delgado v galvin _ma welfare voter registration case_ - complaint
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8/20/2019 Delgado v Galvin _MA Welfare Voter Registration Case_ - Complaint
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
BETHZAIDA DELGADO,
NAACP-NEW ENGLAND AREA
CONFERENCE, and
NEW ENGLAND UNITED FOR JUSTICE,
Plaintiffs,
v.
WILLIAM F. GALVIN,in his official capacity as Secretary of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
JUDYANN BIGBY, M.D.,
in her official capacity as Secretary of the
Executive Office of Health and Human
Services, and
DANIEL J. CURLEY, in his official capacity as Commissioner of the
Department of Transitional Assistance,
Defendants.
)
)))))))))))
)))))))))))
)))))
CIVIL ACTION NO.
_____________________________
COMPLAINT
Plaintiffs Bethzaida Delgado, NAACP-New England Area Conference (“NAACP-
NEAC”), and New England United for Justice (“NEU4J”), for their Complaint against
defendants William F. Galvin, in his official capacity as Secretary of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, JudyAnn Bigby, M.D., in her official capacity as Secretary of the Executive
Office of Health and Human Services (“EOHHS”), and Daniel J. Curley, in his official capacity
as Commissioner of the Department of Transitional Assistance (“DTA”), allege as follows.
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INTRODUCTION
The right to vote is a fundamental right. Deprivations of that right undermine the
American democratic system of government. Unfortunately, flawed practices and policies,
insufficient oversight and inadequate enforcement in crucial parts of Massachusetts’ voter
registration system have deprived the right to vote to tens of thousands of low income
Massachusetts citizens who receive public assistance.
For several years, Massachusetts has violated the National Voter Registration Act of
1993 (“NVRA”). The NVRA was enacted, with widespread bipartisan support in Congress, to,
inter alia, make voter registration more widely available and accessible to the poor. 42 U.S.C. §
1973gg(b)(1). Section 7 designates all public assistance offices as voter registration agencies.
Id. § 1973gg-5(a)(2)(A). Under the NVRA, public assistance offices must provide voter
registration services with each application, recertification, renewal, or change of address. Id.
§ 1973gg-5(a)(6)(A).
Specifically, the NVRA requires that all public assistance offices distribute forms that ask
their clients if they would like to register to vote and, unless the client declines to register to vote
in writing, the NVRA requires that the offices distribute voter registration applications, referred
to in Massachusetts as “affidavits,” assist clients in completing the voter registration
applications, and accept completed applications and deliver them to election authorities. Id.
§ 1973gg-5(a)(6)(B).
Section 7 seeks to increase the number of registered voters for federal elections and to
ensure that voter registration “will be convenient and readily available [for] the poor . . . who do
not have driver’s licenses and will not come into contact with the other principle [sic] place to
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register under this Act [namely, motor vehicle departments].” Id. §1973gg(b)(1); H.R. Rep. No.
103-66, at 15 (1993) (House-Senate Conference Report).
“[N]oncompliance with section 7 [of the NVRA] means the disenfranchisement of
millions of low income citizens and a widening of the gap between the registration rates of high-
and low-income individuals.” Hearing on the National Voter Registration Act, Section 7: The
Challenges that Public Assistance Agencies Face, 110th CONG., 2d Sess. 42-796 (2008) (United
States Representative Zoe Lofgren, former Chairwoman of the House Subcommittee on
Elections). In fact, as a direct result of non-compliance with Section 7, thousands of low income
citizens have been disenfranchised in Massachusetts. Massachusetts’ systemic violations of
Section 7 -- caused by flawed practices and policies, insufficient oversight and inadequate
enforcement -- have contributed to an obvious income-based “voter registration gap.” According
to the United States Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey released in November 2010, in
2010, only 58.2% of Massachusetts’ eligible citizens living in a household with a yearly income
of less than $25,000 were registered to vote, as compared to 76.9% of eligible citizens living in a
household with a yearly income of more than $100,000 – a “voter registration gap” of 18.7%.
Based on the same Current Population Survey for the 2008 presidential election year, 86.1% of
Massachusetts’ eligible affluent citizens were registered to vote, that is, approximately 10% more
than in 2010; but the voter registration rate for low income eligible citizens in 2008 was actually
lower than in 2010, 58.1%. These “voter registration gaps” reveal the disenfranchisement of tens
of thousands of eligible low income Massachusetts citizens.
But for plaintiffs’ substantial investigative efforts and commencement of this action,
Massachusetts’ violations may have remained hidden and unaddressed. Data obtained from
offices of the Massachusetts Department of Transitional Assistance (“DTA”) suggest that, in
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2011, at least 94.2% of their clients were not provided the voter registration services mandated
by Section 7 of the NVRA because they purportedly identified themselves as registered voters.
Given the Census Bureau’s voter registration data, the statistical probability that over 94% of
DTA clients are registered voters is essentially zero. DTA has recorded similarly incredible
percentages of low income voter registrations every year since 2005.
Moreover, the sad truth is that Massachusetts’ NVRA violations are apparently increasing
over time. For example, according to statistics reported to the federal government by
Massachusetts, Massachusetts public assistance offices submitted 26,984 voter registration
applications in 1999-2000. Federal Election Commission, The Impact of The National Voter
Registration Act of 1993 on the Administration of Elections for Federal Office, 1999-2000 Table
2, 6 (2001). Ten years later, in 2009-2010, again according to statistics reported to the U.S.
Election Assistance Commission by Massachusetts, the number of voter registration applications
submitted by Massachusetts public assistance offices had decreased to 2,007 – a reduction of
92.5%. U.S. Election Assistance Commission, 2010 Election Administration & Voting Survey:
Massachusetts Response (2011) (Obtained through Public Records Request, on file with Ropes &
Gray LLP).
Clearly, widespread systemic violations of the NVRA have prevented tens of thousands
of eligible low income Massachusetts citizens from exercising their right to vote in federal
elections. Despite these obvious violations, defendants have made little effort to investigate the
violations or to develop and implement practices and policies to bring Massachusetts into
compliance with the NVRA.
As a direct result of defendants’ violations of Section 7 of the NVRA, eligible citizens
such as plaintiff Bethzaida Delgado have been denied the opportunity to register to vote and have
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thereby been deprived the right to vote. To address defendants’ chronic violations, organizations
such as plaintiffs NEU4J and NAACP-NEAC and their members have expended and will
continue to expend substantial resources to plan and execute voter registration initiatives that
target public assistance clients. But for defendants’ violations, organizations such as plaintiffs
NEU4J and NAACP-NEAC would not have diverted their limited resources to such voter
registration initiatives.
Plaintiffs bring this action for declaratory and injunctive relief, asking this Court to order
defendants to comply with Section 7 of the NVRA. Because the deadline to register for the 2012
federal election is October 17, 2012, plaintiffs seek preliminary injunctive relief, asking this
Court to order defendants to immediately develop and implement remedial practices and policies
to ensure compliance with the NVRA well in advance of that registration deadline.
Simply stated, plaintiffs ask this Court to order defendants to meet their responsibilities
under the NVRA and to assist tens of thousands of eligible but unregistered low income
Massachusetts citizens in registering to vote so that they can exercise one of their most
fundamental rights and participate in our democratic system.
JURISDICTION AND VENUE
(1) This action is brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-9(b).
(2) This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1331 and 28 U.S.C. § 1343(a).
(3) This Court has personal jurisdiction over each defendant because each is a citizen
of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
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(4) Venue in this district is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391 because a substantial
part of the events giving rise to the claims occurred in this district and the principal place of
business of each defendant is in this district.
(5) As described in detail below, an actual and justiciable controversy exists between
plaintiffs and defendants.
