<My report on the Hawaii House of Reps Judicial Committee hearing for bill HB 1740 to require VVPAT (voter verifiable paper audit trail - ballots)with all DRE's:>
There were over 30 testimonies given or submitted. Groups like the League of women voters gave strong supporting testimony. The principles of Safevotehawaii gave excellent expert testimony, and were called back as a group to answer questions. (At a meeting later last night, they were very encouraged by what happened at the hearing.)
There were some relatively minor changes to the bill suggested by the lawmakers. The questions were generally positive and supportive. A good proportion of the room was filled with people there for HB1740. The next step in the House will be the Finance committee. A lot of support and preparation will be necessary, but it is very do-able.
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Urgent: Action re: Paper Audit Capability for Electronic Voting Machines
Your ACTIONS made the difference in helping to make yesterday's hearing on HB 1740 a
SUCCESS!
Please continue your support and we will keep updating you. HB 1740 has now been
referred to the House Finance Committee and we REALLY need your support there. You
can still write testimony and submit them
and/or come down to testify. PHONE CALLS will continue to be important too.
Read the Honolulu Advertiser Editorial Endorsement for Paper Audit Trail below.
NOW on to the SENATE hearing scheduled for this FRIDAY, March 11:
Urgent: Action Call to Support Paper Audit Capability for Electronic Voting Machines
Attention: All Kerry, Dean, Kucinich, Clark, Edwards and Gephardt supporters
Congratulations! Yesterday's House hearing was successful.
The Judiciary Committee in the Hawaii Senate will hold a hearing on SB 1325 Relating
to Electronic Voting Requirements. All electronic voting in Hawaii beginning with
the next election (2006) will be require a paper trail which can be verified by a
voter and audited if this bill passes.
Please read the enclosed one-page summary for more information on this issue.
You can help in one or more of the following ways:
1. Telephone the offices of these Senators today or as soon as possible and ask the
staff member to tell the representative that you support SB 1325 (because you
believe every vote should be counted and able to be audited.) Please be courteous.
Most legislators are supportive. If you get an answering machine, leave the
message.
Sen. Colleen Hanabusa 586-7793 - Chair, Judiciary Committee
Sen. Clayton Hee 586-7330 - V. Chair, Judiciary Committee
Sen. Suzanne Chun Oakland 586-6130 - Member, Judiciary Committee
Sen. J. Kalani English 587-7225 - Member, Judiciary Committee
Toll free from Maui 984-2400+77225
Toll free from Moloka and Lanai
1-800-468-4644+77225
Sen. Les Ihara, Jr. 586-6250 - Member, Judiciary Committee
Sen. Paul Whalen 586-9385 - Member, Judiciary Committee
and/or
2. You can submit a testimony supporting SB 1325 to the Sergeant-at-Arms
(Oahu Fax 586-6659) (Neighbor Islands Fax 1-800-586-6659)
and/or
3. You can attend the hearing: Friday, February 11, 2005 at 9:00 a.m., Conference
room 229, Hawaii State Capitol.
and/or
4. You can submit testimony (see #2 above) and read it at the hearing.
Please do at least one of the above. If you have questions, telephone or e-mail me.
(see above)
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E-Voting Safety Issues Require Legislation
The recent rush to adopt e-voting machines, prompted by the 2002 Help America Vote
Act (HAVA), has resulted in systems which do not provide the same guarantee of vote
safety as existing systems.
Voting needs to be accurate, anonymous, and transparent. The existing system, called
Ooptical scan¹ or 'mark sense', satisfies these requirements. The process used to
record votes consists of marks on paper. The system that counts the ballots can be
verified by auditing the results presented by the counting machine against a manual
count of paper ballots.
Electronic voting is different. E-voting produces no written record of the vote, so
there is no way to audit the results in a meaningful way. The votes are recorded
only electronically, using software programs that are kept secret from the voting
public. Accuracy must be taken on faith. Failures in the voting machines have
caused lost votes with no paper backup.
This is a real problem, one that affects the outcome of elections. In Carteret
County, North Carolina, over 4400 votes were lost by an electronic voting machine
with no paper backup; some races there have not been decided yet as a result. A bug
in counting software in Illinois initially gave a County Commissioner's race to a
Republican; when the tally was checked by hand, it turned out a Democrat had won.
Even here in Hawai'i, we've had our issues. Votes were recorded for the Green Party
during the primary in places with no Green Party candidates. Without paper backup,
there's no way to be sure how those votes were actually entered.
A voter verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) is a system where printers attached to
the voting machines print a paper record of the vote at the same time the electronic
vote is recorded. This paper record becomes the official recount ballot, and is a
safeguard in case a machine fails, or is suspected of losing or modifying votes.
Mandatory audits of a random sample of precincts can provide assurances about
accuracy of the e-voting machines and counting software. Comparing the paper audit
trail to the tabulated votes, as we do for the mark sense machines currently in use,
improves public confidence in the voting system and reduces the chances for fraud or
poor design to affect elections.
A voter verified paper audit trail combined with mandatory audits of a random sample
of precincts comprise the minimum requirements for vote safety. A bill to legislate
that minimum would benefit all the people of Hawai'i.
Also of serious concern is the secret nature of the software used to record and
count the ballots. That secrecy is even more dangerous when the people who provide
the software and hardware are contracted to run the systems, as they are here in
Hawai'i.
Safe Vote Hawaii is a grassroots coalition of technology professionals, official
election observers, and community activists working for safe electronic voting.
Safe Vote Hawaii - Visit www.safevotehawaii.com<
http://www.safevotehawaii.com/ >
info@safevotehawaii.com<mailto:info@safevotehawaii.com >
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EDITORIAL ENDORSEMENT for Paper AUDIT TRAIL from the HONOLULU ADVERTISER:
E-mail<
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2005/Feb/08/op/op01p.html/?email=on>this story
Posted on: Tuesday, February 8, 2005
EDITORIAL
Paper trail will boost voters' confidence
Hawai'i has a long record of fair, accurate and accountable elections
with a strong level of voter trust.
Hearings set
The House Judiciary Committee will hear testimony on electronic
voting at 2 p.m. today in room 325 of the state Capitol. The
Senate Judiciary and Hawaiian Affairs Committee will discuss a
similar bill at 9 a.m. Friday in room 229.
That record is now in danger. Flush with federal cash prompted by the
Help America Vote Act of 2002, elections officials across the country
(and in Hawai'i) are modernizing their voting systems, and in many
areas, it was long overdue.
But this stampede toward computer-based systems, or electronic voting,
has not been without its problems.
EDITED BY ADMIN: COPYRIGHT