Grading State Disclosure 2008 Logo Graphic

N e w . Y o r k

Honor
Grade
Rank
B
16

golden bar divider

Subcategories
Grade
Rank
Campaign Disclosure Law
C
30
Electronic Filing Program
A+
1
Disclosure Content Accessibility
A-
14
Online Contextual & Technical Usability
B-
12

Grading Process green cube Subcategory Weighting green cube Methodology green cube Glossary

golden bar divider

The State of Disclosure in New York

New York improved from a B- to a B and ranked 16th again in 2008. The state has made significant gains since earning a D in 2003, including improving from a C+ to a B- in the usability category since the 2007 assessment.

New York earned a C again in 2008 and ranked 30th in the disclosure law category. The law requires that candidates disclose the name and address of contributors who give $100 or more, but does not require occupation and employer data to be reported. Details of expenditures over $49 must be disclosed, including subvendor information and accrued expenditures. Independent expenditures are also reported, including the name of the candidate on whose behalf the expenditure is made. New York earned an A+ and a share of the top electronic filing ranking again in 2008. Statewide and legislative candidates who raise $1,000 must file their disclosure reports electronically with the State Board of Elections. The agency expanded its filer training program in 2008 to include a new filer education and training unit with four new staff positions to assist filers.

New York has earned an A- in the Disclosure Content Accessibility category in each of the last two assessments and ranked 14th this year. The disclosure web site features searchable databases of campaign contributions and expenditures that contain both electronically-filed reports and paper-filed reports that have been data-entered by agency staff. The databases can be searched by date, transaction amount, and by the name of an individual donor or payee, and search results can be sorted online. Site visitors can download disclosure data for an entire filing period; giving users the ability to also download database search results would be useful. The State Board of Elections’ web site was redesigned in 2008 and a committee has been formed to identify ways to improve both the accessibility and usability of the site by the end of the year.

New York improved from a C+ to a B- in the Online Contextual and Technical Usability category with an improved usability test performance in 2008. Usability testers expressed better understanding and greater confidence in New York’s disclosure site in 2008 than testers did in 2007. The site features a good amount of contextual information, including detailed candidate lists, overviews for comparing totals raised and spent by candidates, and an explanation of which candidates have reports available online. As the site is being reviewed for improvements this year, the agency should consider displaying the starting and ending dates for each report within the index of a candidate’s reports, and clearly labeling any reports that have been amended.

Quick Fix: Provide the starting and ending date for each reporting period shown in the index of a candidate’s reports.

Editor’s Pick: Each candidate’s report index page provides users with the ability to search that candidate’s specific contributors, or for all contributions above a certain amount. View image

Disclosure Agency: State Board of Elections
Disclosure Web Site:
http://www.elections.state.ny.us

View past summaries of this state

View another state's summary:

Back to the Grading State Disclosure home page


First published September 17, 2008
| Last updated September 17 2008
copyright ©
Campaign Disclosure Project. All rights reserved.