PARTIES
(6) Plaintiff Bethzaida Delgado is a Massachusetts citizen who resides at 277 East
Merrimack Street, Lowell, Massachusetts. Ms. Delgado is eligible to register to vote in
Massachusetts. She has not been registered to vote at her current address nor at any other
address in Massachusetts. Ms. Delgado receives Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
(“SNAP”) benefits, which are administered by the DTA.
Ms. Delgado also receives Medicaid, which is implemented in Massachusetts through the
MassHealth program (“MassHealth”). MassHealth is administered by the EOHHS; applications
for MassHealth benefits, as well as assistance related to the receipt of benefits, is available at,
among others, DTA offices. Ms. Delgado first applied for MassHealth benefits from the DTA
office located at 131 Davidson Street, Lowell, Massachusetts. She has subsequently renewed or
recertified her MassHealth benefits through the MassHealth enrollment center located at 367
East Street, Tewksbury, Massachusetts.
On June 24, 2011, Ms. Delgado visited the DTA office located at 131 Davidson Street,
Lowell, Massachusetts, to recertify her eligibility for SNAP benefits. During that visit, she was
not offered the opportunity to register to vote or to change her voter registration address.
Ms. Delgado has been receiving SNAP and MassHealth benefits for the past ten years
and has previously received cash assistance. She cannot recall ever being offered the
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opportunity to register to vote during a visit to a DTA office or through any of her interactions
with MassHealth enrollment centers.
(7) Plaintiff NAACP-NEAC is an organization under the umbrella of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People, with its principal place of business in
Boston, Massachusetts. NAACP-NEAC operates through more than twenty Units – Branches,
College Chapters, and Youth Councils – including at least fifteen Branches located throughout
Massachusetts. It provides services to more than two thousand members, including members
who have applied and/or may apply for, and/or receive and/or may receive, public assistance
benefits in Massachusetts, including SNAP, Transitional Aid to Families with Dependent
Children (“TAFDC”), Emergency Aid to the Elderly, Disabled, and Children (“EAEDC”), and
MassHealth.
Voter registration and education are core components of NAACP-NEAC’s mission and
are central to the accomplishment of its objectives. Among other things, NAACP-NEAC
Branches encourage voter registration and participation in federal and other elections, especially
among people of color, and disenfranchised and low income citizens, and have expended, and
continue to expend, substantial resources conducting voter registration drives throughout
Massachusetts. NAACP-NEAC’s voter registration efforts target voters in low income
neighborhoods, including registration of persons who apply for and/or receive public assistance
benefits. In 2011, as one of its highest priorities, NAACP-NEAC commenced a campaign in
Massachusetts named “This is My Vote,” with voter registration, voter education, and get-out-
the-vote activities planned throughout 2011 and 2012.
As a direct result of defendants’ violations of Section 7 of the NVRA, NAACP-NEAC
has sent volunteers to assist people with voter registration and voter education who should have
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been offered those services by defendants. If defendants provided NVRA-mandated voter
registration services, NAACP-NEAC could reallocate its volunteers to other activities, including
issue-based campaigns, youth programs, collaborative community actions with other
organizations, voter protection efforts, and large-scale voter registration drives that broadly
target many persons, including persons that Section 7 of the NVRA is not designed to cover.
(8) Plaintiff New England United for Justice (“NEU4J”) is a nonprofit membership-
based community organization with its principal place of business at 196 Adams Street, Boston,
Massachusetts. NEU4J has more than 280 members, including members who have applied for
and/or will apply for, and/or receive and/or will receive public assistance benefits in
Massachusetts, including SNAP, TAFDC, EAEDC, and MassHealth. NEU4J encourages voter
registration and participation in federal, state, and city elections, which are core components of
its mission and central to the accomplishment of its objectives, particularly among citizens of
color and low income citizens. NEU4J has expended, and continues to expend, substantial
resources in conducting voter registration drives throughout Boston. Its current voter registration
efforts target voters in low income neighborhoods, including the registration of persons who
apply for and/or receive public assistance benefits.
In addition, after completing interviews of individuals visiting DTA offices, which
revealed that numerous DTA clients were not receiving NVRA-mandated voter registration
forms and assistance, NEU4J has decided that it will devote additional resources to register DTA
clients to vote. These efforts divert NEU4J’s limited resources from other activities, including
voter mobilization and get-out-the-vote efforts, door-to-door canvassing, candidate forums,
neighborhood development efforts, community actions with other organizations, leadership
trainings, and voter registration drives in areas to register persons the NVRA is not designed to
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cover. This diversion of resources would not be necessary if defendants complied with the voter
registration assistance requirements mandated by the NVRA.
(9) Defendant William F. Galvin is the Secretary of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts. Mr. Galvin is the chief election official in Massachusetts and is responsible for
conducting and overseeing federal elections. In his official capacity, among other things, Mr.
Galvin promulgates regulations; issues directives and advisories regarding procedures for
conducting federal elections; prescribes voter registration forms and makes them available for
distribution; establishes and maintains statewide qualified voter files; develops and implements
rules, practices and policies to enforce laws governing federal elections; investigates, or causes
to be investigated, compliance with governing election laws; and is responsible for ensuring
compliance with the NVRA. He is the “chief election official” responsible for coordination of
Massachusetts’ responsibilities under the NVRA.
(10) Defendant JudyAnn Bigby, M.D., is the Secretary of the Executive Office of
Health and Human Services (“EOHHS”). The EOHHS administers the following public
assistance programs: SNAP, EAEDC, MassHealth, and TAFDC (which receives funding from
the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (“TANF”) block grant program). Any
state office that administers these programs must comply with the requirements of the NVRA.
Pursuant to Massachusetts law, EOHHS is the “single state agency” responsible for the
administration of MassHealth. See M.G.L.A. 118E § 1.
(11) Defendant Daniel J. Curley is the Commissioner of the Department of
Transitional Assistance (“DTA”), which Massachusetts has designated as a voter registration
agency pursuant to the NVRA. The DTA, a Department within the EOHHS, administers SNAP,
EAEDC, MassHealth, and TAFDC. In its administration of these programs, DTA must comply
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with the requirements of the NVRA. In addition, on information and belief, pursuant to
Massachusetts law, DTA is the “single state agency” responsible for the administration of SNAP,
EAEDC, and TAFDC. See 106 CMR 701.100.
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
National Voter Registration Act of 1993
(12) The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (“NVRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg et
seq., has as its principal purpose “establish[ing] procedures that will increase the number of
eligible citizens who register to vote in elections for Federal office.” Id. § 1973gg(b)(1).
(13) In furtherance of that principal purpose, the NVRA mandates, among other things,
that “each state shall designate as voter registration agencies -- (A) all offices in the state that
provide public assistance.” 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(2).
(14) At each voter registration agency, Section 7 of the NVRA requires that “the
following services shall be made available:
(i) Distribution of mail voter registration application forms . . .
(ii) Assistance to applicants in completing voter registration application forms, unless
the applicant refuses such assistance.
(iii) Acceptance of completed voter registration application forms for transmittal to the
appropriate State election official.”
42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(4)(A); id. § 1973gg-5(a)(6). Completed voter registration applications
must be “transmitted to the appropriate State election official not later than 10 days after the date
of acceptance,” id. § 1973gg-5(d)(1), or within 5 days, if accepted “5 days before the last day for
registration to vote in an election,” id. § 1973gg-5(d)(2). These services must be offered by all
public assistance offices “with each application for . . . [public] assistance, and with each
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recertification, renewal, or change of address form relating to . . . [public] assistance.” Id. §
1973gg-5(a)(6).
(15) Section 7 of the NVRA also requires all public assistance offices to distribute
with each application for services, and with each recertification or renewal, and with each change
of address form, a voter preference form, sometimes called a “declination form.” The voter
preference form provides specific information to clients regarding the voter registration process
and asks, “[i]f you are not registered to vote where you live now, would you like to apply to
register to vote here today?” The specific information on the voter preference form includes, for
example, an explanation that the decision to register to vote will not affect eligibility for public
assistance or the amount of benefits. Id. § 1973gg-5(a)(6)(B)(ii).
