issues, but have several that are independent, too.
here are a couple of references in articles -- I'm sure someone else will have a better answers
Fro The Clarion Ledger:
"I do know there are more split precincts in legislative races than we have ever had and that makes it more complicated for everybody," he said.
http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0308/05/mvote.html***
From The Cleveland Plain Dealer
"Blackwell allowed one exception: Election officials can count provisional ballots from voters who receive the wrong ballots in "split precincts," areas with multiple voting districts in the same precinct. One precinct, for example, may cover voters in two different school districts - requiring two different ballots."
http://www.cleveland.com/cuyahoga/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/1095500001103810.xml***
From Detroit Free Press
"Democrats say one of the Help America Vote Act's central purposes is to eliminate "arbitrary requirements" that a ballot be cast aside if a voter mistakenly appears at the wrong precinct.
But Thomas said in an affidavit that the act does not require the state to count provisional ballots of voters who are in the wrong polling spot and refuse to go to the correct one. He said 19 cities and townships are split by two congressional districts. He also said that Detroit is split into multiple districts for county, state and federal races. "
http://www.freep.com/news/statewire/sw105562_20041012.htm******
Here are some terms I just found -- i'm not sure they address your question though....
District - A specific geo-political area that defines a
boundary for a ballot contest. When defined, ballot contests are
associated with a specific district. Voters living in that district
should be able to vote on that contest. (e.g. Precinct, School District,
Congressional District, etc.)
Districts Split - Unique combination of all districts in a specific
jurisdiction. By having a unique combination of all districts in a
jurisdiction, a single ballot style can be associated with a single
Districts Split - reducing overall complexity. (AKA Precinct Split)
Ballot Style - Unique combination of contest and candidates. This is
essentially a list of issues on a particular ballot. It does not address
the physical presentation of a ballot.
Ballot Format - A format for rendering a ballot. Examples of ballot
formats include: Online Ballot, Individual Paper Ballot Format (ballots read by various election vendors' hardware - each a separate format), Full-face ballot display (for adhering to the front of booth-style voting devices)
Ballot Layout - A template for a physical ballot. This is the result of taking a ballot style and rendering it to a particular ballot format. Ballot Layout data includes detailed information including where issues appear on a ballot, candidate placement, fonts, colors, images, ballot and contest headers, footers, etc.
Rotation - Used in ballot layout data. The concept of
presenting candidates (for the same contest) in a different order for
different ballots. Rotation schemes may be very complex and vary from
jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
Sequence - Order in which a candidate or contest appears on a
ballot. Contest sequence defines the order of importance of the issues
on the ballot. For simple ballot definitions, a candidate sequence
defines a default rotation position of a candidate under a contest.
Ballot Message - Used in ballot layout data. Fixed text, image,
instructions, etc. that appears on a ballot page.
Ballot Style Scenario - Ballot Rotation:
In some jurisdictions a voter's ballot may have the candidates
'rotated'. This prevents one candidate from being at the top of the
candidate list (for a particular contest) on every ballot. There may be many different iterations of a ballot with the exact same combination of contests and candidates, but with a different candidate order. In this scenario, there may be only one Ballot Style, but multiple Ballot Layouts (one ballot with each permutation of candidate order).
http://lists.oasis-open.org/archives/election-services/200107/msg00008.html***
hope this provides a jump-off point for you.... good luck!