Grade |
Rank |
F |
50 |
Subcategories | Grade
|
Rank
|
Campaign Disclosure Law | F
|
48
|
Electronic Filing Program | F
|
37
|
Disclosure Content Accessibility | F
|
48
|
Online Contextual & Technical Usability | F
|
39
|
Grading Process Subcategory Weighting Methodology Glossary
The State of Disclosure in Wyoming Wyoming has the weakest campaign disclosure program in the country and is ranked at the bottom of all states in the study. Wyoming's most significant weaknesses lie in its law and Disclosure Content Accessibility. Under Wyoming law, candidates must file two reports in non-election years and one report before each election. Contributions greater than $25 must be reported, but a contributor's occupation and employer are not required. Last-minute contributions are not disclosed prior to an election. While expenditures have to be disclosed, candidates do not have to report them until after the election and subvendor information is not required to be reported. In addition, there is no reporting of independent expenditures. Wyoming has no electronic filing program for statewide or legislative candidates. Wyoming is one of only three states that does not publish any campaign finance data on its web site. The only way the public can obtain this information is by getting paper copies of reports from the state. The state makes paper records accessible by allowing people to obtain copies in person or by fax, mail, e-mail or phone request. At 50 cents per page for the first ten pages of any request, the records are expensive. For large reports, the cost decreases to 15 cents per page for additional pages beyond the first ten. The
usability of the site is also very weak. There is a
comprehensive list of candidates and an explanation of the law;
however, there are no lists of total amounts raised and spent by
state candidates. It is also somewhat difficult to find
the disclosure agency's site from the state's homepage. Not
surprisingly, Wyoming's site failed the usability test. None
of the usability testers was able to find the state disclosure
site or information about contributions to candidates.
Disclosure
Agency: Secretary of State |
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This page was first published on September 17, 2003 | Last updated on September 17, 2003
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