(16) The public assistance agency must provide that client with “the same degree of
assistance with regard to the completion of the registration application form as is provided by the
office with regard to the completion of its own forms, unless the applicant refuses such
assistance.” Id. § 1973gg-5(a)(6)(C).
(17)
The NVRA requires that “[e]ach State shall designate a State officer or employee
as the chief State election official to be responsible for coordination of State responsibilities”
under the NVRA. 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-8. As previously noted, in Massachusetts, the “chief
State election official” is defendant Galvin, the Secretary of the Commonwealth.
(18) The NVRA creates a private right of action for “a person who is aggrieved by a
violation” of the NVRA. 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-9(b)(1). The NVRA requires that, at least 90 days
prior to bringing an action to enforce the NVRA, an aggrieved person must give written notice to
the “chief State election official” to identify the violation(s) and to provide the State with an
opportunity to cure the violation(s) prior to the commencement of an action.
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Massachusetts Voter Registration Regulations
(19) Massachusetts has adopted regulations (950 CMR 57) to implement the NVRA.
(20)
950 CMR 57 states, in part, that it “implements the federal National Voter
Registration Act, 42 U.S.C. 1973gg to 1973gg-10.” 950 CMR 57.01. It also states that one of
the purposes of the regulations is to “increase the number of eligible citizens who register to
vote.” Id.
(21) 950 CMR 57.05 requires the Commonwealth to provide voter registration services
at designated voter registration agencies. A voter registration agency is defined to include
agencies that administer or provide services under the Food Stamp ( i.e., SNAP), Medicaid (i.e.,
MassHealth), EAEDC, and Aid to Families with Dependent Children (i.e., TAFDC) programs.
950 CMR 57.02.
(22) 950 CMR 57.05 also requires the Commonwealth to facilitate voter registration.
For example, it states that the Secretary of the Commonwealth “shall prepare blank forms for
affidavits of voter registration and shall supply sufficient quantities of such forms to each voter
registration agency.” 950 CMR 57.05(1)(a). Further, the Secretary “shall prepare voter
registration declination forms and shall supply such forms in quantities the state secretary deems
sufficient.” 950 CMR 57.05(1)(b).
(23) A voter registration application, or “affidavit,” must be distributed with each
application for service or assistance, and with each recertification, renewal, or change of address
form relating to such service or assistance. 950 CMR 57.05(2)(b). Whether an applicant for
services or assistance declines to register to vote, or chooses to register to vote, a voter
preference form, or “declination form,” must be signed by the applicant and retained by the voter
registration agency. 950 CMR 57.05(2)(c), (d). Further, the agency “shall provide the registrant
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with the same level of assistance in filling out the voter registration [application] as is provided
by the agency in completing its own forms.” 950 CMR 57.05(2)(f).
(24) Each voter registration agency must “mail or deliver the original completed
affidavit of voter registration to the board of registrars of voters of the city or town where the
registrant resides within five days after it is completed by the registrant at the agency.” 950
CMR 57.05(3)(a).
Failure to Offer Voter Registration Opportunities to Public Assistance Agency Clients.
(25) Massachusetts must comply with the requirements of the NVRA.
(26)
Defendant Galvin, as Secretary of the Commonwealth, is the chief election
official responsible for ensuring Massachusetts’ compliance with the NVRA. Among other
things, Mr. Galvin is responsible for ensuring that voter registration agencies, including offices
through which persons apply for, recertify, renew, or change their addresses for public assistance
benefits, including SNAP, TAFDC, EAEDC, and MassHealth, provide the voter registration
services mandated by Section 7 of the NVRA.
(27)
EOHHS and DTA are state agencies responsible for the administration of public
assistance in Massachusetts, including, but not limited to, the administration of SNAP, TAFDC,
EAEDC, and MassHealth. DTA and EOHHS are voter registration agencies under Section 7 of
the NVRA, as recognized by the implementing Code of Massachusetts Regulations, 950 CMR
57.02(1)(b), because they administer or provide services under the SNAP, MassHealth, EAEDC
and TAFDC programs. Defendant Bigby, as Secretary of EOHHS, and defendant Curley, as
Commissioner of DTA, are State officials responsible for ensuring that voter registration
materials and services mandated by Section 7 of the NVRA are made available through the
public assistance programs offered by EOHHS and DTA, respectively.
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(28) Defendants have violated Section 7 of the NVRA by failing to provide persons
who apply, recertify, renew, or change their addresses in connection with public assistance
benefits with a voter registration application, a voter preference form, and assistance in
completing a voter registration application. These failures also violate Massachusetts regulations
implementing the NVRA. 950 CMR 57.
(29) United States Census Bureau data strongly suggests that Massachusetts public
assistance offices are not performing their voter registration obligations under the NVRA.
According to the November 2008 United States Census Bureau Current Population Survey, in
2008, only 58.1% of low income eligible Massachusetts citizens were registered to vote
compared to 86.1% affluent Massachusetts eligible citizens, an income-based “voter registration
gap” of 18%. In 2010, according to the November 2010 edition of the same Survey, 58.2% of
low income eligible Massachusetts citizens were registered to vote compared to 76.9% affluent
Massachusetts eligible citizens, an income-based “voter registration gap” of over 18%.
(30) Available reports of NVRA public assistance office voter registration data do not
indicate that Massachusetts public assistance offices comply with NVRA requirements.
Massachusetts is required, pursuant to federal regulations, see, e.g., 11 C.F.R. § 9428.7, to report
voter registration data, including numbers of voter registration applications submitted by voter
registration agencies, to the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (“EAC”). Massachusetts
submitted certain information to the EAC in 2010. However, information regarding voter
registration applications, including those from public assistance offices, was submitted in an
unusable format and was therefore not included in the EAC’s annual NVRA reports. U.S.
Election Assistance Commission, The Impact of The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 on
the Administration of Elections for Federal Office, 2009-2010 39 (2011). More specifically,
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Massachusetts did not aggregate the number of voter registration applications received from
public assistance offices, making it prohibitively burdensome for the EAC to analyze the
information submitted by Massachusetts. U.S. Election Assistance Commission, 2010 Election
Administration & Voting Survey: Massachusetts Response (2011) (Obtained through Public
Records Request, on file with Ropes & Gray LLP). As a result, the EAC’s 2010 annual report to
Congress did not include information regarding Massachusetts’ compliance with Section 7. U.S.
Election Assistance Commission, The Impact of The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 on
the Administration of Elections for Federal Office, 2009-2010 (2011).
(31)
Moreover, data produced by the DTA itself, in response to a Public Records Act
Request by plaintiffs’ counsel, confirm that public assistance offices are not providing voter
registration services required by the NVRA. A comparison of the number of persons registering
to vote through DTA offices with the number of persons receiving SNAP benefits demonstrates
that those offices are not complying with the requirements of the NVRA. As indicated in the
chart below, for the past seven years, significantly fewer than 1% of the DTA’s SNAP clients
have submitted voter registration applications to DTA offices.
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Year
Voter
Registration
(“VR”)
Applications
Submitted
SNAP
Applications
Submitted
Ratio of
VR to
SNAP
Apps (%)
2005 748 214,855 0.34%
2006 871 157, 646 0.55%
2007 901 168, 316 0.55%
2008 1252 219,592 0.57%
2009 764 269,022 0.28%
2010 516 239,795 0.22%
2011 570 240,149 0.24%
(32) The DTA’s non-compliance with the NVRA is also shown by its own
computerized client survey records. For the past seven years (2005-2011), DTA has utilized a
computerized process, known as BEACON, to process benefits-related transactions. As
designed and intended, under BEACON, DTA personnel cannot complete a client’s application,
recertification or renewal, or change of address, without inputting the answer to the question, is
“everyone 18 or older in [the] Assistance Unit who is a U.S. citizen and a Massachusetts resident
currently registered to vote at your current address,”1 and, if the answer to that question is that an
eligible resident within the Assistance Unit is not registered to vote, without also inputting the
answer to whether any such person wishes to register to vote.
