Grading State Disclosure 2003 Logo Graphic

A l a b a m a

Grade
Rank
F
47

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Subcategories
Grade
Rank
Campaign Disclosure Law
F
47
Electronic Filing Program
F
37
Disclosure Content Accessibility
F
45
Online Contextual & Technical Usability
F
30

Grading Process green cube Subcategory Weighting green cube Methodology green cube Glossary

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The State of Disclosure in Alabama

Alabama's grade and rank show that the state has significant room to improve its campaign finance disclosure program. The grade reflects a weak campaign disclosure law and significant inadequacies on its campaign finance web site.

Alabama's law requires candidates to file annual reports in non-election years and two campaign finance reports before an election. Candidates are required to disclose details about contributors who give $100 or more, but occupation and employer do not have to be reported. Candidates do not have to report late contributions. Candidates must file detailed information about expenditures of $100 or more, but subvendor information is not required. In addition, there is no reporting of independent expenditures. Alabama has no electronic filing program.

The state scans campaign finance reports and makes them available on its web site in PDF format, but there are no searchable databases of contributions or expenditures. Although statements are posted on the site in a timely manner and reports date back to 1992, campaign finance information can still be difficult to access. Many campaign finance reports are hard to read because they appear sideways and the site does not provide a mechanism for rotating them online – the only way to view them easily is to download and look at the PDF files offline in an alternate viewer, such as Adobe Acrobat Reader.

The site provides some good contextual information, including an explanation of the state disclosure laws and campaign finance restrictions, and a list of candidates for recent or upcoming elections. However some important additions could improve it, such as lists of the total amounts raised and spent by state candidates and clear labeling of both disclosure reporting periods and amendments to campaign finance reports. Despite its limitations, Alabama's web site performed reasonably well in the usability testing, with four out of six usability testers identifying identical amounts of contributions to the governor.

Disclosure Agency: Secretary of State
Disclosure Web Site:
http://www.sos.state.al.us/

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This page was first published on September 17, 2003
| Last updated on September 17, 2003
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Campaign Disclosure Project. All rights reserved.