Help - Search - Member List - Calendar
Full Version: B2-Articles - Local Election Oversight and Reform
Democracy Cell Project - Forums > LIBRARY/RESOURCES > ELECTIONS & VOTING SYSTEMS > Articles & Books
SuZ
Title: Election Reform: Now, you don't...

Author: Editorial Board

Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Publication Date: Friday, September 16, 2005

Website/URL: Seattle Post-Intelligencer

General Topic: Local Election Oversight and Reform



Friday, September 16, 2005

Election Reform: Now, you don't...

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER EDITORIAL BOARD

In King County, elections and promises to improve their management come and go. Is the same fate awaiting the latest plan for reform?

A turnaround team won't be in place to observe next Tuesday's primary elections, as a step toward running the November general election. That isn't surprising, because the timing was always difficult. But it's mildly annoying that the county first questioned whether the primary was too soon for oversight by a new group, then indicated the team would be here in an observer status, and now says it won't happen.

One more or less good thing about the now-you-see-it, now-you-don't act: More than ever, County Executive Ron Sims is on the spot to manage a basic county responsibility to rigorous standards. He and the elections office simply must do their best.

We support a citizens group's idea of bringing in an outside team to turn around the elections department. We trust the recommendations are going to be implemented, quickly. Sims says the independent citizens task force is confident of hiring a capable turnaround team, and he shares that. Good, but with King County elections, confidence remains more of a stretch than it should be.


http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/240904_turned.asp

.
SuZ
Title: Voter registration system delayed; Testing finds too many errors to meet deadline

Author: By JENNIE TUNKIEICZ jtunkieicz@journalsentinel.com

Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Publication Date: Sept. 16, 2005

Website/URL: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (registration required - free)

General Topic: Local Election Oversight and Reform


Voter registration system delayed
Testing finds too many errors to meet deadline


By JENNIE TUNKIEICZ
jtunkieicz@journalsentinel.com
Posted: Sept. 16, 2005

Changes in the statewide voter registration system won't be ready for a Jan. 1 federal deadline, state Elections Board officials said Friday.

A steering committee overseeing the testing of the new voter registration and election management software has decided the system is not ready, and the deadline to comply with the federal Help America Vote Act of 2002 won't be met.

Testing of the system by Elections Board staff and volunteer clerks has shown there are too many system errors, said Kyle Richmond, public information officer for the Elections Board.

Also at risk is meeting the Jan. 1 deadline for having voting machines that are supposed to make it easier for people with disabilities to vote.

County and municipal clerks expressed frustration Friday over the delays in the process, and some state legislators fear that missing the Jan. 1 deadline will jeopardize some or all of the $50.4 million the state expects to get from the federal government through voting act.

"It's clear now that we can't meet the Jan. 1 deadline," Richmond said. "We don't know how stringent the federal government will be, but we are working as hard and as fast as we can, and we are making a good-faith effort to comply. We hope the federal government will take that into account."

Richmond said other states are having the same problems.

The Help America Vote Act of 2002 was developed in part to solve some problems, such as faulty voting equipment, that had been associated with the 2000 presidential election. The act gives states federal money to replace outdated voting equipment, improve voter education and registration processes, and provide better accessibility to voters with disabilities.

Racine County Clerk Joan Rennert said county and municipal clerks across the state had been busily inputting data and had been frustrated by the waiting.

"We're kind of at a standstill right now," Rennert said.

Kathy Nickolaus, Waukesha County clerk, said the delays were frustrating, but that clerks also want the system to work well.

In addition to training, Nickolaus is concerned about educating the public about the coming changes.

"We have not received any money for materials that will educate people about registering to vote ahead of time and about the data we will be collecting, like driver's licenses and birth dates," Nickolaus said. "We need a really good system to educate the public, so they won't be frightened or angry when we ask for that information and, if they don't have it, they can't vote."

Richmond said Dane County will continue to be the pilot county to test the software before other counties are trained. The Elections Board is now targeting November or December to roll out the pilot project in Dane County, he said.

