• Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
  • default color
  • green color
  • red color

Business Mirror

Sunday
Nov 22nd
Voter-education group says time to fill in ballot down to 6 minutes PDF Print E-mail
Regions
Written by Manuel Cayon / Reporter   
Tuesday, 03 November 2009 18:59

DAVAO CITY—A monitoring conducted by the election-advocacy group YouthVote Philippines (YVP) said repeated voter education has familiarized Filipino voters with the automated process, trimming down to six minutes the length of stay of a voter in the polling precinct.

YVP said its second-round time-and-motion study on filling up the ballot held recently in San Isidro Central School, Nueva Ecija, showed that education campaign by various groups helped voters to rummage through the new technology introduced by the Commission on Elections (Comelec) for the 2010 presidential elections.

Results of the recent study show that, on average, it may take a voter six minutes and one second to fill up the proposed ballot for the automated elections,” the group said, adding that this was an improvement from the average in the first study conducted in Tanauan, Batangas, which recorded an average of eight minutes and four seconds.

It said  it conducted the two studies with PoliticalArena.com, a sociopolitical networking site. The group said  it used an improvised ballot based on the sample design of the Comelec and, in the second study, the ballot featured substitute questions for 32 electoral positions with 338 candidates printed on both sides of the paper.

For its second round, the YVP also shortened the ballot size from 25 to 20 inches and “adjusted the font size to Arial Narrow 11, also as per Comelec advice.”

“Proper orientation on the voting process can really help a voter fill up the ballot easier and faster,” said Ching Jorge, lead convener of the YVP, on an Internet posting. “The result is a welcome development, and we’re gearing our voter-education program not only to get people informed about the candidates, but to familiarize them with the ballot and the new process.”

The group said an exit interview it also conducted among participants of the study indicated positive feedback.

“Several teachers, elderly and experienced voters who participated in the study said they were relieved that voting will still be done using paper ballots, as they were afraid that automated elections meant computerized voting,” Jorge said.

“Previous Board of Election Inspectors [BEI] chairpersons also expressed relief that the voting process will not be very different from past elections. A 74-year-old voter said he was thankful the youth was initiating change. A total of 534 people of voting age participated in the study,” the group further said.

“People are always wary about new processes, especially for events that will impact them personally like elections. It’s important that experienced voters have seen that it is not so much changing the old process but making it more efficient,” said Jaime Garchitorena, YVP information-technology strategist.

“What we need to do now, especially Comelec and other groups with voter-education programs, is to enlighten the public on which parts of the process will be automated, which parts will be a bit different and which parts will be similar,” he said.

“As we improve the way we conduct elections, we think we should also improve the way we conduct voter education. Aside from knowing more about the candidates and developing democratic criteria, people should also now be informed on how exactly to engage the electoral process so they won’t feel indifferent,” added Tanya Hamada, YVP regional convener.

In the second time-and-motion study, the participants came from different sectors, including out-of-school and elderly voters. The participants were oriented on the mechanics of filling up the ballot to avoid overvoting and shading problems.

“When we released the results of the first study, some people said we got a good average time because our participants were all students who are used to shading, like when they do it during exams,” Jorge said. “But with the result of the second study, it goes to show that, with proper guidance, even experienced voters can easily adjust to the new process.”

The group said it launched the studies and information campaign to address “concerns regarding difficulties and delays that might be caused by the new process and clustering of precincts.”