Voting News: Trust, Antitrust and Your Vote
Trust, Antitrust and Your Vote, GA seeks voter id approval, VA. votes still at risk
Posted: 29 Oct 2009 04:53 PM PDT
Trust, Antitrust and Your Vote (or ES&S buys Diebold)...Your papers please: Georgia's State Board of Elections seeks DOJ approval of law requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote...Correction: Voting news should have said Wyoming County New York yesterday: Pilot is beginning of Wyoming County New York's switch to electronic voting, officials incorrectly cite HAVA as requiring they ditch lever machines...St Paul MN divided over instant runoff voting...NY City Council member sponsors resolution urges state lawmakers to keep the levers...Will every vote count? New optical scan voting machines to be tested in NY 23rd House race...Virginia runs risk in 2010 elections with mostly paperless voting...VA State BoE submits swine flu contingency plans to EAC..."President Obama signs Schumer bill to ease voting process for Military, overseas voters...Voting Gets Easier For Disabled, But Problems Remain...
All of that and more in today's Voting News below...
CA: Santa Barbara "Vote-By-Mail" Election
Nears
There are nearly 47,000 registered voters in
the city of Santa Barbara and with less than a week until
the November 3, 2009 election, just 11,000 ballots have been
received by the County Elections Office.
The election is
the city's first ever "vote-by-mail" election, and there's
concern that some registered voters may not return their
ballots on time.
http://www.keyt.com/news/local/67064762.html
GA:
Citizen Check For Voter Registration Moves
Ahead
ATLANTA — The State Elections Board this week
decided to take the first step to get approval for Senate
Bill 86. Passed by state lawmakers earlier this year, it
requires proof of citizenship when registering to vote in
Georgia.
http://www.gpb.org/news/2009/10/28/citizen-check-for-voter-registration-moves-ahead
KY:
Polling preparedness: Counties gear up for December special
election
...At its meeting on Oct. 13, the court
approved the purchase of 19 new eScan voting machines. A
machine will be placed in each of the 17 precincts, one will
be in the courthouse for absentee voting and one reserved in
case of malfunctions.
...
On Dec. 8, voters will get
their first chance to use the new machines. Judge-Executive
Milward Dedman said this election offers a chance for voters
and poll workers to get familiar with the new machines
before the primaries in May.
http://www.amnews.com/stories/2009/10/28/loc.745133.sto
MN:
IRV: No, but we appreciate the debate
Pioneer Press
Editorial 10/28/2009
...try as we might - and we tried
pretty hard - we remain
unconvinced of the compelling
need to change the way we elect the mayor
and members of
the City Council. We view up-or-down, yes-no voting
as
simpler and clearer, and IRV as an intriguing idea
whose time has not
yet come in St. Paul.
http://www.twincities.com/opinion/ci_13663272
MN:Don
Fraser and George Latimer: The case for instant-runoff
voting is clear
Name any common flaw in the current
system, and IRV offers a solution.
By DON FRASER and
GEORGE LATIMER
October 29, 2009 ...Fortunately, St. Paul
voters can do just that on Nov. 3 by adopting a proposal for
instant-runoff voting -- also called ranked-choice voting --
in mayoral and City Council elections.
http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentary/67356572.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUUsZ
MN:
More complicated, confusing and expensive
By Chuck
Repke, Angie Kline, Kathy Lantry and Dave Thune
Pioneer
Press Updated: 10/28/2009
St. Paul voters should learn
from others' mistakes and not switch to an expensive,
complicated and confusing election system. Free, fair
elections are the hallmark of democracy and every voter
deserves to be treated equally. Using IRV is far too likely
to confuse and inhibit voting. IRV's voting system will
leave too many voters without a vote in the final "round" of
voting. Taxpayers will pay more to wait weeks for results.
It seems to us like IRV is a damaging and expensive solution
in search of a problem. Vote "no" on Nov. 3.
http://www.twincities.com/ci_13663289?IADID
NC:
TN EDITORIAL: New kind of voting is no threat
October
29, 2009 Another concern is that third and forth place votes
in the 2007 election were not publicized because they were
not needed or used. That should be
easily remedied.
The
bottom line is that instant runoff voting is a fair and
efficient
way to elect office-holders. Just because
Hendersonville is the only
city in North Carolina using
the system this year does not make it a
bad
idea.
http://www.blueridgenow.com/article/20091029/SERVICES03/910291016/1016/OPINION02?Title=TN-EDITORIAL-New-kind-of-voting-is-no-threat
Correction:
NY:
Warsaw will be first Wyoming County town to use electronic
voting machines (report mistakenly says HAVA requires
replacement of levers)October 28, 2009 WARSAW -- As Warsaw
goes, so will Wyoming County.The town is the first to switch
over to the county's new electronic voting machines. They'll
be used in Tuesday's elections....Like other counties
statewide, Wyoming is switching to electronic machines as
part of the federal Helping Americans Vote Act. The new
units will ultimately replace the old-style lever machines
used since the 1940s.
http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/articles/2009/10/28/news/wyoming_county/6109254.txt
NY: No New Machines
October 28th, 2009. On the
steps of City Hall this afternoon, council members Helen
Foster, Robert Jackson, Simcha Felder and David Weprin urged
the city to keep the lever machines instead of the
electronic ones.