1 Upon information and belief, DTA recently reworded this question to ask whether there is“anyone 18 or older who is currently NOT registered to vote at your current address.” Uponinformation and belief, DTA has made no other changes to the BEACON computerized process.
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There is a “hard stop” step in the computer program which must be completed before the
computerized process will proceed. For each of the past seven years, according to data produced
in response to the Public Records Act Request, BEACON has reported that over 94% of all DTA
clients have answered that everyone 18 or older in their home is registered to vote. In other
words, notwithstanding the fact that, according to the United States Census Bureau 2010 survey,
only 58.2% of eligible Massachusetts low income citizens were registered to vote, the BEACON
DTA data suggest that over 94% of DTA clients are registered voters. Given the Census Bureau
data, the statistical probability that over 94% of DTA clients were registered voters is essentially
zero.
(33) Upon information and belief, it is far more likely that DTA personnel have
proceeded past the “hard stop” step in the BEACON computer program by inputting an answer
in response to the voter registration question without actually asking the client the voter
registration question; by answering that a client is already registered when he or she fails to
answer the question; and/or by failing to explain the voter registration question when “assisting”
a client in completing benefits forms.
(34) The same DTA BEACON data also indicate that DTA offices are not distributing
voter registration applications or voter preference forms to all clients, as required by the NVRA.
Public assistance agencies are required to distribute a voter preference form with each
application for service or assistance, and with each recertification, renewal, or change of address
form relating to such service or assistance. 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(6)(A). Public assistance
agencies are further required to distribute a voter registration application “unless the applicant, in
writing, declines to register to vote.” Id. at § 1973gg-5(a)(6). DTA’s data show that when the
first BEACON question response is inputted as “everyone in the client’s home is already
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registered to vote,” not only is no voter registration application distributed, but also no voter
preference form is completed. In other words, based on the DTA data produced, DTA personnel
have failed to distribute voter registration applications to 94% of its clients even though no voter
preference form containing a written declination was completed.
(35) DTA is further required by the NVRA, as implemented by 950 CMR 57.05(2), to
preserve voter preference forms. Specifically, “[i]f the applicant declines to register to vote, the
declination form shall be signed by the applicant, and retained by the registration agency.” 950
CMR 57.05(2)(c). The suspect nature of the DTA’s BEACON system and DTA’s apparent non-
compliance with NVRA requirements are further evidenced by the revelation that, according to
DTA 2011 records, not a single DTA client who had responded that he or she was already
registered to vote completed a voter preference form that was retained by a DTA office.
(36) Between May and December 2011, NEU4J visited DTA offices in Boston,
Holyoke, Lawrence, Lowell, Springfield, Worcester, Pittsfield, and Fitchburg, and spoke to
office personnel, as well as individuals leaving those offices who had visited to apply for,
recertify, renew, or change their address in connection with SNAP, EAEDC, TAFDC, or
MassHealth benefits. Information compiled during these visits confirm widespread violations of
Section 7 of the NVRA. Specific violations at DTA offices include:
(i) Failure to offer voter registration opportunities. Of the 174 public assistance
clients interviewed, 129, or 73%, reported that they received no offer of voter
registration in any manner. They did not see any voter registration question
on any DTA forms; they were not asked by any DTA personnel about voter
registration; they were not offered a voter registration application; and they
were given no assistance whatsoever in registering to vote.
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(ii) Failure to distribute voter registration applications. As previously noted, the
NVRA requires public assistance offices to distribute voter registration
applications to each client unless he or she completes a written declination of
his or her right to register to vote. 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(6)(A). Similarly,
pursuant to Massachusetts regulation, 950 CMR 57.05(2)(c), “[i]f the
applicant declines to register to vote, the declination form shall be signed by
the applicant, and retained by the registration agency.” By definition, a failure
to provide a response to the written voter preference form is not a statement
“in writing” that satisfies an agency’s obligation to provide a voter registration
application. Of the 146 interviewed clients who did not provide a response to
the NVRA-mandated voter registration question – either because they did not
see the question or because they left it blank – 140 (approximately 95%) were
not provided with a voter registration application.
(iii) Failure to keep voter registration applications and materials in supply and
generally available. The failure to stock voter registration materials also
suggests broader non-compliance with Section 7 of the NVRA and 950 CMR
57.05(1)(a) and (b). For example, although the Elections Director of the
Secretary of the Commonwealth has asserted (in a letter to plaintiffs’ counsel
dated March 6, 2012) that the Secretary of the Commonwealth has always
made posters regarding violations of election laws/penalties and “register to
vote here” signs available to all public assistance offices, no signs or posters
were observed at any of the DTA offices visited. Similarly, although the
Secretary has purportedly always made voter registration applications and
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mail-in voter registration applications available to all public assistance offices
in multiple languages, in only one DTA office of the nine visited were voter
registration applications – in any language – observed at the office intake
counter.
(37) The NVRA (42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(6)) requires that public assistance offices
designated as voter registration agencies “distribute with each application for such service or
assistance, and with each recertification, renewal, or change of address form,” a voter
registration application and a voter preference form. Significantly, “Virtual Gateway,” an online
portal operated by the EOHHS that provides information about a broad range of social services
for low income persons, including food stamps and Medicaid, offers no voter registration
information. Because a Massachusetts citizen can apply for public assistance through “Virtual
Gateway,” it triggers the requirements of the NVRA. And, upon information and belief, while
this online registration system requests an applicant’s personal information (including age and
citizenship status), it does not ask about voter eligibility or registration status. Voter registration
is neither available through “Virtual Gateway” menu options, nor is it listed among its index of
available services. Defendants’ failure to provide voter registration applications and voter
preference forms through “Virtual Gateway” is symptomatic of Massachusetts’ systemic non-
compliance with the NVRA.
(38) Defendants’ widespread violations of the NVRA and disregard for voter
registration rights of public assistance clients is remarkable given the Massachusetts
Constitution’s guarantee of the right to vote to every citizen of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts. Mass. Const. pt. 1, art. IX. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has long
recognized that being left off voter registration rolls deprives one of the right to vote and is a
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violation of the Massachusetts Constitution. Santana v. Registrars of Voters of Worcester , 384
Mass. 487, 492 (1981); Lincoln v. Hapgood , 11 Mass. 350, 355 (1814). Defendants’ failure to
comply with the requirements of the NVRA prevents tens of thousands of low income
Massachusetts citizens from registering to vote, and so prevents them from exercising their right
to vote.
(39) On December 8, 2011, a letter was sent to defendant Galvin, on behalf of “New
England United for Justice, persons eligible to register to vote that it represents, and others
similarly situated,” to “provide written notice of the violation [of Section 7 of the NVRA] to the
chief election official of the State,” as required by the NVRA. 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-9. The
notice stated that, unless Massachusetts implemented a plan to remedy the violations of the
NVRA within 90 days, NEU4J would commence litigation. (A copy of the December 8, 2011
notice letter is attached hereto as Exhibit A.) Defendants Bigby and Curley were sent a copy of
the notice on the same day. The violations of the NVRA described in the notice letter have not
been remedied.
(40)
On February 9, 2012, representatives of plaintiffs met with representatives from,
among others, the offices of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, EOHHS, and DTA to discuss
Massachusetts’ NVRA violations. At the conclusion of that meeting, all attendees agreed to
reconvene for additional discussions two weeks later, on February 22, 2012. On February 17,
2012, however, defendants’ representatives unilaterally cancelled the second meeting and
refused to conduct any further discussions before the 90-day deadline, opting instead to provide a
written response to the December 8, 2011 notice letter.
