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DESCRIPTION:http://www.marinrankedvoting.org/\n\nFW:Marin Ranked Voting's August 
 meeting is Wednesday, August 15 at 7:00pm.  Note our special summer meeting 
 place (while College of Marin is in recess).  It's the Aroma Cafe at 1122 
 4th Street, between A and B Streets. in downtown San Rafael.\n \nEveryone 
 interested in better ways of choosing public officials is encouraged to 
 drop by.\n\nFW:Please heed the urgent call to action below.  Marin's 
 senator, Carole Migden, voted for AB 1294 in the Elections Committee on 
 July 10.  We should let her know how much we will appreciate her support 
 for the bill on the Senate floor as well.  At least as important, 
 Appropriations Committee chair Tom Torlakson needs to hear from citizens 
 all over the state, not just in his own district.\n \n--Bob Richard\n 
 \n-----Original Message-----\nFrom: Rob Dickinson, Californians for 
 Electoral Reform [mailto:rdickinson@cfer.org]\nSent: Thursday, August 02, 
 2007 6:50 AM\nTo: Marin Ranked Voting\nSubject: Help Electoral Reform 
 Legislation in California Senate\nImportance: High\n\n\n\nTake Action 
 Today: Support Key Electoral Reform Legislation in California\nAB 1294 — 
 Mullin and Leno — Local Option for Ranked Voting\nUrge Your Senator To 
 Support and Co-Author AB 1294\nUrge Senate Appropriations Chair Tom 
 Torlakson To Support and Co-Author AB 1294\nAB 1294 is CfER's bill to allow 
 cities and counties to use ranked voting systems, including instant runoff 
 voting and choice voting. We are very pleased that the California Assembly 
 passed AB 1294 in June and that the Senate Elections Committee passed the 
 bill out of that key policy committee in early July.  Another critical 
 milestone is coming up in August, and we need your help.\nWe need your help 
 to move AB 1294 in the California Senate. We need you to make two contacts 
 today in the state Senate. \nPlease contact Senator Tom Torlakson, Chair of 
 the Senate Appropriations Committee, and urge him to support the bill when 
 it is heard in committee on August 20th.  Please contact his office soon, 
 as we want to win his support well before the committee hearing.\nSenator 
 Tom Torlakson,\nChair, Senate Appropriations Committee\nPostal: State 
 Capitol, Room 5050, Sacramento, CA 95814\nPhone: (916) 651-4007\nFax: (916) 
 445-2527\nEmail: Senator.Torlakson@senate.ca.gov\nFor more information, see 
 Background or Talking Points or Supporters below. A sample letter appears 
 below.\n\nPlease contact your state Senator today and urge his or her 
 support for the bill. In addition, please ask that they co-author the bill, 
 and provide them with the co-author request letter available at 
 http://www.cfer.org/coauthor. \nYou can call, fax, email, or send a postal 
 letter to them. Written comments, especially handwritten letters, have the 
 greatest impact, but do whatever works for you. \nFor contact information 
 for your Senator, please view the Senate roster available at: 
 http://www.cfer.org/senate\nYou can find out who your Senator is using your 
 address or a map at: http://www.cfer.org/findmysenator\nIf your senator is 
 a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee (i.e. Senators Torlakson 
 (Chair), Cox, Aanestad, Ashburn, Battin, Cedillo, Corbett, Dutton, Florez, 
 Kuehl, Oropeza, Ridley-Thomas, Runner, Simitian, Steinberg,, Wyland, Yee), 
 be sure to ask them to support the bill when it is heard in committee on 
 August 20th.\nBACKGROUND \nAB 1294, introduced by Assembly Members Mullin 
 (D-19) and Leno (D-13), would allow all cities and counties to use ranked 
 voting systems to elect their representatives. The bill would allow these 
 jurisdictions to use Instant Runoff Voting for single-winner elections or 
 Choice Voting (a ranked voting system similar to IRV) for multiple-winner 
 elections. It would also add to the state Elections Code the guidelines and 
 procedures that registrars and equipment vendors need to count and report 
 ranked voting elections.\nAB 1294 passed in the Assembly Committee on 
 Elections and Redistricting on April 17th and passed through the Committee 
 on Appropriations on May 9th. The bill passed in the full Assembly on June 
 6th.  The bill then moved to the Senate, where it passed out of the Senate 
 Elections Committee on July 10th. It now moves to the Senate Appropriations 
 Committee on August 20th.\nIn addition to the successful votes above, we 
 are also very pleased that a number of other legislators have signed on as 
 co-authors of the bill, including Assembly Members Mike Davis, Loni 
 Hancock, Jared Huffman, Betty Karnette, John Laird, Fiona Ma, and Lois 
 Wolk, in addition to the principle authors Gene Mullin and Mark Leno.\nThis 
 bill is important in that most local jurisdictions are not able to use 
 ranked voting systems under current law, and this bill would permit them to 
 do so. Today only charter counties or charter cities can use IRV, but over 
 three-fourths of cities and counties are general law jurisdictions and 
 don't have these options. Over half of Californians live in a general law 
 city, a general law county, or both. AB 1294 would give these jurisdictions 
 these additional options, but would not mandate that any jurisdictions use 
 these systems. In other words, it is simply permissive and gives local 
 governments the tools they need to respond to the wishes of their 
 voters.\nInstant Runoff Voting (IRV) ensures that the winner of a 
 single-winner election has the support of the majority of voters in a 
 single election. By eliminating the need for a costly runoff election it 
 saves local governments a lot of money -- about $1.6M per election in San 
 Francisco alone. IRV also eliminates vote-splitting and spoiler effects, 
 both of which undermine the public's confidence in the political process. 
