In Violation of Texas Law, Most High Schools Aren't Giving Students the Chance to Register to Vote
Abysmal compliance with a decades-old state law is leaving at least 180,000 high school seniors off the current voter rolls, according to a new report.
by Ruben Paquian Published Thu, Aug 2, 2018
About two-thirds of Texas high schools are not following a state law that mandates giving all eligible students the opportunity to register to vote, according to a new report. That means hundreds of thousands of potential voters have been left off the rolls.
For three decades, public and private high school principals in Texas have been required to distribute voter registration applications to all students who will be 18 years old that school year. The law stipulates that students be offered the applications at least twice per year. But without an enforcement mechanism or sufficient outreach by the state, compliance has been abysmal, according to the Texas Civil Rights Projects report.
Since the 2016 presidential election, only a third of public high schools with more than 20 seniors requested a single voter registration form from the secretary of states office, the reports authors found. In other words, two-thirds of public high schools in Texas didnt even take the first step in complying with the law, leaving out at least 183,000 students in the last two years alone.
https://www.texasobserver.org/in-violation-of-texas-law-most-high-schools-arent-giving-students-the-chance-to-register-to-vote/