She has been asked to compile an advice list for political parties and candidates. She is looking for people interested in assisting.
Link to USCountVotes:
http://www.uscountvotes.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=21&Itemid=51Word Document for printing:
http://utahcountvotes.org/detect-errors/whatPartiesCanDo.rtf Here are some snippets from the Word document at the above link, and the same document found at:
http://www.verifiedvoting.org/article.php?id=5195 It seems to be a pretty comprehensive list of what to do and expect in the event you are interested.
"Guidelines for Observing Central Tabulation
Observing the central tabulation of the votes in your jurisdiction is quite different from observing in the polling place and watching the poll-opening and closing procedures. In some cases this may be more “open” to the public, in that you may not have to have credentials from a party or candidate to watch, but keep in mind that this takes place in a much more limited space, and you must make arrangements in advance with the county, township or parish in order to observe.
>snip
You should choose whether you can observe at a polling place or observe at central tabulation; you probably won’t be able to do both, and you would want to be at the central count facility when ballot materials begin to arrive from the polling places. If absentee ballots are processed in the same general area, you may be able to observe that process before the central tabulating processes begin.
Some jurisdictions limit the number of observers. Get a comfortable seat and plan to stay until the wee hours. Interesting things happen at the end, when party observers are woozy and may be inattentive, so bring a thermos of coffee and stay alert
>snip
Take notes on all your central tabulation observations and all responses to questions.
· If possible, observe the entire day of operations at the central election office. If the law in your state allows this, insist on it. Log anything out of the ordinary, and log the names of the relevant people."
>much more
Last part of email, also found at the end of the Word Document:
II. What Candidates Must Do If We Are to Repair U.S. Democratic Elections
Because every county in America currently publicly reports its election data in a way that hides the evidence of tampering, and no state monitors its own vote count data for accuracy, the most important thing all candidates must do, prior to conceding, if we are to repair our democracy, is to obtain the detailed vote count data for every election, race, and issue. Candidates must refuse to concede their elections, no matter how wide the reported vote margins, before first obtaining and analyzing the detailed vote count data for their own elections. In other words, candidates must demand to obtain their own unofficial and official reported vote counts broken out by precinct and by type of vote (absentee, early, provisional, mail-in, overseas, military, and Election Day). Otherwise insiders can pad votes for one candidate in one vote type, while simultaneously subtracting votes for another candidate in another vote type and yet hide the evidence.
It is not possible to ensure the future accuracy of U.S. Vote counts without the active assistance of candidates who run for office due to the lack of independent audits and the resistance by a many U.S. Election officials to publicly releasing the data which would allow vote miscounts to be detected and corrected. See:
http://uscountvotes.org/ucvAnalysis/US/election_officials/Audits_Monitoring.pdf