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Christian
Science Monitor

Voting technology: Will the chads still
hang? By Linda Feldman October 30, 2002
Two years
after the Florida election fiasco of 2000, nationwide reform of
America's voting mechanics has only just begun.
Yesterday, President Bush signed legislation that authorizes
$3.86 billion to replace antiquated and mistake-prone voting systems
and implement new federal standards. The plan calls for changes to
be in place by 2006.
But the danger, say observers of reform, is that it focuses
too heavily on technology and not enough on the human element of
voting ��� finding and training dedicated poll workers and educating
voters.
"Any legislation that directly or indirectly equates election
reform with new voting machines risks missing the mark," reports the
Washington-based Election Reform Information Project.
A handful of states that have already implemented changes
discovered this the hard way during fall primaries. In Florida's two
largest counties, insufficiently trained poll workers ��� and some who
didn't show up at all ��� spoiled the debut of state-of-the-art
touch-screen voting machines and produced massive, embarrassing
delays.
Touch-screen machines also baffled some poll workers in
Montgomery County, Md., in the Sept. 10 primary, and communications
glitches delayed reporting of final results until 2 a.m. Since then,
the county has retrained poll workers and installed computer modems
to speed reporting of returns.
County Board of Elections Director Margaret Jurgensen says
she's "on track" to line up the 4,000 poll workers she needs for
Tuesday and has been holding training sessions almost daily. She's
also still recruiting bilingual poll workers to help with the
county's burgeoning Hispanic population.
THERE'S no doubt that elections can look messy in America ���
both before reform and after. In Michigan, which hasn't started
reforms yet, a confusing ballot design led to the invalidation of
about 10 percent of primary ballots this year. And with many tight
races that could determine control of the House, Senate, and
statehouses, cries of election fraud and unfair practices are
already ringing out nationwide.
Bogus absentee ballots have turned up in South Dakota.
Arkansas Democrats are charging Republicans with "bullying tactics"
to keep African-Americans away from the polls, though GOP officials
deny the charge. Both parties are recruiting lawyers to monitor
polling places in anticipation of disputes. By election night, the
United States could look like 50 Floridas.
But both experts and those in the trenches of conducting
elections come back to a key theme: that citizens need to be
energized to help run elections.
"As our poll-worker community gets older, we need to make
sure we're reaching out to younger populations, not just to engage
in civic participation but also to work at the polls," says Rashad
Robinson, field director for the Center for Voting and Democracy in
Takoma Park, Md. Indeed, Kentucky, West Virginia, and the District
of Columbia have new rules allowing older teenagers to work in
polling places.
Yet the bulk of the reform to come will center on technology
��� and most states have been waiting for federal money to foot most
of the bill. The new Help America Vote Act calls for the federal
government to pay 95 percent of the cost, with 5 percent coming from
the states. (So far, though, there is no money; Congress has not yet
passed an appropriation.)
In addition to providing block grants to the states for
upgrading voting equipment and improving election administration and
training of poll workers, the law calls on states to:
�Ģ Allow for "provisional voting," beginning with the 2004
presidential election. This allows people whose names are not on
registration lists to vote anyway; the vote counts if the
registration can be verified later.
�Ģ By 2004, require people registering to vote to provide a
driver's license number or the last four digits of a Social Security
number. If a person has neither, a number will be assigned. The goal
is to prevent fraud.
�Ģ Establish state-wide, computerized voter registration
databases by 2006. This will make it easier to confirm if someone is
on the voter rolls.
�Ģ Allow "second chance voting" by 2006. Voters will be
allowed to check for errors and redo their ballots.
�Ģ Provide at least one handicapped- accessible voting machine
per precinct by 2006.
�Ģ Define a "legal" vote ��� clarifying, for instance, the fate
of the hanging chad ��� for each type of voting machine by
2006.
One of the
largest sticking points on the legislation was the issue of voter
identification. To critics, the requirement flew in the face of the
American tradition of allowing people to vote without showing ID, in the name of
encouraging participation. There is concern centered in the Hispanic
community that identification requirements will depress Latino
turnout, especially among naturalized citizens, who may lack
credentials.
"Some new citizens may not have proof of citizenship," says
Angelo Ancheta, legal director of the Civil Rights Project at
Harvard University. "After 9/11 we're seeing immigration used to
address security concerns, and some immigrants are having trouble
getting a driver's license."
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