(41) On March 6, 2012, the Elections Director of the Secretary of the Commonwealth
sent a response letter to plaintiffs’ representatives. That letter describes a single change in policy
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by the Secretary. Previously, public assistance offices were directed not to provide a voter
registration application to any client who left the voter registration question on the voter
preference form blank, a clear violation of NVRA requirements. The Elections Director’s letter
states that, going forward, public assistance offices would be directed to provide a voter
registration application to any client who does not provide a written declination of the
opportunity to register to vote – as has always been required by the NVRA. While this change in
policy, reportedly to be accompanied by planned updates to the “Agency Voter Registration
Workbook” and the “Agency Script,” is clearly necessary to comply with the NVRA, the March
6, 2012 letter is silent regarding how the policy change would be implemented or enforced.
The Elections Director’s letter states that the policy change was communicated to public
assistance agencies in March of 2012. However, such a communication, standing alone, does
nothing to ensure that the policy change is implemented by agency personnel. Given the
historical policies and practices of these agencies to provide a voter registration application if
and only if a client answered the voter registration question affirmatively – that is, specifically
stating in writing on the voter preference form that he or she would like to register to vote – the
Secretary’s change in policy – unaccompanied by any implementation or enforcement
procedures – does not remedy Massachusetts’ violations of Section 7 of the NVRA.
(42) The March 6, 2012 letter fails to mention any other change in policy or procedure
to ensure that voter registration applications and materials would be distributed and displayed; or
to ensure that voter registration services would be provided to public assistance agency clients.
Throughout her letter, the Elections Director simply summarizes requirements of the NVRA,
without offering any evidence that the voter registration agencies have adopted practices and
policies that satisfy those requirements. By way of example only, the Elections Director writes
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that “[p]ursuant to the NVRA, as well as state law and regulations promulgated by the Secretary
of the Commonwealth . . . the declination form must be distributed with each application for
service or assistance, recertification, renewal, or change of address.” That is indeed a correct
statement of federal and state law. However, there is no evidence that, for example, supervision
and oversight of compliance with this legal requirement has been initiated, or that enforcement
procedures have been implemented. Similarly, the Elections Director writes that “[t]he same
level of assistance must be provided in completing the voter registration form as is provided by
the agency in completing its own forms, unless the registrant refuses assistance.” This is
essentially a quotation of 950 CMR § 57.05(2)(e). However, the letter provides no information
regarding whether this legal requirement has been followed; overseen through regular
supervision; or enforced through compliance procedures. Such empty recitations of law appear
throughout the response letter.
(43) In addition, many of the practices described in the March 6, 2012 letter have been
required throughout the many years of Massachusetts’ violations of Section 7 of the NVRA.
While certain of these practices may be necessary to ensure compliance with the requirements of
the NVRA, they have proven to be woefully inadequate without additional policies, practices and
procedures. For example, the Elections Director notes that, in terms of staffing, Massachusetts
has “maintained a NVRA coordinator in the Elections Division” since the NVRA’s enactment in
1993. The NVRA coordinator has purportedly “[c]onsistently . . . met with agency contacts to
provide information and training on the NVRA and to address any issues that arise.” In addition,
according to the Elections Director, the Secretary’s office “has always made itself available to
conduct trainings for any agency.” While laudable, these practices alone have obviously not
prevented Massachusetts’ systemic violations of the NVRA. There is no reason to believe that
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preference form blanks is irrelevant. The Executive Director notes that the BEACON system
can identify DTA public assistance offices with low voter registration rates, but goes no further.
Without additional training, supervision, oversight and enforcement procedures to ensure that
DTA personnel follow the updated BEACON Users’ Guide and BEACON Help Instructions, the
BEACON’s “hard-stop” step and data do nothing to ensure that DTA personnel will offer and
provide NVRA-mandated services.
Planned DTA changes, although desirable, are inadequate unless implemented and
enforced. For example, the Executive Director’s March 6, 2012 letter states that DTA “will . . .
designate a local office manager, who will see that voter registration procedures are being met,
forms are available and posters posted,” but offers no details, for example, on when the manager
would be selected or how the manager will enforce compliance with NVRA requirements. It
similarly notes that DTA “is increasing its monitoring of NVRA activities during this election
year and will work to address any issues that are identified in 2012 and subsequent years,” which
suggests that no additional changes are contemplated until after the 2012 federal elections.
(45)
Furthermore, even if defendants were now to adopt and fully implement the
practices and policies described in the March 6, 2012 letter, much more is needed to remedy
Massachusetts’ woeful history of violations. For several years, defendants have either
disregarded or ignored the precipitous decline in voter registrations reported by public assistance
offices. Over the years, Massachusetts’ violations of Section 7 of the NVRA have directly
caused tens of thousands of eligible low income citizens to lose their right to register to vote,
and, as a direct result, they have been disenfranchised. To remedy these violations and to
provide eligible low income Massachusetts citizens opportunities to exercise their right to
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register to vote in time for the fast-approaching 2012 federal election, preliminary injunctive
relief is needed.
Plaintiff Bethzaida Delgado Is Denied the Opportunity to Register to Vote.
(46) Plaintiff Bethzaida Delgado is 35 years old and has lived in Massachusetts for
over 12 years. Ms. Delgado is a United States citizen. She satisfies all qualifications to register
to vote in Massachusetts.
(47) Ms. Delgado is not registered to vote at her current address, and would like to
register to vote at her current address.
(48)
Ms. Delgado has received SNAP and MassHealth benefits since approximately
2002 and received cash assistance in 2006 and 2007 following an automobile accident. In
connection with her application and receipt of public assistance, she has visited the DTA office
at 131 Davidson Street, Lowell, Massachusetts, many times to recertify or to renew her benefits.
She first applied for MassHealth benefits at the Lowell DTA office. Ms. Delgado has
subsequently recertified or renewed her MassHealth benefits through the MassHealth enrollment
center located at 367 East Street, Tewksbury, Massachusetts.
(49) Ms. Delgado visited the DTA office at 131 Davidson Street, in Lowell,
Massachusetts, on June 24, 2011, to recertify her SNAP benefits. She was not offered the
opportunity to register to vote at any time during her visit; nor was she offered a voter
registration application. Ms. Delgado will not visit the office again until she is required to do so
by DTA.
(50) Despite her numerous interactions with DTA offices and MassHealth enrollment
centers over the past 10 years, including her most recent visit to the Lowell DTA office, Ms.
Delgado does not recall ever being offered the opportunity to register to vote or being informed
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that she could obtain voter registration applications and register to vote through DTA offices or
MassHealth enrollment centers.
(51) Had Ms. Delgado been advised that she could register to vote, or been offered
opportunities to register to vote through a DTA office or MassHealth enrollment center, Ms.
Delgado would have done so and she would have been able to vote.
NAACP-New England Area Conference Voter Registration Efforts.
(52) NAACP-NEAC seeks to achieve equality of rights among all Massachusetts
residents. It especially encourages participation in federal and state elections by traditionally
underrepresented groups. Massachusetts’ continuing widespread violations of Section 7 of the
NVRA have frustrated NAACP-NEAC’s efforts, as many low income and citizens of color have
been deprived of opportunities to register to vote at DTA offices. But for defendants’ violations
of the NVRA, NAACP-NEAC volunteers and members would not have expended as much of
their limited resources assisting these Massachusetts citizens with voter registration.
