DuPage County, Illinois is one of the first jurisdictions in the country to use Diebold's TSx machines (touch-screen machines with a VVPAT)in a county-wide election. It also appears to be the first jurisdiction in the U.S. to use those machines for early voting. Early voting for DuPage County's primary elections began on Feb. 23rd and will conclude in less than twenty-four hours.
Undoubtedly, county election officials, as well as Diebold itself, are nervously monitoring and managing every aspect of this election knowing that it will be highly scrutinized by other jurisdictions around the country. The state of Utah, for example, will be using more than 6,000 of Diebold's TSx machines statewide, for the first time, during early voting in their June primary elections.
And, undoubtedly, election integrity activists across the country, also will be noting every failure, glitch, slip-up, error, or malfunction of DuPage County's Diebold machines. ---------------------------
Paper or plastic? Choose between conventional or touch-screen votingBy Kathy Cichon
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Tried technologyA number of the 732 Diebold TSX touch-screen machines purchased by the county have already been used by voters in DuPage who took advantage of early voting. During the primary election Tuesday, any voter can choose to use the touch-screen terminals or the more familiar optical scan ballot at any precinct in the county.
But the use of electronic voting booths have prompted outcries from activists across the country who fear the technology leaves the security of votes cast on the machines in jeopardy.
"I do believe there is a time when electronic voting can be secure and accurate," said Jean Kaczmarek, co-chair of the DuPage chapter of the Illinois Ballot Integrity Project. "It's just not there yet. Our electoral process is too meaningful and precious to give up to anything less than a completely reliable and accurate system."
Election officials say they continue to address voters' concerns about the safety and accuracy of votes cast on such machines. Bob Saar, executive director of the DuPage County Election Commission, said some of the concerns can be addressed, others cannot.
"I'm not going to have an answer to satisfy people who want to turn back the clock 30 years," Saar said.
X marks the spot"There is a group of people that are concerned about any electronic voting," Saar said. "They want to go back to the days of marked paper ballots."
"Sounds good to me," Kaczmarek said. "Most democracies do it that way and it works for them. I would take humans over computers any day. I'm in favor of hand-counting on the precinct level and studying how other countries involve the people in the community in the process."
If there were more people involved in the process and they took shifts at the precincts, it could be done efficiently and at a fraction of the cost of electronic voting, she said.
"We just have to ask citizens, 'Would you be willing to wait a few extra hours for results that you can trust?'" Kaczmarek said. "I would be."
Paper ballots, Saar said, "are not even an option."
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Leaving a trailsnip
"The electronic device will print a paper ballot for the voter to review and verify the accuracy," Saar said of DuPage's touch screen machines. "That is a paper ballot audit trail that is physical ... That's an important safeguard."
The paper audit goes back into the machine and can't be pulled out, Saar said. Once the roll of paper is full, it is kept in a sealed canister.
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Melisa Urda, who serves with Kaczmarek as co-chair of the local Illinois Ballot Integrity Project, said the paper audit trail does not alleviate her concerns. Problems can arise with the paper record that in some instances could invalidate someone's vote, she said.
"The only thing that means is there's a paper ballot," Urda said. "We still don't know how that machine is interpreting our vote."
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To ensure accuracy, activists would like to see a 100 percent hand count of a randomly selected 5 percent of the precinct vote, Urda said.
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A 'voter-verified paper audit trail' (VVPAT) is useless without conducting an actual hand-counted audit of a randomly selected, significant sample of the vote counts. For those jurisdictions that are temporarily stuck with black-box voting systems, the next big push must be to pass legislation to audit the vote! http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/sunpub/naper/news/n15evoting.htm