Grading State Disclosure 2004 Logo Graphic

O r e g o n

Grade
Rank
D
32

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Subcategories
Grade
Rank
Campaign Disclosure Law
B
15
Electronic Filing Program
B
14
Disclosure Content Accessibility
F
45
Online Contextual & Technical Usability
F
35

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

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The State of Disclosure in Oregon

Oregon introduced a new system for viewing campaign finance records online, but the change did not occur until late September 2004, and the state will not receive credit for the improvement until next year’s Grading State Disclosure report.  For now, Oregon’s only gain came in the area of Electronic Filing, and its overall grade is still in the D range.

Candidates in Oregon are required to file once in non-election years and twice before each election.  Detailed information about contributors who give $50 or more must be disclosed, including their occupations, but not employers.  Last-minute contributions of more than $500 and independent expenditures of more than $1,000 must be reported before the election.  Candidates are required to report all expenditures, including some subvendor information.  Electronic filing is mandatory for any state candidate reaching a threshold of $50,000, and the waivers that were given last year to those who said they were unable to e-file are no longer permitted.

The Secretary of State appointed a panel to examine access to campaign finance data in Oregon, and its preliminary report recognized the need for change.  As noted above, the agency’s web site now features an interface for browsing complete campaign finance reports in PDF format, but that enhancement was made after this project’s evaluation period and Oregon’s Disclosure Content Accessibility grade is unchanged.  The state’s 2005 grade will reflect the expansion.  Oregon’s strengths in this category are still the speed with which information is posted to the Internet, and access to paper copies of reports, which is excellent compared to many other states.  The most serious shortcoming is the lack of a searchable database, and that feature is so far not included on the recently updated disclosure site.

Oregon’s second F came in the Online Contextual and Technical Usability category, and was caused by an inadequate description of whose records are available online, and the lack of browsable filings at the time of the study’s research.  Having no browsable reports online means the state cannot receive credit for the labeling of reporting periods in a report index, or the posting of both original and amended filings.  It is also somewhat difficult to locate the Secretary of State’s web site from the main State of Oregon web site, which contributed to the state’s low usability testing score.

Disclosure Agency: Secretary of State
Disclosure Web Site:
http://www.sos.state.or.us

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This page was first published on October 25, 2004
| Last updated on October 25, 2004
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