(53) NAACP-NEAC Branches organize and conduct numerous voter registration
drives throughout Massachusetts. They devote substantial resources to voter registration drives
every year. In promoting these drives in communities, NAACP-NEAC organizers target, among
others, families who live in low income housing. If public assistance offices throughout
Massachusetts were complying with the requirements of the NVRA, NAACP-NEAC would
expend fewer resources on voter registration drives in communities where DTA clients should be
offered voter registration opportunities at DTA offices. But for defendants’ violations of Section
7 of the NVRA, NAACP-NEAC would be able to allocate substantial resources to other
activities central to its mission. This diversion of NAACP-NEAC’s limited resources will
continue unless and until defendants’ violations are remedied.
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New England United for Justice Voter Registration Efforts.
(54) NEU4J supports the civil rights efforts of low income Massachusetts residents,
especially within those communities where its members reside, with a specific focus on the
communities in Dorchester, Roxbury, and Mattapan. NEU4J targets low income residential
areas where voter turnout and participation are historically low, and educates and empowers
residents by assisting them in registering to vote and by encouraging them to participate in
federal and state elections. NEU4J efforts include voter outreach, such as door-to-door
canvassing and telephone drives, which depend on volunteer participation. NEU4J has also
partnered with other Massachusetts organizations, such as the NAACP-NEAC and MassVote, in
large-scale outreach programs. As a direct result of defendants’ violations of Section 7 of the
NVRA, NEU4J and its members have expended and, unless and until defendants’ violations of
the NVRA are remedied, will continue to expend substantial resources to assist public assistance
applicants and recipients to register to vote. By way of example only, upon learning from clients
visiting DTA offices that they were not being offered NVRA-mandated voter registration
services, NEU4J began developing plans to register voters visiting those offices. These plans
diverted NEU4J resources that would otherwise be expended on different voter education and
voter registration activities. The diversions of NEU4J and its members’ resources will continue
unless and until defendants’ violations of Section 7 of the NVRA are remedied.
(55) NEU4J is also actively involved in many community improvement initiatives
targeting local, state, and federal issues facing low income families, including paid sick leave,
Social Security and Medicaid benefits, tax reform and improving local city, state, and federal
budget deficit efforts. As a direct result of defendants’ NVRA violations, NEU4J has diverted,
and will continue to divert, its limited resources away from these other initiatives.
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CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
Violation of Section 7 of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993
(56) Plaintiffs incorporate by reference the allegations contained in paragraphs 1
through 55 as if fully set forth herein.
(57) As a consequence of their past and continuing failures to provide voter
registration materials and services required by Section 7, defendants have violated and continue
to violate the NVRA.
(58) Plaintiffs are aggrieved by defendants’ past and continuing violations of the
NVRA, and have no adequate remedy at law. Declaratory and injunctive relief are required to
remedy defendants’ past and continuing violations of the NVRA and to ensure defendants’ future
compliance with the NVRA.
PRAYERS FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, plaintiffs respectfully request that this Court enter judgment in their
favor and enter an order:
(i) Declaring, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201 and 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-9(b)(2), that
defendants have violated Section 7 of the NVRA, 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5, by failing to provide
the NVRA-required voter registration materials and services through public assistance offices,
including EOHHS and DTA;
(ii) Preliminarily and permanently enjoining defendants, their officers, agents
servants, employees and successors in office, and all persons in active concert or participation
with them, from failing to develop, implement and enforce practices and policies to ensure
compliance with Section 7 of the NVRA, 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5;
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(iii) Directing defendants, under a court-approved plan with appropriate mandatory
reporting and monitoring requirements, to take all actions necessary to remedy the past and
continuing violations of Section 7 of the NVRA, including, without limitation, ensuring that all
persons affected by defendants’ violations of Section 7 of the NVRA are provided opportunities
to register to vote or to change their voter registration addresses to enable them to vote in the
2012 federal election;
(iv) Directing defendants, under a court-approved plan with appropriate mandatory
reporting and monitoring requirements, to take all actions necessary to ensure future compliance
with the requirements of Section 7 of the NVRA, 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5, including, without
limitation, practices and policies for distribution of voter registration applications and voter
preference forms; training and monitoring public assistance agency personnel to ensure that all
public assistance offices are distributing a voter registration application form to each person who
applies for public assistance benefits, and to each person who recertifies, renews, and/or changes
an address for benefits; inquiring of all such persons, in writing, whether they want to register to
vote or change their voter registration addresses, and providing to them the NVRA-required
information concerning the voter registration process; assisting such persons in completing voter
registration applications to the same level of assistance that is provided with other public
assistance forms; accepting completed voter registration applications, and timely transmitting
completed registration forms to appropriate election authorities; and retaining voter registration
declination forms;
(v) Awarding plaintiffs the costs and disbursements incurred in connection with this
action, including, without limitation, their reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses, and costs,
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-9(c);
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(vi) Retaining jurisdiction over this action to ensure that defendants are complying
with any order(s) issued by this Court and with their obligations under the NVRA; and
(vii) Awarding such additional relief as to this Court seems just and proper.
Dated: May 15, 2012 BETHZAIDA DELGADO, NAACP-NEWENGLAND AREA CONFERENCE and NEW ENGLAND UNITED FOR JUSTICE
By their attorneys,
s/ John Kenneth Felter__________John Kenneth Felter (BBO#162540)[email protected]
Ming M. Zhu (BBO# 676863)[email protected] & GRAY LLPPrudential Tower800 Boylston StreetBoston, Massachusetts 02199-3600Telephone: 617-951-7000Fax: 617-951-7050
Lisa Danetz (BBO #645998)Dēmos
358 Chestnut Hill Avenue, Suite 303Brighton, Massachusetts 02135(617) [email protected]
Adam Lioz ( pro hac vice pending)Dēmos1710 Rhode Island AvenueWashington, D.C. 20036(202) [email protected]
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Bob Kengle ( pro hac vice pending) [email protected] Reyes ( pro hac vice pending)[email protected]' Committee for Civil Rights
Under Law1401 New York Avenue, N.W., Suite 400Washington, D.C. 20005(202) 662-8321
Sarah Brannon ( pro hac vice pending)[email protected] Khan ( pro hac vice pending)[email protected] Vote1350 Eye Street, NW, Suite 1250
Washington, DC 20005(202) 546-4173
Rahsaan Hall (BBO #645369)Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rightsand Economic Justice294 Washington St., Ste #443Boston, MA 02108(617)[email protected]
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December 8, 2011
Via UPS and e-mail
Mr. William F. Galvin
Secretary of the CommonwealthCitizen Information Service
One Ashburton Place, Room 1611
Boston, MA [email protected]
Re: Compliance with Section 7 of the National Voter Registration Act
Dear Mr. Galvin,
We write on behalf of New England United for Justice, persons eligible to register to votethat it represents, and others similarly situated to notify you that the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts is not in compliance with Section 7 of the National Voter Registration Act of
1993 (“NVRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5, which requires States, including Massachusetts, to provide the opportunity to register to vote with every application for public assistance and every
public assistance recertification, renewal, and change of address. We urge you, as the
Commonwealth’s chief election official, to take immediate steps, in conjunction with theExecutive Office of Health and Human Services and the Departments of Transitional Assistanceand Public Health to bring the Commonwealth into compliance with Section 7.
The NVRA requires Massachusetts to “designate as voter registration agencies . . . alloffices in the State that provide public assistance.” See 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(2)(A). Each
public assistance office must, at a minimum, (i) distribute voter registration application forms;
(ii) assist applicants in completing the voter registration forms; and (iii) accept completed voterregistration application forms and forward them to the appropriate election official. See 42
U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(4)(A). Moreover, each office must (i) distribute a voter registrationapplication form with each application for public assistance and with each recertification,
renewal or change of address form; (ii) inquire of the applicant, in writing, whether he or shewould like to register to vote or change his or her voter registration address; (iii) inform theapplicant, in writing, that the decision to register or decline to register to vote will not affect the
amount of public assistance provided by the agency; and (iv) provide assistance in completing
the voter registration forms to the same degree the agency provides assistance in completing its
own forms. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-5(a)(6).
