-----Original Message-----
From: Davi Rodrigues [mailto
 [email protected]
[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 11:40 AM
To: Voter Info
Subject: Questions
Is it possible for citizens to obtain voting ballots that do not contain
the confusing spanish language on them?
______________________________________________
	Quote:
	
	
		| Hi Mr. Rodrigues- 
 We are mandated by the US Department of Justice, under the Voting Rights
 Act, to provide election materials in certain languages depending on how
 many people per county list that language on their census forms.
 
 As of now, Sacramento County is mandated to provide English and Spanish
 but with the most recent census, there is the strong possibility that we
 will have to provide more election materials in different languages.
 We did try separating the two languages a couple of years ago and it
 caused extra work for our department and a tremendous extra cost to the
 county, as we had to ensure that we had enough election materials for
 all. It is significantly cheaper for the county to combine the English
 and Spanish languages onto one ballot or sample ballot booklet.
 
 We realize it can get confusing with the two languages side by side.
 Unfortunately, at this time, the county does not have the extra funds to
 print and send out separate languages. It is possible, depending on the
 newest census results, we might have to provide more languages. If that
 happens, we will have to look at separating them all and find the money
 for it somewhere.
 
 I hope this has answered your question. If you have any other questions
 or concerns, please don't hesitate to contact me.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 Courtney Bailey
 Election Assistant - County of Sacramento
 (916) 875-6024
 [email protected]
 | 
	
 
So there you have it: Immigration costs you dearly. Not just in monetary terms either. So to get a ballot printed in the official language of California only, we have to have enough foreign language speakers to warrant seperate ballot material. There's a catch 22 for you. But of course the real catch is illegals. Drop anchors here that are native born citizens who don't speak English; are taught in spanish, and are encouraged to retain their spanish speaking roots.