Harkless v. Brunner (Ohio)

The lawsuit filed in Ohio by ACORN, along with two individuals, charges Kenneth Blackwell, Secretary of State in Ohio and Barbara Riley, Director of the Department of Job and Family Services with failing to fulfill their obligations under Section 7 of the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) to implement voter registration programs in public assistance agencies. Extensive research by ACORN found that virtually no clients at public assistance agencies were offered the opportunity to register to vote as required by the NVRA. In addition to requesting the Court order the Secretary of State to comply with NVRA, the complaint asks for a reporting and monitoring procedure that will ensure future compliance. Plaintiffs are represented by Project Vote, National Voting Rights Institute, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Dechert LLP and Donna Taylor Kolis.

The case was filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, and after a decision by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, the case returned to the district court where it settled after extensive fact discovery. The Court of Appeals decision established an important precedent that state officials have ultimate responsibility for compliance with this federal law, even when local agencies also have day-to-day responsibility for administering public benefits programs.

In November 2009 parties submitted a signed settlement agreement to Federal District Court Judge Patricia A. Gaughan. As a result of the agreement, the provision of voter registration services will be institutionalized within the office procedures at county DJFS offices, and both the SOS and ODJFS will make sure such services are provided. Among other important gains, the settlement requires that: voter registration applications be integrated within each agency’s benefits forms; voter registration be incorporated into the ODJFS statewide computer system used by all front-line caseworkers; the SOS designates the Department of Veterans Affairs as a voter registration agency; and the state will implement extensive training and monitoring requirements.

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Fight Tea Party Voters with Fresh Voters

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Project Vote, Demos, The Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and the local civil rights groups who sued these states and won (forcing turnarounds at state public assistance agencies) have been waging a lonely fight to implement the National Voter Registration Act. Read more

More Richland County low-income residents registering to vote

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Job and Family Services offices in Ohio were taken to task in a 2006 lawsuit contending they failed to go far enough to register low-income voters, but voter registration at those locations skyrocketed after a court settlement went into effect in January. Read more

A Welfare Check and a Voting Card

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After years of deliberate neglect, the Justice Department is finally beginning to enforce the federal law requiring states to provide voter registration at welfare and food stamp offices. Read more

Voter registration surge reported: Agencies were ordered to help low-income applicants

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Ten times as many poor people are filling out voter registration applications at public assistance offices in Ohio now than had been doing so before a voting rights advocacy group won a legal settlement. Read more

Low-Income Ohio Voters Registering In Droves: Registration Now Permitted At Public Assistance Offices

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Voter right advocates said more than 100,000 low-income Ohio residents have applied to register to vote at public-assistance offices in the months after a federal court settlement on the issue. Read more