Los Angeles Times

Faults found in off-year local elections

- By Martha Groves martha.groves@latimes.com

Off-year municipal elections like those held this year in Los Angeles reduce overall voter turnout and appear to draw disproport­ionately small numbers of voters from minority groups, according to a study by the Greenlinin­g Institute to be released Monday.

“Our analysis strongly suggests that holding local elections in odd years … almost certainly skews the makeup of the electorate,” said Michelle Romero, director of the group’s Claiming our Democracy program.

Holding local elections separately from state and federal ones also raises pervoter costs, the study found.

The analysis suggests consolidat­ing municipal elections with state and federal elections would bring more voters to the polls, cut costs and draw voters who better represent the population, the report said. Greenlinin­g is a Berkeley nonprofit that advocates for racial and economic justice.

In March, embarrassi­ngly low voter turnout for the L.A. mayoral primary renewed discussion­s about scheduling elections to coincide with higher-profile state or national races. The city clerk’s office is considerin­g how to attract more voters to the polls, and rescheduli­ng is one possibilit­y.

Cities that have consolidat­ed elections have seen jumps of 20 to 50 points in the percentage of registered voters who participat­e, said Kathay Feng, executive director of California Common Cause, a group that supports combining elections.

Some county election officials surveyed by Greenlinin­g argued against consolidat­ing elections, saying voters would pay less attention to local candidates and measures at the end of a long ballot. Others countered that combining elections would save time, money and labor and make city elections seem as important as state and federal elections.

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