By Megha Rajagopalan
Fox News, October 11, 2006
[link
to article]
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — As Maryland's leading politicians urge voters to
request absentee ballots instead of going to the polls, local elections
officials are contending with a predictable flood of requests for
absentee ballots.
But the absentee ballots being requested haven't yet arrived from the
printer, and local officials worry that they won't have time to get a
ballot to every voter who wants one. The firm that is printing the
ballots says they will be delivered on schedule and that local officials
have no reason to worry.
Absentee ballots are being requested in large numbers from voters who
say they are concerned electronic voting machines built by *Diebold Elections Systems Inc.* are unreliable. Ironically, Diebold is also
printing the ballots that local officials say are late in arriving.
State law does not specify the number of days before an election
absentee ballots should arrive at local election boards. But local elections officials complain the ballots are unusually late, a troubling setback in a year that has brought a barrage of applications for
absentee ballots.
"It has me very concerned," said Terri Narciszewski, supervisor of the
absentee ballot department at the Baltimore City Board of Elections. "I
don't know if it's a matter of people working overtime, farming out the
printing to other printers, whatever, but the state should do whatever
needs to be done to get these ballots here."
Narciszewski, who has held her post for 20 years, said absentee ballots
typically arrive about 30 days before Election Day, which this year is
Nov. 7. Officials of three other major Maryland jurisdictions also said
they had expected the ballots earlier, judging by previous years.
Narciszewski said she expected them to arrive last week. This has her
concerned because absentee ballot requests have already poured in. The
city has received about 6,000 requests to date — more than twice the
number of requests before the primary — and Narciszewski says she
expects "a lot more."
Michael Morrill, who works for a public relations firm that represents
Diebold, said that most counties will receive the ballots Thursday and
the rest on Friday. He said the company is delivering them on schedule
and that local elections officials have no reason to claim they are late.
Officials of the state board of elections, which is responsible for
making sure the ballots are delivered to local boards, also say the
ballots are not late. But both state and local officials agree on one
thing: the worries over the new electronic voting machines working are
misplaced and voters are still best off going to the polls.
Morrill pointed out technical problems in the primary came from a
check-in machine that voters never touch. The touch-screen machines that
are used for voting worked fine, he said.
The flood of requests for paper absentee ballots comes in response to
state politicians, including *Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich*, Baltimore *Mayor
Martin O'Malley* and Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan, who have
urged voters to vote absentee instead of going to the polls because of
glitches in machines that created a mess in the Sept. 12 primary.
On top of this, Maryland's General Assembly last year passed a law over
Ehrlich's veto that allows voters to cast absentee ballots without
giving a reason. Election officials say the law opened the doors to the
large influx of absentee ballot requests.
In the 2002 elections, the state received about 65,000 requests for
absentee ballots, said Mary Cramer Wagner, state director of voter
registration and petitions division. This year, there have already been
over 66,000 requests with more than three weeks before elections— and
the stream of applications shows no signs of slowing.
Like Diebold, state elections officials say the ballots aren't late.
"Obviously, because the number of absentee ballot applications has
increased, a lot of these jurisdictions would like to have them the next
day," Wagner said. "But there is a process. It's not going to happen
overnight."
But local elections officials say they are frustrated. The later ballots
arrive, the less time elections workers have to send them out.
"Every day that they're not here costs us time," said Jacqueline
McDaniel, director of the Baltimore County Board of Elections. "Once
they get here, they have to be unpacked. We have to itemize them, record
everything, put them where they belong, and then after all that, then we
can start stuffing the ballots."
Also, absentee ballots can take weeks to arrive in locations overseas.
If they arrive too late, some absentees may not be able to vote, local
elections officials said.
"We have people in the Peace Corps and their mail doesn't get to them in
a timely fashion to begin with," Narciszewski said. "You add this in and
it's not good."
Local elections officials criticized politicians for encouraging voters
to use absentee ballots as an alternative to the polls.
"There is nothing wrong with our voting system," McDaniel said. "I wish
[politicians] would sit back and think about what they're doing before they mouth off like this. It's just wrong."
State officials and Diebold expect local elections boards to receive all
absentee ballots by Friday, but some local elections officials are
skeptical.
"Hopefully that's true, but we've had so many promises from the state
that have never been fulfilled," said Nancy Dacek, president of the Montgomery County Board of Elections. "This whole election season has
been one of those promises that never came true." |