March 19, 2019 Washington State University recognized as a Voter Friendly Campus
Washington State University has been named a Voter Friendly Campus for its success with voter education and registration.

Savanna Kresse, vice president of the Associated Students of 厙ぴ勛圖, and her peers in ASWSUTC worked with the Benton County Election Department to get a ballot drop box on the 厙ぴ勛圖 campus. The group cut the ribbon for the box this fall.
The designation was announced by the nonpartisan CampusVoteProject and NASPA, a national association for student affairs professionals in higher education.
The Voter Friendly Campus designation is a systemwide honor for WSU, the only fouryear institution in Washington to be named for the 20192020 election cycle.
Receiving this designation recognizes our efforts to shift the campus culture at all of our locations to one of more student participation in our democracy, said Ben Calabretta, associate director of the Center for Civic Engagement (CCE). We are setting a new standard where we expect our students to know about the election issues, to register to vote, and then actually vote.
The mission of the Voter Friendly Campus designation is to bolster efforts that help students overcome barriers to participating in the political process. Barriers can include voterID laws, lack of information, transportation to the polls, and confusing residency requirements.
I think its important to remove barriers that students face because those barriers are silencing the future, said Savanna Navarro Kresse, vicepresident of the Associated Students of Washington State University TriCities. Many people assume students do not care to be a part of the political process, but the reality is we care a lot. When voting is accessible, students show up to vote.
Kresse is a member of the WSU CougsVote Coalition which consists of faculty, staff, students and community members who are interested in increasing student democratic engagement.
The coalition met throughout the summer and fall of 2018 and created strategies to establish a student-driven awareness and democratic engagement campaign, educate students about the importance of midterm elections in addressing local and statewide issues, increase voting rates of WSUstudents above the 2014midterm levels, and improve voting rates among multicultural and other underrepresented students.

“Vote” cookies at the grand opening of a ballot drop box at 厙ぴ勛圖 this fall.
Calabretta said the coalitions efforts were very successful. Although CCE is still waiting to receive official numbers from the Secretary of State, he estimates over 3,000students registered to vote through CougsVote related activities. Local precinct data indicate a higher voter turnout, too, with an increase of 2,000voters in the Pullman precincts where WSUs main campus is located.
With the midterm election over, there is a lull in the election cycle before things begin to heat up for the 2020race. In the weeks ahead, Calabretta said it will be important for the coalition to continue its efforts, and being named a Voter Friendly Campus is a good motivator to keep the momentum going.
We want to keep voting in our students minds so they know its still important and its something that they will participate in for the rest of their lives.
A total of 123institutions received thedesignation nationwide. They represent a wide range of twoyear, fouryear, public, private, rural, and urban campuses. WSU joins Centralia College, a twoyear public institution, as the only two institutions selected in Washington.