 Finally, IRV helps promote positive, issue-based campaigns with less 
 negative campaigning because candidates will seek 2nd and 3rd choice votes 
 in addition to 1st choice votes.\nSan Francisco has used Instant Runoff 
 Voting extremely successfully for three consecutive elections, and all 
 academic and survey research shows that the results have been excellent. 
 San Francisco voters understood IRV extremely well, used it effectively, 
 and overwhelmingly prefer it to the old two-round runoff system that they 
 had used for decades.\n\nGiven the momentum for ranked voting building 
 around the country -- shown last November in Oakland, Davis, Minneapolis 
 (MN) and Pierce County (WA) -- this bill comes at an excellent 
 time.\n\n\nTALKING POINTS FOR AB 1294: \n1) IRV has an extremely successful 
 track record in its usage in San Francisco \n\nAll of the available 
 research and surveys of the usage of IRV in San Francisco support the fact 
 that every single demographic in the city -- defined by where they live and 
 their race, age, gender, party and political philosophy -- preferred IRV to 
 the old runoff system. In fact, voters prefer IRV by a three-to-one margin 
 over the old system. Over 87% of voters said that they understood IRV 
 perfectly well or fairly well, and voters two-to-one perceived the instant 
 runoff voting system as more fair than the prior two-round runoff system. 
 So from the standpoint of voter acceptance, ranked voting has proven 
 exceptional in the last three elections in San Francisco. And in addition 
 to this local usage, over 25 million people worldwide use IRV and have done 
 so for many decades, showing that this is not something on the bleeding 
 edge, but rather a proven system gaining acceptance in California and other 
 states. \n\n2) IRV can lead to dramatic improvements in voter participation 
 \n\nOne of the arguments that legislators are finding particularly 
 compelling about the bill is the potential for dramatic improvement in 
 voter turnout as a result of using ranked voting, especially among minority 
 communities. San Francisco saw an estimated effective tripling of voter 
 participation overall as a result of using ranked voting (and being able to 
 combine two elections into a single election), and as much as a quadrupling 
 of turnout among minority and low-income neighborhoods. Significant 
 improvements seem likely in other jurisdictions as well, and also for local 
 elections which coincide with the statewide primary and general elections. 
 For an analysis of how IRV led to significant improvements in voter turnout 
 in San Francisco, see: http://www.sfrcv.org/reports/turnout.pdf \n\n3) IRV 
 can save local governments considerable money \nThere is a significant 
 potential for cost savings by eliminating the need for expensive runoff 
 elections, often elections with single-digit voter turnout. San Francisco 
 alone saves around $1.6 million per election, which is real money when we 
 are talking about local government budgets. In Los Angeles County, they had 
 a recent runoff election for local government offices that cost $5 million 
 dollars and only had 6% voter turnout. \n4) Cities and counties deserve the 
 opportunity to use the electoral systems that best address their unique 
 needs . Currently, only charter cities have this opportunity, and it should 
 be extended to all local governments. Giving general law jurisdictions the 
 right to improve their election procedures would open up valuable new 
 opportunities for them to achieve more representative democracy and better 
 government. Allowing local jurisdictions to demonstrate improvements to 
 their electoral processes allows the whole state to benefit and see what 
 works best. \n\n5) Our current voting systems suffer from a variety of 
 deficits, including vote splitting and spoiler effects, and unequal 
 representation. Spoiler and vote splitting effects can allow a candidate to 
 be elected where the majority of people would prefer a different candidate. 
