For
Immediate Release
on Wednesday,
October 26, 2005
For
additional information, contact:
Saskia Mills or Kim Alexander at
(530) 750-7650; saskia@calvoter.org
Davis,
CA – States across the country
provided better access to candidates’ campaign
disclosure records in 2005 and particularly
improved the usability of their official
disclosure web sites, according to Grading
State Disclosure 2005, a comprehensive,
comparative study of candidate campaign
finance disclosure laws and practices in
the 50 states. Grading State
Disclosure 2005 follows two prior
annual reports, and is online at: www.campaigndisclosure.org
Washington
State ranked number one in the country
for the third year in a row, followed
by Florida and California. Overall, 34
states’ disclosure programs passed
the assessments earning a grade of D or
better, while sixteen states' disclosure
programs failed. The assessment was
conducted by the Campaign Disclosure Project, which
seeks to bring greater transparency and
accountability to money in state politics.
The project is a collaboration of the California
Voter Foundation, the Center for Governmental
Studies and the UCLA School of Law and
is supported by The Pew Charitable Trusts.
“The number of positive changes
states are making to their disclosure web
sites is encouraging,” said Kim Alexander,
president of the California Voter Foundation,
which produced the study. “Since
2004, 14 state disclosure agencies have
redesigned their web sites, making them
easier for the general public to access
and navigate. This activity shows a number
of agencies are increasingly responsive
to the public’s demand for meaningful
access to campaign data.”
The
Campaign Disclosure Project evaluates,
grades, and ranks all 50 states’ performance
in four campaign finance disclosure areas:
the strength of campaign disclosure laws;
availability of electronic filing programs;
the degree of public access to campaign
finance information; and the usability
of state disclosure web sites.
Of
the 34 passing states, eleven received
grades in the A or B range, up from eight
in 2004 and only two in 2003. Washington
received the highest grade (A-) and rank, Florida
ranked second with a B+, and California
came in third, also with a B+. Overall,
the study found that 13 states’ grades
improved, while seven declined. Among
the study's significant findings:
- States
with the best overall campaign disclosure
programs, in rank order from one
to ten, are: Washington (A-); Florida (B+);
California (B+); Hawaii (B); Georgia and
Illinois (B, tied for 5th); Virginia
(B); Michigan and Texas (B-, tied
for 8th); Rhode Island (B-); and
Ohio (B-).
- States
with the weakest overall campaign
disclosure programs, all receiving
Fs and in rank order from 40 to 50,
are: Delaware, Nevada and New Mexico
(tied for 40th); North Dakota; Vermont;
New Hampshire; Montana; Alabama;
South Dakota; South Carolina; and
Wyoming.
- Virginia
was the most-improved state, climbing
from a D+ to a B and from 22nd to
7th place, followed by Iowa, which
moved from 38th to 31st place, and
Hawaii, which improved from 12th
to 4th.
- Among the four grading categories,
the most improvement was found in Online
Contextual and Technical Usability, followed
by Disclosure Content Accessibility.
“States have improved dramatically
since we first evaluated their disclosure
programs in 2003,” said Bob Stern,
president of the Center for Governmental
Studies. “The changes made
in 2005 demonstrate a continuing commitment
on the part of state disclosure agencies
to further enhance access to campaign finance
records, and we hope the trend continues.”
Each
state was assessed, graded and ranked
for its overall performance as well as
its performance in each of the four grading
categories. States across the country performed
best in the Campaign Disclosure Law category,
with 40 states receiving passing grades
and ten states failing. Twenty-four
states passed in the Electronic Filing
Program category, while 26 failed. Twenty-eight
states passed in Disclosure Content Accessibility,
and 22 failed. Thirty-nine states received
passing grades in Online Contextual and
Technical Usability, while eleven failed.
Criteria
in each category were developed by the
Campaign Disclosure Project partners,
the project's advisory board and a panel
of expert judges, who also assisted
with the grading process. The project sets
a high, but not impossible, standard for
state campaign finance disclosure programs. In
developing the criteria, efforts were made
to balance the concerns of practitioners
and government officials with the public's
need for timely, complete and effective
disclosure.
Assessments
of each state were based on research
of state laws as of December 2004, web
site visits and research from April to
June of 2005, responses from state disclosure
agency staff and activists working on campaign financing
at the state level, and web site testing
by outside evaluators in June 2005. State
grades are a reflection of not only the work
of state disclosure agencies, but also
state legislatures and governors, who are
responsible for enacting and funding state
campaign disclosure laws and programs.
Grading State Disclosure 2005 features
a written assessment of each of the fifty
states’ disclosure programs, a U.S.
map of the states color-coded by grade,
comparison charts, and an analysis
of campaign disclosure trends across the
states, such as the number of states that
require disclosure of independent expenditures
and donors’ occupations and employers.
For more information, contact Saskia Mills
or Kim Alexander at 530-750-7650; saskia@calvoter.org
For further information about the Project's
legal research, please contact: Joe Doherty,
UCLA School of Law, 310-206-2675, Doherty@mail.law.ucla.edu;
or Bob Stern, Center for Governmental Studies,
310-470-6590 x117, rstern@cgs.org.