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Our investigation demonstrates that Massachusetts is systematically failing to provide the
voter registration services mandated by the NVRA at its public assistance offices. From data thatMassachusetts has submitted to the United States Election Assistance Commission and that the
undersigned have received through public records requests, we have determined that the number
of voter registration applications submitted at Massachusetts public assistance offices has
decreased precipitously in the last decade – from 26,984 at the peak in 1999-2000 to 2,007 in2009-2010, a reduction of 92.5%. Indeed, this low level of voter registration activity at public
assistance offices is reflected in the low voter registration rates of low-income citizens in
Massachusetts. In 2010, only 58.2% of the Commonwealth’s low-income citizens wereregistered to vote compared to 76.9% of affluent citizens – a voter registration gap of 18.7
percentage points. Indeed, in the historic 2008 presidential election and contrary to the norm for
a presidential election year, the Commonwealth’s low-income voter registration rate was slightlylower , at 58.1%, compared to 86.1% of affluent citizens, a voter registration gap of 28
percentage points.
Our review indicates that Massachusetts’s noncompliance with Section 7 is the result, in
part, of its implementation of a voter registration policy that violates Section 7. The NVRArequires that public assistance offices presumptively distribute voter registration applications to
all public assistance applicants and clients, unless the individual applicant or client affirmativelyopts out of voter registration by declining “in writing” to register to vote. 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-
5(a)(6)(A). Nevertheless, in defining those times at which voter registration applications must be
distributed, the Commonwealth’s policy – as reflected in both the Voter Registration Workbookfor Agencies at pages 6-7 and WIC’s Motor Voter Program Administrative Manual at page 8 –
requires distribution to those applying, recertifying, renewing, or changing an address with
respect to the receipt of benefits only when the individual checks “yes” in response to thequestion, “If you are not already registered to vote at your current address, would you like to
register to vote?” This violates the NVRA. Valdez v. Herrera, No. 09-668, MemorandumOpinion and Order, at 10-11 (D. N.M. Dec. 21, 2010) (“Section 7 does not make the provision
of a voter registration application contingent upon an affirmative request, either written or
verbal, from a client. . . . A blank response on the declination provision . . . cannot be a
statement ‘in writing’ for purposes of subparagraph (A) [the voter registration distributionrequirement].”); see also U.S. Dep’t of Justice, “Voter Registration Requirements of Sections 5,
6, 7, and 8 of the NVRA” (question 19), available at http://www.justice.gov/crt/about/vot/
nvra/nvra_faq.php (last viewed on November 22, 2011).
Observations in the field confirm that front line staff at DTA offices are failing to
regularly provide the voter registration services required by the NVRA to public assistanceclients. In visits to 8 local DTA offices, which occurred between May and August 2011, a
significant percentage of public assistance applicants and clients interviewed who should have
received an offer of voter registration services, i.e. were at the office to apply, recertify, orchange an address with respect to the receipt of benefits, were not provided any meaningful offer
of voter registration:
• 69% of interviewees (79 out of 115) did not see any voter registration question withinDTA forms, were not asked by any DTA personnel about voter registration, and were
not given a voter registration application.
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• Fewer than 14% of all interviewees were provided a voter registration application.
• Of 92 interviewees who did not provide any response to a voter registration question
– either because they did not see any question or saw a question and left it
unanswered – only 3 were orally asked about voter registration and only 6 were provided with a voter registration application.
Indeed, there was nothing in the lobbies of any of the DTA offices that might advise clients of
the availability of voter registration – no signs, no posters, no stack of voter registration
applications on the intake counters. In several offices, DTA personnel could not even provide avoter registration application when requested to do so.
Observations at WIC Clinics in five cities, conducted during the same time period,yielded similar results. Among the WIC clients interviewed who should have received an offer
of voter registration services, i.e. were at the office to apply, recertify, or change their address
with respect to the receipt of WIC, only one person reported seeing any form that included aquestion about voter registration. Not one of any of the remaining individuals either saw a
written voter registration question or was asked orally about voter registration. Indeed, only one
individual among all those who were interviewed received a voter registration application. And,like the DTA offices, there was nothing in the lobbies of all but one DTA office that might
advise clients of the availability of voter registration.
These problems should not have occurred. The Secretary of the Commonwealth, the
Secretary of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, the Commissioner of the
Department of Transitional Assistance, and the Commissioner of the Department of Public
Health are responsible to ensure that local offices are implementing the law and thus are
responsible for effective supervision of local offices to ensure compliance. See Harkless v. Brunner , 545 F.3d 445, 451 (6th
Cir. 2008) (chief election official is “responsible for
implementing the state's function”); id. at 455 (head of “single state agency” responsible foradministering public assistance programs has responsibility to provide statewide voter
registration services). Massachusetts must make sure the NVRA actually is implemented by
making prompt changes so that all of its citizens, including the hundreds of thousands of itscitizens who receive public assistance, are able to participate in elections. In short,
Massachusetts must change its facially noncompliant policy and institute procedures to ensure
that frontline workers perform their federally mandated responsibility to provide voter
registration services.
This letter serves as a notice letter pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1973gg-9(b) in an attempt toobtain compliance with the public assistance provisions of the NVRA without the need forlitigation. Please advise us promptly of the steps you intend to take to remedy Massachusetts’
violations of Section 7 of the NVRA. We are prepared to meet with you and other state officials,
at your earliest convenience, to assist in your development of a comprehensive plan forcompliance. In the absence of such a plan, we will have no alternative but to initiate litigation at
the conclusion of the statutory 90-day waiting period.
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Sincerely,
___ Lisa J. Danetz ________
Lisa J. Danetz
Demos
358 Chestnut Hill Ave.Suite 303
Brighton, MA 02135
(617) 232-5885
___ Rahsaan Hall ___________________
Rahsaan Hall
Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights
Under Law of the Boston Bar Association294 Washington Street, Suite 443
Boston, Massachusetts 02108
(617) 482-1145
___ Nicole Zeitler ____________
Nicole Zeitler
Project Vote
737 1/2 8th
Street, SE
Washington, DC 20003(202) 546-4173 ext. 303
cc: Ms. JudyAnn Bigby, Secretary of Executive Office of Health and Human Services
Mr. Daniel J. Curley, Commissioner of the Department of Transitional AssistanceMr. John Auerbach, Commissioner of the Department of Public Health
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S 44 (Rev. ) CIVIL COVER SHEETThe JS 44 civil cover sheet and the information contained herein neither replace nor supplement the filing and service of pleadings or other papers as required by law, except as pr
y local rules of court. This form, approved by the Judicial Conference of the United States in September 1974, is required for the use of the Clerk of Court for the purpose of inhe civil docket sheet. (SEE INSTRUCTIONS ON NEXT PAGE OF THIS FORM.)
. (a) PLAINTIFFS DEFENDANTS
(b) County of Residence of First Listed Plaintiff County of Residence of First Listed Defendant
(EXCEPT IN U.S. PLAINTIFF CASES) (IN U.S. PLAINTIFF CASES ONLY)
NOTE: IN LAND CONDEMNATION CASES, USE THE LOCATIONTHE TRACT OF LAND INVOLVED.
