The League of Women Voters’ fourth consecutive Youth Voter Registration Program kicked off this week in nearly 40 communities nationwide. Over the next several months, local League volunteer teams in 15 states will visit local high schools, community colleges and technical/vocational schools in order to help young people get registered and ready to vote in 2014.
This work will build on and supplement the numerous voter registration drives Leagues across the country hold every year.
With work already underway in several places, League volunteers are gearing up to visit an estimated 250 schools before the end of the school year. They’ll be setting up in classrooms, outside cafeterias, on community college quads and at a wide range of springtime school events to help as many eligible young people as possible register to vote.
One key to boosting youth turnout is hosting community-based voter registration drives, which can help fill the gaps in voter registration among the most underrepresented groups of young voters, including low incoming and non-college youth, who are more ethnically diverse and more likely to identify as LGBT than their college-educated peers.
League volunteers will visit community college campuses across central Florida and North Carolina, hoping to build upon relationships first established with schools in 2012. Major efforts are being planned to reach as many eligible students as possible in eight communities in South Carolina and in nearly a dozen communities on Long Island (NY). In Juneau, Alaska, League volunteers plan to visit hard-to-reach high schools that are only accessible by air or water. In Kansas, League volunteers plan to visit schools that predominantly serve Native American communities. In Illinois, League leaders will be out in full force in local high schools in order to take advantage of a new law that permits 17-year-olds to participate in this year’s primary elections, as long as they will be 18 by the November general election.
Only 35 percent of young people with no college experience turned out to vote in 2012, with lack of registration being a key barrier standing in the way of their participation. The League’s program specifically aims to target the high schools and other institutions serving likely non-college youth in order to provide voter registration opportunities.
League volunteers will also equip the students for a smooth Election Day experience by giving them the tools they need to successfully cast a vote for the first time.
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NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!
Michael H. Drucker
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