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” said Jackson.
Foster has sponsored a resolution,
which urges the state legislature and the state’s
congressional delegation to “take all appropriate actions
that may be necessary to enable New York counties to
continue using lever voting machines supplemented by
accessible voting technology for people with
disabilities.”
http://www.gothamgazette.com/blogs/wonkster/2009/10/28/no-new-machines/#at
NY:
Will every vote count?
New voting machines in 23rd
House race not fully certified in pilot program, officials
say
Thursday, October 29, 2009 ALBANY -- What do
Minnesota and New York's 23rd Congressional District have in
common, aside from their proximity to Canada and hard
winters? Two additional correct answers: Hotly contested
elections, and voters choosing their candidates with paper
ballots scanned through optical counting machines.
http://www.timesunioncom/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=858903&category=STATE
NY:
N.Y. 23rd District Dems Head to Court
Democrats are
going to court over New York's 23rd House District race,
looking to have voting machines impounded on election
night.
Parties usually seek to impound machines the day of
so campaigns can watch ballots be double-checked.
http://www.wcax.com/Global/story.asp?S=11404853
VA:
Voting Machines: State Has Long Way to Go
...The
General Assembly has already decided that unverifiable
direct-recording electronic (DRE) voting machines must be
phased out -- and for good reason. Subtle bugs occur in all
computer systems, and it is impossible to test for all of
them. Report after report in recent years has uncovered new
ways that purely electronic voting can be corrupted without
detection -- or simply fail
...
In neighboring North
Carolina, in 2004, a paperless voting machine in Carteret
County lost more than 4,000 votes, and threw a statewide
election into chaos.
...
Virginia has had warnings and
near-misses. We've taken incremental steps, but it is time
to provide verifiable ballots for every voter. We should not
wait for a "Carteret County" to do the right thing for
Virginia's voters.
http://www2.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/opinion/op_ed/article/ED-JDDOP29_20091028-191006/302123/
VA:
Protesters push to have late absentee ballots
counted
October 29, 2009 "Support our troops, let
them vote," read a sign held by Jim Smyers, who helped
organize the protest on behalf of the Richmond Liberty
Alliance, an offshoot of the Tea Party movement.
http://www2.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/state_regional/state_regional_
govtpolitics/article/ELEX29_20091028-222809/302274/
or
use this tiny url http://tinyurl.com/yhubhg8
VA:
Virginia H1N1 plan is submitted to EAC
clearinghouse
The Virginia State Board of Elections
submitted the latest state H1N1 flu contingency plan. EAC
has encouraged election officials to submit H1N1 flu season
contingency plans to EAC's online clearinghouse. Read the
Virginia plan here.
http://www.eac.gov/blog-postings/virginia-h1n1-plan-is-submitted-to-eac-clearinghouse
National
Trust,
Antitrust and Your Vote
October 28, 2009
Editorial
...The new company would have enormous reach.
Without meaningful competition, localities would have fewer
choices when they bought voting machines. If something were
to go wrong — an inadvertent failure in hardware or
software or intentional tampering by a bad actor — it
could have a disastrous effect on the entire nation’s
vote.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/29/opinion/29thu3.html?_r=3&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1256857234-SJqWxTu0cp1jHyczSXFomA
How
to Make Open Source Happen
Champaign County
Clerk
...As in any public policy initiative, the case
needs to be made to the policy makers. Unfortunately, they
are often part of the problem as I noted earlier. But each
impediment to open source that I mentioned yesterday can be
addressed and needs to be.
...
GOSCON is
an organization that has been formed to begin the process of
developing open source solutions for government.
http://blog.champaigncountyclerk.com/2009/10/29/how-to-make-open-source-happen/
Military and Overseas Voter Empowerment Act
signed
President Obama signed the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 yesterday (28 October
2009). One part of the act is the Military and Overseas
Voter Empowerment Act, reproduced below.
http://www.votelaw.com/blog/archives/006328.html
Voting
Gets Easier For Disabled, But Problems Remain
On
Election Day last year, the Government Accountability Office
sent investigators to 720 polling places around the country
to see if people in wheelchairs, or who were blind deaf or
had other disabilities, could easily cast a ballot.
The
results were mixed. There was some barriers, from the
parking lot to the voting booth, in more than two-thirds of
the polling places.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2009/10/voting_gets_easier_for_disable.html
Voting
News by Joyce McCloy.
Archives here at http://votingnews.blogspot.com/
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