(c) Attorneys (Firm Name, Address, and Telephone Number) Attorneys (If Known)
I. BASIS OF JURISDICTION (Place an “X” in One Box Only) III. CITIZENSHIP OF PRINCIPAL PARTIES (Place an “X” in One Box for
(For Diversity Cases Only) and One Box for Defendant
1 U.S. Government 3 Federal Question PTF DEF PTF D
Plaintiff (U.S. Government Not a Party) Citizen of This State 1 1 Incorporated or Principal Place 4
of Business In This State
2 U.S. Government 4 Diversity Citizen of Another State 2 2 Incorporated and Principal Place 5
Defendant (Indicate Citizenship of Parties in Item III) of Business In Another State
Citizen or Subject of a 3 3 Foreign Nation 6
Foreign Country
V. NATURE OF SUIT (Place an “X” in One Box Only)CONTRACT TORTS FORFEITURE/PENALTY BANKRUPTCY OTHER STATUTE
110 Insurance PERSONAL INJURY PERSONAL INJURY 625 Drug Related Seizure 422 Appeal 28 USC 158 375 False Claims Act
120 Marine 310 Airplane 365 Personal Injury - of Property 21 USC 881 423 Withdrawal 400 State Reapportionm
130 Miller Act 315 Airplane Product Product Liability 690 Other 28 USC 157 410 Antitrust
140 Negotiable Instrument Liability 367 Health Care/ 430 Banks and Banking
150 Recovery of Overpayment 320 Assault, Libel & Pharmaceutical PROPERTY RIGHTS 450 Commerce
& Enforcement of Judgment Slander Personal Injury 820 Copyrights 460 Deportation
151 Medicare Act 330 Federal Employers’ Product Liability 830 Patent 470 Racketeer Influence
152 Recovery of Defaulted Liability 368 Asbestos Personal 840 Trademark Corrupt Organizatio
Student Loans 340 Marine Injury Product 480 Consumer Credit
(Excl. Veterans) 345 Marine Product Liability LABOR SOCIAL SECURITY 490 Cable/Sat TV
153 Recovery of Overpayment Liabili ty PERSONAL PROPERTY 710 Fair Labor Standards 861 HIA (1395ff) 850 Securities/Commod
of Veteran’s Benefits 350 Motor Vehicle 370 Other Fraud Act 862 Black Lung (923) Exchange
160 Stockholders’ Suits 355 Motor Vehicle 371 Truth in Lending 720 Labor/Mgmt. Relations 863 DIWC/DIWW (405(g)) 890 Other Statutory Acti
190 Other Contract Product Liability 380 Other Personal 740 Railway Labor Act 864 SSID Title XVI 891 Agricultural Acts
195 Contract Product Liability 360 Other Personal Property Damage 751 Family and Medical 865 RSI (405(g)) 893 Environmental Matt
196 Franchise Injury 385 Property Damage Leave Act 895 Freedom of Informa
362 Personal Injury - Product Liability 790 Other Labor Litigation Act Med. Malpractice 791 Empl. Ret. Inc. 896 Arbitration
REAL PROPERTY CIVIL RIGHTS PRISONER PETITIONS Security Act FEDERAL TAX SUITS 899 Administrative Proc
210 Land Condemnation 440 Other Civil Rights 510 Motions to Vacate 870 Taxes (U.S. Plaintiff Act/Review or Appe
220 Foreclosure 441 Voting Sentence or Defendant) Agency Decision
230 Rent Lease & Ejectment 442 Employment Habeas Corpus: 871 IRS—Third Party 950 Constitutionality of
240 Torts to Land 443 Housing/ 530 General 26 USC 7609 State Statutes
245 Tort Product Liability Accommodations 535 Death Penalty IMMIGRATION
290 All Other Real Property 445 Amer. w/Disabilities - 540 Mandamus & Other 462 Naturalization Application
Employment 550 Civil Rights 463 Habeas Corpus -
446 Amer. w/Disabilities - 555 Prison Condition Alien Detainee
Other 560 Civil Detainee - (Prisoner Petition)
448 Education Conditions of 465 Other Immigration
Confinement Actions
V. ORIGINTransferred fromanother district(specify)
(Place an “X” in One Box Only)
1 OriginalProceeding
2 Removed fromState Court
3 Remanded fromAppellate Court
4 Reinstated or Reopened
5 6 MultidistrictLitigation
VI. CAUSE OF ACTION
Cite the U.S. Civil Statute under which you are filing (Do not cite jurisdictional statutes unless diversity ):
Brief description of cause:
VII. REQUESTED IN
COMPLAINT:
CHECK IF THIS IS A CLASS ACTION
UNDER F.R.C.P. 23
DEMAND $ CHECK YES only if demanded in complaint
JURY DEMAND: Yes No
VIII. RELATED CASE(S)
IF ANY(See instructions):
JUDGE DOCKET NUMBER
DATE SIGNATURE OF ATTORNEY OF RECORD
FOR OFFICE USE ONLY
RECEIPT # AMOUNT APPLYING IFP JUDGE MAG. JUDGE
Case 1:12-cv-10872-DJC Document 1-2 Filed 05/15/12 Page 1 of 1
Bet za a De ga o,NAACP-New England Area Conference andNew England United for Justice
William F. Galvin, in his official capacity as Secretary of the Commonw
Massachusetts, JudyAnn Bigby, M.D., in her official capacity as Secreta
Executive Office of Health and Human Services and, Daniel J. Curley, in
official capacity as Commissioner of the Department of Transitional Ass
John Kenneth Felter (BBO#162540), Ropes & Gray LLP, Prudential Tower
800 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02199, 617-951-7000
Middlesex
X
Su o
X
X
42 U.S.C. §1973gg
Violations of Section 7 of the National Voter Registration Act
May , /s/John Kenneth Felter
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTDISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
1. Title of case (name of first party on each side only)
2. Category in which the case belongs based upon the numbered nature of suit code listed on the civil cover sheet. (See local
rule 40.1(a)(1)).
I. 410, 441, 470, 535, 830*, 891, 893, 895, R.23, REGARDLESS OF NATURE OF SUIT.
II. 110, 130, 140, 160, 190, 196, 230, 240, 290,320,362, 370, 371, 380, 430, 440, 442, 443, 445, 446, 448, 710, 720,740, 790, 820*, 840*, 850, 870, 871.
III. 120, 150, 151, 152, 153, 195, 210, 220, 245, 310, 315, 330, 340, 345, 350, 355, 360, 365, 367, 368, 375, 385, 400,422, 423, 450, 460, 462, 463, 465, 480, 490, 510, 530, 540, 550, 555, 625, 690, 751, 791, 861-865, 890, 896, 899,
950.
*Also complete AO 120 or AO 121. for patent, trademark or copyright cases.
3. Title and number, if any, of related cases. (See local rule 40.1(g)). If more than one prior related case has been filed in thisdistrict please indicate the title and number of the first filed case in this court.
4. Has a prior action between the same parties and based on the same claim ever been filed in this court?
YES NO
5. Does the complaint in this case question the constitutionality of an act of congress affecting the public interest? (See 28 USC§2403)
YES NO If so, is the U.S.A. or an officer, agent or employee of the U.S. a party?
YES NO
6. Is this case required to be heard and determined by a district court of three judges pursuant to title 28 USC §2284?
YES NO
7. Do all of the parties in this action, excluding governmental agencies of the united states and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (“governmental agencies”), residing in Massachusetts reside in the same division? - (See Local Rule 40.1(d)).
YES NO
A. If yes, in which division do all of the non-governmental parties reside?
Eastern Division Central Division Western Division
B. If no, in which division do the majority of the plaintiffs or the only parties, excluding governmental agencies,
residing in Massachusetts reside?
Eastern Division Central Division Western Division
8. If filing a Notice of Removal - are there any motions pending in the state court requiring the attention of this Court? (If yes,
submit a separate sheet identifying the motions)
YES NO
(PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT)
ATTORNEY'S NAME
ADDRESS
TELEPHONE NO.
Case 1:12-cv-10872-DJC Document 1-3 Filed 05/15/12 Page 1 of 1
Bethzaida Delgado, et al. v. William F. Galvin, in his official
capacity as Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, et al.
N/A
X
X
X
X
X
John Kenneth Felter
Ropes & Gray LLP, Prudential Tower, 800 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02199
617-951-7000
x
x