Electronic voting will be back at the polls
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Andrew Edwards
Electronic voting machines will be back in Orange County for the
November election.
The equipment was banned in April by the California Secretary of
State’s office after problems were reported relating to the March
primary vote.
The recertification order, issued on Thursday, will allow the
machines to be used in Huntington Beach and other Orange County
cities under four new rules: Voters will be able to use a paper
ballot if they don’t want to use the computerized system, and the
county will provide more training for poll workers. On a more
technical side, the system’s source code must be made available for
independent analysis and no telephone or Internet connections can be
installed on voting machines.
Assemblyman Tom Harman said he agreed with the decision and
believes the machines are a good idea.
“I’m very supportive of that,” he said. “I fully thought the
electronic voting system that we used in the primary worked very
well. I was personally satisfied.”
In March, voting troubles in Huntington Beach ranged from
electrical problems, which kept machines from being usable to voters
at a Hamilton Avenue polling place, to voters being issued the wrong
electronic ballot, preventing some residents from casting a vote on
Measure E, the redistricting measure that ultimately failed.
In some cases, voters accustomed to the old paper ballots were
puzzled by the new technology.
The county will use the same machines used in the March election,
said Brett Rowley, spokesman for the Orange County Registrar of
Voters. The training given to poll workers, however, will be
different.
“We’re actively revamping our training program based on the
feedback we got,” Rowley said.
One aspect of the poll workers’ jobs that is getting more
attention is what Rowley called “scrolling,” the process poll workers
use to pick which ballot a voter gets. He said he anticipated workers
would have an easier time scrolling in November since they would have
more training and there would be fewer ballots to choose from in the
general election.
In the primaries, where each party has its own ballot, a precinct
could have as many as 11 different ballots, Rowley said.
Surf City poll workers in March said the machines deserve another
shot, and that once the voters get the feel for electronic voting,
the system’s advantages will become apparent.
“When people learn how to do it, it’s so much better,” poll worker
Michelle Turner said, adding that, “it’s easy to vote, easy to
tally.”
The biggest problem with the machines was technical, said poll
worker Margo Gayler, who worked at a precinct where the machines did
not work properly. She suggested a technician should make sure the
system is ready to go the night before the election. When the
equipment was up and running, technology-savvy voters liked the
machines, she said.
“Most of the voters loved it, but most everybody is computer
literate now,” she said.
A future plan to enhance the security of electronic voting is
scheduled to be in place in the county by 2006. By that time, Rowley
said, a “paper trail” system would be used so voters could verify
their votes on a paper printout after they cast their ballots.
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