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About
 

The Interagency Accord Commission is an administrative coordination body with a principal organizational nexus in the United States, structured to support intergovernmental collaboration among state election offices and special districts.

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Administrative Coordination & Governance Framework

The Interagency Accord Commission (IAC) is an administrative and coordination body established to support structured collaboration among governmental entities on election-related and public-sector operational matters. The Commission exists to facilitate alignment, documentation, and information-sharing in a non-partisan, advisory, and administrative capacity.

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The Commission is structured to support coordination with state and local election offices, including those operating within duly constituted special districts. Such coordination is limited to administrative alignment, procedural reference, and non-binding collaboration related to election administration and civic operations.

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Where permitted by law and subject to appropriate approvals, the Interagency Accord Commission may develop or participate in memoranda of understanding with governmental entities, including election offices, for the purpose of clarifying roles, information-sharing practices, and coordination mechanisms. References to memoranda of understanding on this website are prospective unless expressly stated otherwise.

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The Commission maintains governance documents, administrative records, and public-facing reference materials to support transparency and civic accountability. Activities of the Commission are conducted in a non-partisan manner and in compliance with applicable state election laws and public-sector standards.

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Administrative Support for Election Offices and Special Districts

The Interagency Accord Commission provides non-partisan, administrative coordination support to election offices and public-sector entities, including those operating within other states and duly constituted special districts, where permitted by law. Such support is limited to procedural reference, documentation alignment, information-sharing practices, and the development of non-binding coordination frameworks intended to promote consistency, transparency, and administrative efficiency.

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The Commission does not exercise regulatory, supervisory, or enforcement authority over any election office or governmental entity. Participation in any coordination activity is voluntary and subject to applicable legal and institutional approvals.

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