http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/06/opinion/06goldway.html?th&emc=th

The Election Is in the Mail

By RUTH GOLDWAY
NY Times Op-Ed: December 6, 2006
Washington

LAST Election Day, voters encountered myriad difficulties, from the
unexplained glitch that temporarily halted Montana's vote count to the
18,300 undervotes in Florida's 13th Congressional District, to long lines,
bad weather, inadequately trained workers, delayed or missing absentee
ballots and complicated new identity forms. There was, however, one state
where all went well: Oregon, where everyone votes by mail.

Since Oregon adopted Vote by Mail as its sole voting option in 1998, the
state's turnout has increased, concerns about fraud have decreased, a
complete paper trail exists for every election, recounts are
non-controvertible and both major political parties have gained voters.
Moreover, in doing away with voting machines, polling booths, precinct
captains and election workers, the state estimates that it saves up to 40
percent over the cost of a traditional election.

Vote by Mail could offer real advantages if it were adopted nationwide.
Voters would not need to take time off from work, find transportation, find
the right polling station, get babysitters or rush through reading
complicated ballot initiatives. The country's 35,000 post offices could
provide information, distribute and collect voting materials and issue
inexpensive residency and address identifications for voting purposes.

Perhaps most important, given the concerns about voting machine security,
mail ballots cannot be hacked. Tampering or interfering with mail is a
federal crime, and the United States Postal Service has its own law
enforcement arm, which works closely with a variety of enforcement
authorities including the F.B.I. Trained election clerks can take the time
to check signatures without delaying or discouraging voters. And the
advantages of a paper trail outshine the glitter of black box electronic
gadgetry.

States that have adopted measures like "no excuse necessary" absentee
ballots find that the public is eager to avail itself of the opportunity to
vote by mail. As many as 30 percent of voters didn't use the polls in
November. In Washington State, where 34 of 39 counties vote entirely by
mail, 70 percent of November's votes were cast by mail; in California, the
number is near 40 percent.

The Postal Service has set up a Vote by Mail preparation Web site and a
traveling workshop. But out of 750,000 employees, it has only a handful who
work part-time on mail balloting issues. The 110th Congress should direct it
to expand these efforts. Senators Ron Wyden, John Kerry and Barack Obama
recently sponsored a bill to grant funds to states that adopt Vote by Mail.
That legislation should also give the Postal Service money to coordinate a
national program.

For a small fraction of the sums spent on unreliable voting machines, the
Postal Service could work with state and local governments to design
standard ballots and develop processes for sorting and delivering them (like
those that already exist for overseas military personnel). It could
coordinate its own address database with the database of registered voters,
set postmark deadlines and devise language prompting voters to affix correct
postage.

Already, in order to help businesses that send out big mailings, the Postal
Service uses bar-code scanning to inexpensively track large volumes of mail
from origin to destination. With minor but careful modifications, this
technology can be adapted for use with ballots - allowing voters to check on
their location and status by entering a tracking number on the Internet or
by phone.

Public confidence in the accuracy of vote counting is at an all-time low.
The Election Assistance Commission estimated that as many as 850,000 votes
were not counted in the 2004 elections, and a recent report warned that
electronic voting machines cannot be made secure. Fortunately, a remarkably
sophisticated and effective technology exists for solving these problems,
and it is "old-fashioned" mail.

The founders conceived of a national postal service as a force to "bind our
nation together." Other technologies may now spread the news and help
families stay in touch, but the Postal Service should be called upon to meet
this latest challenge to our democracy.

Ruth Goldway is a commissioner on the Postal Rate Commission.


***

HI.  The feelings brought by notice of this festival go deep. The events
take place near where I was born, in White Memorial Hospital, and
lived beyond high school.  The schedule, attached, is diverse, fits a
very large number of doc's around several features, and looks amazing.
I feel genuine pride and admiration for the film-makers and the women
who have organized the festival.
Que vaya bien!
Ed

 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Latina film festival this weekend!
 Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 10:25:50 -0700

 Josefina Lopez, author of Real Women Have Curves, and Courage
Productions invite you to celebrate the voices and visions of Latina
filmmakers in the second annual Boyle Heights Latina Independent
Film Extravaganza (BHLIFE).

 BHLIFE will be a celebration of Latinas, their voices and their visions.
The mission of the festival is to build a network of Latina filmmakers
that will draw attention to the growing number of Latinas working behind
the camera. The films of these Latinas constitute a body of work that
will act as a powerful statement against the stereotypical portrayals of
Latinas on screen. Films will be screened in the categories of youth
media, feature length dramas, feature length documentaries, dramatic
shorts, documentary shorts, experimental shorts, and erotica.

 Over 50 films are featured in the festival. These come from local Boyle
Heights artists as well as from filmmakers representing diverse Latino
communities throughout the country. The cities represented include
 Boston, New York, Chicago, Tucson, Houston, Austin, San Francisco,
Oakland and Los Angeles.

 The festival will begin with a screening of the feature length film,
Buscando a Leti, a film that addresses the immigrant experience from
the point of view of those that are left behind, in this case, children
in Mexico. This opening night event will include a discussion of current
immigration legislation. The film's director will be present and USC
Professor Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo, whose research focuses on
Mexican undocumented immigration and transnational families,
will facilitate the discussion.

 The film festival will take place at CASA 0101 Theatre, 2009 East First
Street in Boyle Heights - December 8-10, 2006.

 For more information regarding the program, please contact: Katynka
Martinez, Festival Director, at [EMAIL PROTECTED], or visit
www.bhlife.org and www.myspace.com/bhlifefestival
Reservations may be made at casa0101.org

 We hope to see you soon!

The Schedule is attached.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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