San Francisco spends more than $300K to register 49 noncitizens
supervisor, told the Chronicle in July. “Why would we not want our parents invested in the education of their children?”
San Francisco spent about $310,000 setting up the new registration system and informing potential voters, the Chronicle reported Sunday.
“We assumed that it would be many thousands, potentially, that could register and so far we’re at 49,” said John Arntz, director of elections, according to KPIX.
The deadline to register passed Monday, but California voters can conditionally register and vote on the same day, reported the Los Angeles Times.
The city had to set up a new registration system to handle the non-citizens, who can’t be lumped in with other voters, accounting for part of the $310,000 cost, reported KPIX.
“We had to create a separate database,” Arntz said, according to the station. “We created a separate ballot for these folks. We have separate roster pages for the polling places, we have a separate registration affidavit. We have a separate vote by mail ballot application, we have a separate website page.”
The city also distributed $100,000 to nonprofits to notify non-citizens of their new-found right to vote in San Francisco school elections, according to the station.
Chicago and some Maryland cities also allow non-citizen residents to vote in school board elections, reported KPIX.
Several cities in Massachusetts, including Cambridge, Amherst, Brookline and others, have at various times voted to allow noncitizens to vote in local elections, but those moves require legislation from state lawmakers to take effect, according to The Boston Globe.
San Francisco’s move to allow non-citizens to vote, albeit only in school board elections, prompted outrage across the nation, particularly in conservative and rightwing circles, reported the Los Angeles Times.