Chief among the coalition's proposals: do not attempt to retro-fit existing DRE touch screen with printers. "Our research has shown us that the existing technology is so deficient that attempting to add printers to machines that already have countless problems, would reduce, not add, to voter confidence," stated University of Miami Law Professor Martha Mahoney, a member of the coalition and its lead technology investigator.
The coalition also opposes merely replacing DRE touchscreens with optical scan systems. According to Lida Rodriguez-Taseff, the coalition's former chair, "optical scan systems pose serious barriers for language minorities and voters with disabilities. Those who blindly push for optical scans without addressing these barriers run the risk of neglecting large numbers of voters in Florida."
Nor is the coalition simply pushing for a voter-verified paper record. According to Wayland, "while we applaud legislative efforts to require voter-verified paper records, to be effective in the long term, voting system legislation must create a framework for promptly innovating and producing new or improved systems that all Floridians can use to vote secretly and securely. A voter verified paper record is one, but by no means the only, system requirement worthy of legislative attention."
According to Barbara Brandon, a former regulatory lawyer and member of the coalition,
"the only solution to Florida's voting problems is the tried and true concept of technology enforcement: the Florida Legislature sets the standards and vendors wishing to do business in Florida are then required to provide equipment that meets or exceeds those standards." Wayland concluded, "the recent media coverage demonstrates that Florida's voters are tired of the vendors telling Floridians how to vote and they are tired of a process that this driven by the business interests of vendors, instead of the needs of voters. We are proposing a solution that will return the power where it belongs - with the
voters."
http://www.reformcoalition.org/ressources/MDERC-PRESS%20RELEASE%2012-15-06.pdfSo they advocate specifying minimum standards in only general terms and then letting the election systems industry come up with innovative solutions that meet those standards. They also recommend some interim measures while we're waiting for the innovation to occur.
Apparently MDERC is following this strategy because of a fear that opscan in its current level of development will be put in as a quick solution that meets
some of their requirements and that then they will be unable to get the
rest of their requirements met -- particularly the ones related to language minorities.
I don't have a problem with the long term goals. The problem is that in the interim (which would surely extend past the 2008 election) their recommendations would leave a large part of Florida on paperless DREs. They are effectively sacrificing the overall transparency and reliability of at least the next election cycle in order to get some finer points handled. In a way they've hit on a big part of the problem we've had in the past -- that of going for too quick of a solution -- but their timing is off. This time there
is a quick solution that satisfies the main requirements.