$4.13 Amount Oregon spent per voter to process registrations in 2008. On average, local election offices spent a third of their budgets to register voters, according to a 2001 study.
Well spent too. We screen everyone by mail. We want to be sure they can lick a stamp.
A new study finds that millions of the names on U.S. voter rolls appear in more than one state ... or on tombstones
POSTED ON FEBRUARY 15, 2012, AT 6:05 PM
Nevadans register before voting in February's GOP presidential caucuses: Some 2.8 million Americans are registered in more than one state, and nearly 69,000 are registered in three states. Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty ImagesSEE ALL 17 PHOTOS
The nation's voter-registration system is a wreck, according to a new report from the Pew Center on the States. Millions of invalid registrations remain on the books, including an "army of (potential) zombie voters" who remained registered long after they died. "Voter registration is the gateway to participating in our democracy," but the country's "antiquated, paper-based systems are plagued with errors and inefficiencies," says Pew's David Becker. "These problems waste taxpayer dollars, undermine voter confidence, and fuel partisan disputes over the integrity of our elections." Here, a look at the problem, by the numbers:
2.75 million People registered in more than one state
68,725 Voters registered in three states
1,807 Voters registered in more than three states
51 million Americans who are eligible to vote, but are not registered
12 million People registered under addresses that are old or have errors severe enough that mailings are unlikely to reach them
24 million Voter registrations that are inaccurate or no longer valid — nearly 13 percent of the names currently on voter rolls nationwide
76 Percentage of eligible adults who are registered to vote in the U.S.
93 Percentage of eligible adults who are registered to vote in Canada
$4.13 Amount Oregon spent per voter to process registrations in 2008. On average, local election offices spent a third of their budgets to register voters, according to a 2001 study.