Selection of Accenture

The delay has rekindled criticism of the state's selection of Accenture to create the voter database. State Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Madison) and others sued the state over the $13.9 million contract with Accenture, saying state Elections Board Executive Director Kevin Kennedy did not have the authority to sign the deal without explicit board approval. A Dane County judge upheld the contract in June.

Pocan and state Rep. John Lehman (D-Racine) worry the delays also could cost more and take away from needed training money.

"Just so the federal government doesn't decide not to pay the $50.4 million," Lehman said of the delay.

Kennedy said Friday that the delays do not mean that he has lost confidence in Accenture.

"We're partners in this," Kennedy said of Accenture. "We're not satisfied with their performance. Our contract said they would have software deliverable on July 18, which we got, and that it would work. We've tested it, and it's not working."

Voting equipment

Also frustrating clerks is that there have been no vendors selected to provide the equipment for voters with disabilities.

"Let's say they approve two or three vendors now. We will still have the process of determining what we are going to buy and then training people to use it," Rennert said. "We can't just put equipment out there without training. Maybe that can be done in January or before the February primary election, but it won't be done by January 1. It's not possible."

Kennedy said the state needs equipment that will meet all of its requirements.

"We have told the federal government that we won't buy something that doesn't meet federal requirements. We have had only three vendors apply to date, and two of them have flunked our test," Kennedy said.

Kennedy said municipalities will likely be able to place an order for equipment by the end of the year, and the equipment might be available by February.


Sidebar Contents:

Voter Registration
Quotable


We are working as hard and as fast as we can, and we are making a good-faith effort to comply.

- Kyle Richmond,
public information officer for the state Elections Board

Sidebar Contents:

Background


9/4/05: Voter database behind schedule
6/2/05: Judge upholds voter list deal
5/19/05: New talks ahead on voter database
4/14/05: State panel OKs plan for funding voter list
3/6/05: Foes put sights on voter list pact
12/30/04: Elections Board gets scrutiny over pact
12/24/04: Elections Board voter-list deal draws lawsuit
12/22/04: Lawmaker to propose contract disclosures
12/9/04: Editorial: Make voting user-friendly
11/27/04: Critics oppose state pact
10/18/04: State looks to Accenture to create list of voters


From the Sept. 17, 2005 edition of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
http://www.jsonline.com/news/state/sep05/356475.asp


SuZ
Title: Plaintiffs Blocked During Discovery Phase of New Mexico '04 Election Lawsuit; Process So Far Has Revealed Votes Changed from One Candidate to Another, Disappearing All Together...

Author: Brad Friedman

Source: Bradblog

Publication Date: Blogged by Brad on 11/12/2005 @ 5:19pm PT...

Website/URL: http://www.bradblog.com/archives/00002008.htm

General Topic: Local Election Oversight and Reform



Plaintiffs Blocked During Discovery Phase of New Mexico '04 Election Lawsuit
Kept From Inspecting Voting Machines as Promised

Process So Far Has Revealed Votes Changed from One Candidate to Another, Disappearing All Together...
.

We've failed to report too terribly much on it to date, but there is a very important lawsuit quietly proceeding in New Mexico which is challenging the results of the 2004 Presidential Election there. The final result of that election was very close, and Election Reform advocates -- and indeed a great deal of evidence -- suggest that something was amiss there. Michael Collins wrote a good article about the suit a couple of weeks ago for New Zealand's SCOOP.

Yesterday, VoterAction.org sent out an email about some roadblocks that the plaintiffs are suddenly facing in the discovery phase of the trial. They were supposed to have been allowed to have experts inspect -- for the first time -- the Electronic Voting Machines that were used in the '04 Election, along with the actual results that they gave.

All of a sudden, Voter Action says, the county clerks have flat-out refused to permit the inspections by the plaintiffs' experts. That, after some interesting evidence has already been found by the experts during discovery, like tests where they were able to see votes for one candidate being registered for their opponent (as has been so widely reported as happening in so many elections of late!) and ballots being confirmed with NO choice for President at all, which wasn't supposed to have been possible on at least one of the machine types being looked at.

