County proceeds on touch-screen voting machines
By Helen Gao, San Diego Union Tribune
November
26, 2003
After months of delays and uncertainty, the county is moving ahead
with plans to spend $30 million to buy touch-screen voting machines
for the March 2 primary, the county's elections chief said yesterday.
The Board of Supervisors is expected on Dec. 9 to authorize buying
10,200 machines from Diebold Election Systems Inc. of Canton, Ohio.
The machines will replace punch-card ballots, the type that caused
confusion in the 2000 presidential election in Florida.
San Diego and other counties in the state are under a federal
court order to eliminate the antiquated system. The county's replacement
effort, however, was held up by the state's delay in certifying
Diebold's technology.
County Registrar of Voters Sally McPherson said Diebold has finally
received conditional certification from Secretary of State Kevin
Shelley.
Computer scientists and researchers have criticized Diebold's
machines, alleging that they have major security lapses that would
allow votes to be changed after they've been cast.
Although Diebold's certification is conditional, Shelley has said, "There
is no lack of confidence in the ability of the software" already
in use throughout California.
Diebold's conditional certification says it must comply with and
pay for an audit of its product and participate in a Dec. 16 state
elections meeting to discuss the audit, all of which the company
has agreed to do, McPherson said.
Despite the months-long uncertainty surrounding Diebold, the registrar's
staff has been training to ensure a smooth transition from punch-card
ballots to touch-screen machines.
"It's not an easy task," McPherson said. "I feel that we will
be ready. We will be well-prepared."
County officials renegotiated its contract with Diebold on Monday
after learning that the state would require voting machines to
print a list of the voter's choices for review starting in July
2006. The list would be behind glass, and couldn't be removed.
The latest Diebold machines come with a built-in printer, but
they only print voter reports for poll workers – not statements
that voters can view to verify their votes before casting them.
Diebold has agreed to modify the county's machines for free by
the 2006 deadline so voters can review a printout of their ballots
before casting them.
David Bear, a Diebold spokesman, said the technology exists to
upgrade the machines. "It's our intent to meet the requirements
as called for," he said.
Election officials consider touch-screen technology superior to
punch-card ballots, which allow hanging chads that can disqualify
votes, and superior to optical scan systems, which require voters
to use pencils to bubble in their choices on paper ballots.
Touch-screen technology has built-in mechanisms to prevent overvoting – casting
more than one vote for a political office or ballot measure. It
also is equipped to reduce undervoting by reminding voters they
have blanks on the ballot.
Copyright © 2003 The Baltimore Sun
|