Md. Lawmakers Look at Plugging Touch-Screen Security With Paper
Ballots
By Stephanie Tracy, Capital News Service
February 11, 2004
ANNAPOLIS, Md. - With only three weeks remaining until voters statewide
get their first feel of new touch-screen voting machines, lawmakers
are still working to plug the system's security holes, including
adding voter-verifiable paper records.
Opponents reiterated the vulnerabilities of a voting system that
was initially praised for its accuracy and revolutionary advantages
for disabled voters at a House Ways and Means Committee hearing
Tuesday.
The bill before the committee would require computerized voting
machines to produce a printed record for the voter to inspect and
confirm. The paper ballots would be used for any legally required
recount and to monitor the accuracy of the computerized results.
Voter-verifiable paper records would be mandatory by the 2004 general
election if the proposed bill succeeds.
Touch-screen voting machines debuted in a few elections in 2002,
and must be used in all jurisdictions by 2006.
Supporters of the paper ballots compared them to receipts printed
at automated teller machines and gasoline pumps.
Delegate Kumar Barve, D-Montgomery, said the lack of verifiable
ballots constituted a failure of the voting system.
"With the old (voting) system, as bad as it was . . . you
had a back up," Barve said. "You had an audit trail, not
just something someone calls an audit trail."
The bill's sponsor, Delegate Karen Montgomery, D-Montgomery, said
the security flaws discovered by three studies of the state's new
Diebold AccuVote-TS voting system necessitated the push for individual
vote records.
Until there are voter-verifiable records, Montgomery said she will
be "unhappy and uncomfortable voting in the next two elections."
Some opponents also said installing printers at each voting machine
would be too expensive, but Montgomery countered that Diebold provided
printers to San Diego County, Calif., for free after questions from
that county's supervisors.
With a projected state budget gap of more than $800 million, Delegate
Jean Cryor, R-Montgomery, asked the committee to look into the differences
between the two contracts.
Proponents of the voting paper trail said software could easily
be corrupted by the computer programmers responsible for creating
the technology in the first place.
Kevin Zeese with the Campaign for Verifiable Voting said the risk
of corrupted computer coding had not been considered adequately
and said printed records of individual votes was the "common
sense solution" to avoiding election fraud.
"We don't know how to keep our computers safe from software
glitches," Zeese said. "We need a second system, and we
need a paper ballot at every machine not just some machines."
Printers attached to voting machines would print ballots inside
a locked glass box to allow voters to read, but not handle, the
print-out. The ballot would then be stored in the box as an official
voting record.
State Board of Elections Administrator Linda Lamone said voter-verifiable
ballots would open the door for poll workers to view individual
votes in the process of repairing printer malfunctions, and continue
the problem of visually impaired voters casting their ballots independently.
"I don't think it's necessarily the answer," she said
Lamone adds that the federal government hasn't developed standards
for a paper trail.
Copyright 2004 by Capital News Service. All Rights
Reserved.
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