Voter Action didn't post the article from their email on their website, so we'll post it here in its entirety. Check it out...



QUOTE
NM Election Officials Try to Block Machine Inspections

Voter Action New Mexico Update 11/11/05

In the past week, two New Mexico election officials refused to allow the voter plaintiffs in the case of Patricia Rosas Lopategui v. Rebecca Vigil-Giron, et al. to conduct meaningful inspections of their electronic voting machines. This despite clear indications that there were serious problems in last years presidential election with these same machines, which do not produce a voter-verifiable and auditable paper record.

Bernalillo County Clerk Mary Herrera has given no explanation for her sudden, flat refusal to permit any inspection after weeks of discussions between plaintiffs attorneys and attorneys for the county. Plaintiffs have sworn statements from Bernalillo County voters who tried to vote on the countys paperless touchscreen voting machines, manufactured by Sequoia Voting Systems, and whose votes were switched before their eyes from the candidate they supported to a different candidate. Plaintiffs also have evidence that the Countys widespread use of another type of paperless machine, the Shoup 1242, resulted in the erasure of votes that citizens tried to cast for presidential candidates.

San Juan County Clerk Fran Hanhardt permitted limited inspection of her countys voting machines. She would not, however, open the voting machines to permit plaintiffs experts to examine their components. The experts included Dr. David Dill, a computer science professor from Stanford University with extensive knowledge of electronic voting machine issues. The reason? Doing so would void the Countys warranty from the manufacturer, Election Systems and Software (ES&S).

Ms. Hanhardt also refused to allow plaintiffs experts to examine or copy electronic files containing the results of the November 2004 presidential election that were stored in the machines redundant memories. The reason? The machines store the results of public elections in a secret, proprietary format that ES&S claims as its private property. According to Ms. Hanhardt, allowing plaintiffs experts to see those results in their original form would violate the countys contract with ES&S, which prohibits disclosure of proprietary information.

However, plaintiffs experts did cast votes in simulated voting on two touchscreen machines, and noted several anomalies. Several times when they tried to vote for a candidate, the X appeared instead in the adjacent box for a different candidate. Once when boxes for two candidates were pressed at the same time, neither registered a vote but an X appeared in the box of a third candidate between them. In addition, the experts were able to cast ballots that contained no votes whatsoever, something the County Clerk and her staff had told them the machines would not permit. They did this by first selecting the straight party option, which marked votes for every candidate of the selected party on the ballot. Next, they pressed the boxes for each of the partys individual candidates, which erased those votes. Finally, they pressed the Vote button, and the screen notified them that they had successfully voted

The right to select our governmental representatives in free, fair and transparent elections is the foundation of our democracy. Before electronic voting, candidates, political parties and ordinary citizens had the right to monitor and observe every step of the election process. Unfortunately, that is no longer the case.

Neither unreasonably broad warranty restrictions nor the intellectual property claims of private corporations should trump the publics right to know exactly how their votes are recorded and counted. Elections officials should not be able to contract away this right when they buy voting machines. They should not be able to hide behind contracts with private companies to avoid having a bright light shown on the inner workings of the paperless electronic voting machines. Unless and until everything about how these machines work is open to public scrutiny, voters are being asked to take it on faith that electronic voting is accurate, reliable and secure. With everything that is known in other fields about the prevalence of programming errors, software bugs, and hacking where computers are concerned, that is asking too much.

What comes next? The attorneys for the plaintiffs will ask the court to order the defendants to permit full inspections of the voting machines. They will also proceed to amass more evidence by taking depositions of witnesses from public elections agencies and the private voting machine companies.

Let us know what YOU think info@voteraction.org

Voter Action is a project of the International Humanities Center. www.voteraction.org


.



This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2008 Invision Power Services, Inc.