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101Scout
02-02-2008, 02:43 PM
Think your votes still count?? Read the article below.... then check out the attitude of the state election board and it's 'machine' vendors. They treated it like no big deal. A few here... a few there... some unexplainable events... along with the vendors that should reset the cards to 0. Now why would vendors not set the cards to 0????? Think your votes count???? Think again!!!! Other than that... just move on... there's nothing here to be concerned about.... just what the NeoCons wants.



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Post-Election Audit Results Released

by Christine Stuart | January 30, 2008 4:45 PM
Posted to State Capitol


An audit of the November 2007 election, in which voters statewide used optical scan machines to cast their ballots, found that on average the machine count tends to be one vote higher than the hand count, according to a report released Wednesday by the University of Connecticut Voter Technology Research Center.

Asked why the machines tend to over count by one vote, Dr. Alex Shvartsman, director of the voter research center, said he didn’t know. “That’s a very good question,” he said, adding that the center would continue to look into the results.

But Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz was quick to step in and answer the same question for Dr. Shvartsman as she tried to put to rest any lingering skepticism about the results. She said that the machine overcounts may have happened in races with multiple candidates when voters unintentionally marked an additional bubbles on the sheet.

For example, a voter may have wanted to vote for three of five candidates, but accidentally made a mark in a fourth bubble, Bysiewicz said. In such a case, the machine counts the vote, but a poll worker conducting a hand recount may not count the additional vote because to them it appeared to be an inadvertent mark or smudge, she said.

Another issue was that 175 audit reports submitted to the University of Connecticut were “incomplete, unuseable, or obviously incorrect.” About 70 percent of the 958 reports submitted by 70 polling places were complete. The center decided to use about 783 of the reports to complete their audit.

The audit found that 66.4 percent show a discrepancy of 0 to 1 vote between the machine counts and hand counts; 89.4 percent show a discrepancy of 5 votes or fewer; and 31 records, or 4 percent, show a discrepancy of 10 or more votes.

Bysiewicz said overcounts happened in races where candidates were cross-endorsed by two parties. In Waterbury, the audit report shows an overcount of 74 votes, but upon further analysis by UConn, researchers discovered there was only a two vote discrepancy. Dr. Shvartsman said that in this instance, local election officials just did not carefully record the results on the audit form. He said he will be working with the Secretary of State to come up with a better way to record the audit results.

The good news is that the post-election audit of the memory cards showed none of the cards had been hacked or showed signs of tampering. Bysiewicz said eight of the cards tested weren’t programmed with any ballot, meaning the vendor had failed to program the cards. She said she would be asking the vendor, LHS Associates, “to do a better job with quality control.”

One of the 50 memory cards tested after the election was not zeroed out, “indicating that the district tested the card in election mode and did not reset the card,” the report states. That card was not used in the election, but the report points out that it is important for poll workers to print a zero total report prior to the start of the election — “a requirement which cannot be ignored,” the report concluded.

Christine
02-03-2008, 12:58 PM
Colorado is going to paper ballots!


Paper ballots win over Ritter
Plan upsets clerks' call for all-mail vote
By John Ingold
The Denver Post
Article Last Updated: 01/24/2008 03:06:43 AM MST

[Only registered and activated users can see links] ([Only registered and activated users can see links] imageDisplay.jsp%3FcontentItemRelationshipId%3D1799910)Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter (Post / RJ Sangosti)



Gov. Bill Ritter, backed by a bipartisan line of key legislative leaders, announced Wednesday that he wants the state to use traditional paper ballots filled out at polling places in the 2008 elections.
Ritter said the decision — reached after lengthy discussion with state and county officials — is the best way to hold a safe, verifiable election, and it was met with applause by a number of voting activists.
"We're back to technology that is tried and true," Ritter said.
But the decision also pitted Ritter and the legislators against the majority of county clerks and the secretary of state — the people charged with running the elections. They have backed a mandatory mail-in-ballot election, and on Wednesday
Paper Balloting



they responded to Ritter's announcement with a mix of worry and frustration. "We gave a lot of input," said Larimer County Clerk Scott Doyle. "I think they had their minds made up as to what they were going to do. Quite frankly, we're the ones who hold the elections, and we know what we ought to do."
Colorado's election system has been in chaos since late last year when Secretary of State Mike Coffman decertified many of the counties' electronic voting machines because they didn't meet security or accuracy standards. Coffman has been working to fix the problems.
Just about everyone — legislators, Coffman, the clerks and Ritter — had already backed away from using electronic voting terminals to record and count votes this year. Instead, the debate has revolved around how to distribute paper ballots — either the traditional way at polling places or through the mail.
An all-mail ballot would have required legislative approval.
Sen. Ken Gordon, D-Denver, plans to sponsor a bill that sets a statewide standard for all-paper, polling-place elections this year.
In announcing their support for a polling-place election, officials said Wednesday that it will give people the most options on how to vote — people will still be able to vote through absentee ballot or in the early voting period that begins two weeks before an election. Ritter said some elections officials aren't comfortable quickly implementing an all-mail ballot for a presidential election.
"It would be like building an airplane in the air," he said.
"Given the constraints of the decertification," said Rep. David Balmer, a Centennial Republican, "this is the best option."
Voting activists and some county clerks agreed.
Al Kolwicz, with the Colorado Voter Group, said precinct elections allow for poll watchers, making the process more transparent. "This is really a home-run first step," he said.
El Paso County Clerk Bob Balink, who opposed mandatory mail balloting, said he has confidence in a precinct election.
But several others said the decision could prove disastrous.
"I think perhaps there is not a good understanding of the critical situation we're faced with," said Nancy Amick, the Rio Blanco County clerk and the president of the Colorado Association of County Clerks. ". . . We basically believe we are in an election crisis."
The decision means some clerks will have to deal with hundreds of different paper ballot styles, a task that had been easier to manage with the voting terminals and something that Douglas County Clerk Jack Arrowsmith said could lead to long lines at the polling places.
Some counties may not have enough optical scan machines to read all the ballots as they come in at one time on election day, Arrowsmith said. That would mean purchasing more costly machines, but with two of the four optical scan machines used in the state currently decertified, that could be difficult, Amick said.
Arrowsmith said clerks are worried about the statewide voter identification database, known as the SCORE system, which is scheduled to be rolled out this year. Arrowsmith said SCORE has been tested only in a mail-ballot election.
To minimize concerns about SCORE, Ritter said clerks would use paper printouts from the system on election day to determine eligible voters.
Coffman said he will work with the clerks to implement whatever system the legislature ultimately decides upon.
"I think it's workable," he said of the governor's plan. "But it's going to be tough on the clerks."