to an important special interest that has nothing to do with elections.
Tucked away in this year’s version, which comes as a product of the
State Board of Election Supervisors, among the roughly three dozen measures
expected to be written into bill form and introduced is one that would drop
the requirement that the names of inactive voters – those who have registration
addresses not able to be verified by registrars of voters during the annual
canvass or whose correspondence sent to the address on file was returned
undeliverable – be published 90 days prior to federal primary elections. The
purpose of this is every two years for the state to alert these voters that
they would have to go through additional hurdles in order to vote unless they
provide address verification.
Instead, the state argues that the online listing, where
a voter may enter their names to see whether they have been put on inactive
status which is never more than a day old, should suffice. It also would save,
according to the last available statistics, for all parishes $200,000 in
off-election years and $375,000 in presidential election years.