by ED STERLING
The State of Texas last week agreed to drop its recently adopted practice of using “weak matches” of Social Security Administration data in purging names from voter rolls as required by a 2011 state law.
What precipitated the agreement was a lawsuit filed Sept. 20 in a Travis County district court by Austin attorneys Buck Wood and David Richards on behalf of four plaintiffs who were among some 70,000 Texans who were mailed a letter from the state’s chief elections officer, Secretary of State Hope Andrade, instructing recipients to fill out a form and send it to their local voter registrar within 30 days – or be presumed dead – and consequently stricken from the list of registered voters.
Pursuant to the agreement, Andrade stopped using weak matches, or part of a name and part of a social security number, to identify deceased or possibly deceased voters.
Names on voter rolls that have been “strong matched” through Social Security Administration death index data will get a letter and have 30 days to respond.
Meanwhile, Oct. 9 was the last day to register to vote. Looking forward, on Monday, Oct. 22, early voting begins.
And, on the subject of voting, Texans last week saw the campaign season move to the front burner with the first of three scheduled debates between incumbent President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney taking place on Oct. 3 and the first of two debates between U.S. Senate nominees, Democrat Paul Sadler and Republican Ted Cruz on Oct. 2.
Broadcast from Denver, the presidential debate featured segments on the economy, health care, the role of government and the act of governing. Online, nonpartisan fact-checking organizations such as factcheck.org have posted information to help viewers sort out what they heard.
School offers $10,000 degree
Gov. Rick Perry on Oct. 2 praised Angelo State University’s new $10,000 degree program and called on more Texas universities to follow suit, the governor’s office announced Oct. 2 in San Angelo.
Joined by Texas Tech University System Chancellor Kent Hance, Angelo State University President Joseph C. Rallo and state Rep. Drew Darby, R-San Angelo, the governor applauded Angelo State “for joining the growing list of universities that are thinking hard about how to educate more Texans at a reasonable cost.”
Under the program, Perry said, any qualifying student could enter Angelo State as a freshman and in four years leave with a bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies for less than $10,000 in tuition and fees, starting in the fall of 2013. A list of other institutions have responded to Perry’s call to create $10,000 degree programs.
Ed Sterling works for the Texas Press Association and follows the Legislature for the association.
edsterling@texaspress.com