 Our winner-take-all electoral systems ensure that a significant percentage 
 of the population is denied representation, and this ultimately undermines 
 the political system. In particular, minority communities suffer the most, 
 and the Choice Voting system allowed by this legislation provides for much 
 greater opportunities for representation than are afforded under our 
 current at-large winner-take-all systems.\n\n6) The lack of uniform 
 election code support for these improved electoral systems is a significant 
 obstacle to cities and counties and other jurisdictions that want to use 
 these systems, and AB 1294 addresses this need. In addition, City and 
 County officials and/or local Registrars are not put in the difficult 
 positions of having to make up such procedures themselves.\n\n7) AB 1294 is 
 broadly supported \nSee the partial list below of organizations and 
 individuals supporting AB 1294.\nSUPPORTERS OF AB 1294 INCLUDE: 
 \nCalifornians for Electoral Reform (sponsor) \nSecretary of State Debra 
 Bowen \nAsian Americans for Civil Rights and Equality \nAsian Pacific 
 American Legal Center \nCalifornia Common Cause \nCalifornia League of 
 Women Voters \nCalifornia Peace and Freedom Party \nCalifornia Public 
 Interest Research Group \nCity Clerks Association of California \nCity of 
 Davis, CA \nCity of Fort Bragg \nCommunity Development Institute of East 
 Palo Alto \nDavis Choice Voting \nDemocracy for America \nFairVote – the 
 Center for Voting and Democracy \nGreenlining Institute \nKevin McKeown, 
 Councilmember, City of Santa Monica \nLatinos for America \nLeague of 
 California Cities \nLos Angeles Voters for Instant Runoff Elections 
 \nMexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF) \nNew America 
 Foundation \nSan Mateo County Democracy for America \nWarren Slocum, Chief 
 Elections Officer & Assessor-Clerk-Recorder, San Mateo County \nYolo County 
 Registrar of Voters Freddie Oakley\n \nSample Letter to Senator 
 Torlakson\n--------------------------------------------\nSend To: 
 Senator.Torlakson@senate.ca.gov\nSubject: Support AB 
 1294\n--------------------------------------------\n\nDear Senator 
 Torlakson,\nI urge you to support AB 1294 when it is considered in the 
 Senate Appropriations Committee on Monday August 20th, and hope that you 
 will consider co-authoring the bill.\nAB 1294 gives cities and counties an 
 option to use Instant Runoff Voting and Choice Voting, two ranked voting 
 systems which have proven themselves to be both good for local governments 
 and good for voters.\nLocal governments can save a lot of money by being 
 able to elect their representatives in a single election, without the need 
 for a costly runoff election.  San Francisco alone saves over $1.6 million 
 per election.  Los Angeles just recently held a set of runoff elections 
 that cost around $5 million and only had a 6% voter turnout.  That money 
 could be better spent elsewhere, and democracy would be better served by 
 involving more citizens in the process.\nIn addition, because only a single 
 election is needed, voter turnout improves because the election is held 
 when turnout is highest, thus including more people in the process.  An 
 analysis of citywide races in San Francisco before and after Instant Runoff 
 Voting was used showed that voter turnout improved by an estimated 2.7 
 times.  \nFinally, Instant Runoff Voting works well, and voters understand 
 it, use it effectively, and like it.  Voters in San Francisco preferred IRV 
 by a three to one margin over their previous system, and two to one thought 
 it more fair. \n \nLet's give all local governments the option to use 
 ranked voting.  It's only an option, not a mandate, and cities and counties 
 at least deserve a 
 choice.\nSincerely,\nYourNameHere\n\n--------------------------------------------\n\nThanks 
 again for your help. If you have questions, please contact:\nRob 
 Dickinson\nExecutive Vice President\nCalifornians for Electoral 
 Reform\nEmail: rdickinson@cfer.org\nWeb: www.cfer.org\nPhone: 
 650-365-6025\nMobile: 650-544-5925 
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 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/08/14/18440651.php
SUMMARY:IRV NEWS>MONTHLY MARIN RANK VOTING MEETING
LOCATION:meeting could shorter\n\nIt's the Aroma Cafe at 1122 4th Street, between A 
 and B Streets. in downtown San Rafael.\n\nyou haft to do some searching 
 amoung others there\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/08/14/18440651.php
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