Grading State Disclosure 2003 Logo Graphic

S o u t h . C a r o l i n a

Grade
Rank
F
49

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Subcategories
Grade
Rank
     
Campaign Disclosure Law
C-
32
Electronic Filing Program
F
37
Disclosure Content Accessibility
F
50
Online Contextual & Technical Usability
F
50
     

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

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The State of Disclosure in South Carolina

South Carolina came in next to last place in the study, primarily due to its lack of electronic filing of campaign finance reports and the absence of any official campaign finance data on the Web.

The state is on the brink of major improvements in online disclosure of campaign finance information, however, with a bill (H3206) signed by Governor Mark Sanford in June 2003 that will make sweeping revisions to the state's campaign finance law and requiring candidates to file campaign reports electronically. These changes will be included in the study's next round of research; South Carolina's grade and rank should improve significantly next year.

South Carolina ranked 50th in accessibility to disclosure data and campaign finance reports, and currently does not publish any campaign finance data on the Internet, or make it available on disk or CD-ROM. With a trip or phone call to the State Ethics Commission, South Carolinians can get copies of the paper-filed campaign finance records, but at 50 cents per page the cost is high and may pose an additional barrier to public access. Hopefully, this situation will change quickly once electronic filing of campaign data is implemented.

There are some simple things the state could do to improve the contextual information on its web site right now, such as adding a comprehensive list of candidates or recent election results to its site (which will be more important when there is actually campaign finance data there to research). A list of committees with the total amounts raised and spent in the last election would be helpful as well. One unique piece of contextual information on the disclosure web site is a page that lists committees that have failed to properly file campaign reports, along with the amounts they have been fined by the Commission.

The Ethics Commission appears to be doing the best it can considering it has been handicapped by poor disclosure laws and limited resources. In its report to the legislature last summer, the Commission recognized the need for Internet disclosure of campaign data and named the development of an electronic filing system as one of its two “key strategic goals”. Now that electronic filing will be required by law, the Commission is more likely to get the funding it needs to implement that goal.

South Carolina's disclosure web site failed the usability test mainly because there is no data there. Only a small number of testers were able to find the disclosure site from the state's main homepage.

Disclosure Agency: State Ethics Commission
Disclosure Web Site:
http://www.state.sc.us/ethics/index.htm

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This page was first published on September 17, 2003
| Last updated on September 17, 2003
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