LITTLE ROCK - Arkansas volunteers who gather the tens of thousands of voter signatures needed to qualify a constitutional amendment or state law for the statewide ballot now have access to a guide written especially for their civic role.The Arkansas Volunteer Canvasser Guide includes helpful tips and information about new state laws so volunteers can better navigate the signature collection process. Arkansas Civic Action Network and the Public Policy Center at the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture partnered on producing the guide."Our number one goal is for canvassers to feel confident in their role of volunteer," said Gail Choate, executive director of Arkansas Civic Action Network, a Little Rock-based nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that engages Arkansans in civic life through education, workshops and community projects.Choate and Kristin Netterstrom Higgins from the Public Policy Center wrote the guide after legislators passed several new canvassing laws establishing misdemeanor and felony crimes."Our shared goal is to give volunteers clear, consistent, and legally accurate information so Arkansans can volunteer confidently and safely," Choate said.The guide is available on both organizations' websites: uaex.uada.edu/ballot and www.arkaction.net. The guide discusses what a petition is and what the canvasser is responsible for during the signature collection process. The guide also notifies volunteers that recent laws requiring canvassers to check a voter's photo ID and to witness voters read the ballot title are on hold as part of a federal lawsuit.The signature collection process is where most ballot issue groups see their campaign efforts flail, said Netterstrom Higgins, who publishes a neutral statewide ballot issue voter guide each election cycle."The petitions are just one step of an intense process, but they're often challenged in lawsuits seeking to stop a constitutional amendment ...