R-71 signature check nears halfway point





Image

halfwaycheckers




The signature check for Washington's Referendum 71 is near the halfway mark, with over 65,000 petition signatures now tallied .

According to a fresh post at the end of the day shift Monday, election crews and master checkers have completed their work on about 289 of the 623 petition batches – bound volumes of 15 petitions, each bearing between 1 and 20 signatures.

The total now checked, 65,531, is more than 7,000 above the Friday evening report, and approaches halfway to the full check of the 137,689 signatures that R-71 sponsors submitted on July 25. Sponsors are trying to force a statewide vote on the Legislature's new "everything but marriage act," Senate Bill 5688, that gives state-registered domestic partners the same state rights and responsibilities that married couples have.

The new tally shows 58,306 signatures accepted – they need 120,577 valid Washington voter signatures to qualify – and 7,225 rejected (6,165 because the person wasn't found on the state voter database, 24 where a digital signature is needed from the voter's home county in order to compare with the signature on the petition, 566 where the signer's signature did not match the one on file, and 470 duplicates.)

Overall, the error rate is currently 11.03 percent, considerably lower than the 20-year average of about 18.5 percent, and still below the maximum error rate the sponsors can absorb, about 12.4 percent. Some have speculated that the measure is headed to the ballot, but the state Elections Division continues to withhold a conclusion. All signatures are being checked, using double shifts, rather than random sampling, since the sponsors' pad is so small.
(no html)

Secretary of State
Steve Hobbs

Image
Image of Secretary of State Steve Hobbs

Connect with Us

Search Our Corner

About this Blog

The Washington Office of the Secretary of State’s blog provides from-the-source information about important state news and public services.

This space acts as a bridge between the public and Secretary Steve Hobbs and his staff, and we invite you to contribute often to the conversation here.

Comments Disclaimer

The comments and opinions expressed by users of this blog are theirs alone and do not reflect the opinions of the Secretary of State’s Office or its employees. The agency screens all comments in accordance with the Secretary of State’s blog use policy, and only those that comply with that policy will be approved and posted. Outside comments will not be edited by the agency.