Next Freeholder Meeting June 1st Fairfield Town Hall
The ATTn GEn of NJ has s=certified just 3 machines for use in NJ--
---Avante DRE
---Sequoia Edge DRE
---Sequoia Advantage DRE
It seems to me that the Essex Freeholders are between a rock and a hard place.
The Attn. Gen. has stacked the process to preclude any kind of REAL choice.
I think we should make it clear to Freeholders we understand this and support them. Irregardless of what voting Equipment they buy.
WE should garner support from the Freeholders ( as well as other Public Offivials) as we look to the NJ Attn. Gen. to examine the options.
What Pressure can be applied on the NJ ATTN GEn to Accelerate the certification of a HAVA Compliant Opscan system.
The Advantage will cost the COunty $8,000 oer machine. OUCH !!
If the Freeholders are made to understand that:
-- many of us will not support any non open source code DRE---and why-- (I made significant progress on this and many other points while talking to Pat Sebold on the phone proir to the meeting)
--many of us wont support DRE's in general
--Non binding Town Resolutions against DRE's may be passed
--County petition to get a referendum on the ballot in NOv. to ban DRE's, may happen
--and if a NJ VVPT law passes--what to do? if you dont have VVPT compliant equipment.
-- Will that put the Freeholders in the Position where they need to spend another 28 million dollars--say 1 or 2 years down the line to buy more voting equipment---and the wont get HAVA money--for that Purchase. I spoke briefly to Pat Sebold VP of the Freeholders. I think to a degree she understands that they may be forced to buy new Equipment- AGAIN----maybe prior to the NOv. '06 election. For another 30 million.
I talked to essex County SOE Carmine Casciano at some length last night--in the hall way ---he says that there is some politics going on in Mercer---DUH ! I think its obvious at this point that someone is trying to go hard at these folks---CFPA---you have been (Mercer) singled out for some special treament.
I have traded emails with Jeff, one of the Lawyers who filed a suit against Sequoia in the state of WAshington. Sequoia has asked for removal to Federal Court. If/when this happens the opportunity for a number of groups to jump on Sequoia and make it a class action needs to considered. I have talked to one of my Voting Issues project members, who is a lawyer--retired from the NJ Attn. Gen office, he concurrs---class action may be the way to go.
FROm the Essex dfa yahoo group--
tulations to everyone who attended tonight's Freeholder meeting
in Newark for showing what democracy looks like:
Frances Martin, for pulling together the whole effort, David Zimmerman
for excellent testimony on electronic machines, Peter Christian for
his commentary on quality control, Ron Rice Jr. who spoke eloquently
on our shared concerns for reliability and verification, Roger Fox opf
GRASP for his discussion of alternative systems, Green Party leader
Ted Glick for his references to AccuPoll equipment, Trina Paulus of
Cornucopia Network for presenting the "simpson ballot" proposition,
NJIT's Jay Kaproff for technical elucidation, Blue Waves' Paul Kiczek,
Linda Halper and Arnold Peckerman for theis remarks regarding optical
scan equipment, reliability standards, and the importance of citizen
confidence in the voting process.
The result of what Freeholders termed the largest showing of citizen
activism in their memory is that Superintendent Casciora will be
holding small meetings with Freeholders to answer their questions and
newly raised concerns about the impending equipment purchase, and a
request will be made to Attorney General Peter Harvey's office to send
a representative to the next Freeholder meeting on June 1 to explain
the certification process for voting equipment.
While the Freeholders did approve the ordinance to appropriate funds
and issue bonds (totalling $11 million) for the purchase of
HAVA-approved voting equipment (with two dissenting opinions by
Freeholders Carol Clark and Muriel Shore -- if they're your
freeholders, please thank them for their courage!), it's clear
tonight's public comments raised the consciousness of the Board of
Freeholders and opened the way for them to review additional
information about available equipment, guidelines for purchasing new
machinery, and constituent concerns about what's now available.
THE JOB IS NOT DONE!
If you live in Essex County, please find your Freeholder and let him
or her know how much it matters to you to have an open, auditable and
accessible voting process. Demand a voter-verified paper record
(PLEASE, *not* "trail") of the vote, which can be used in a recount to
verify election results. Demand an auditable outcome, independent of
the manufacturer and its software engineers. If only programmers can
extract the vote counts, it doesn't count! Demand open-source software
and insist that proprietary engineering standards fail the smell test.
If you live in Essex County, you MUST plan to write your community's
weekly newspaper and/or the daily most read in your town (Star-Ledger
for many of us) to raise the concerns we all have about the purchase
of voting equipment that uses proprietary software, cannot be audited
and does not produce a paper record the voter can verify, which is
stored with the machine and remains available for a recount or audit.
Remind your fellow citizens of the fiascos in other states that are
using DRE (direct record entry), touch-screen machines. Urge NJ
Attorney General Peter Harvey to certify more optical scan machines
that do provide these assurances.
Help us raise the public consciousness on this issue before Essex
County's $11 million is spent. This equipment is a once-in-a-lifetime
purchase (our current mechanical lever machines were built in 1952 --
older than me!), and we will be stuck with what we purchase, or with
costly retrofitting of same once new state or federal legislation (of
which there is plenty) requires some of the very safeguards we are
demanding now. Wasteful county spending is a hot issue in Essex County
-- push whatever button it takes to get people to pay attention! These
Sequoia machines now planned for purchase are the same ones that have
been stirring controversy all over the country. Let's stop it from
happening to us.
If you live in Essex County, you must try to attend one of the next
upcoming Freeholder meetings on June 1 or June 9, to be sure that the
same 12 faces do not have to appear again to do the work of all of us.
If you need coaching on what to say or how to frame the issues, we can
help, but the Freeholders need to know this issue is growing and
concern is mounting -- we were not tired out and scared away by a
meeting that ran on past 10:30 p.m. Are you up for this?
So, to reiterate:
Contact your freeholder to voice your concern (find him or here here:
http://www.essexcountyofnj.com/freeholders/site/districts.htm)
Write to your town's paper or the local daily and mention the twelve
people who attended tonight's (May 25) Freeholder meeting from a
collection of groups to speak out against the purchase of Sequoia
Advantage voting equipment.
Attend an upcoming Board of Freeholders meeting and plan to make a
brief public comment of your position on electronic voting equipment.
Tell ten friends to do the same.
Thanks for all your support!