State Board Vows to Move Forward
with Electronic Voting System
By Chris Yakaitis
Capital News
Service
Tuesday, Sept.
26, 2006
ANNAPOLIS, Md. - The State Board of Elections vowed Tuesday to move
forward with fixes to Maryland's troubled electronic voting
system, despite Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich's advocacy of a move to
paper ballots before the Nov. 7 general election.
"We will work around the clock to get it right," said state
election board chairman Gilles W. Burger, echoing remarks made
by state election administrator Linda H. Lamone at the Sept. 20
Board of Public Works meeting.
At a two-hour meeting with representatives from Diebold
Election Systems Inc., the company that developed Maryland's
voting system, the board virtually ignored the governor's public
call for a paper system and instead focused on technical
support, election judge training and mechanical and software
failures.
Diebold representatives said they were already on their way
to correcting the glitches that resulted in long lines and voter
confusion during the Sept. 12 primary election, including a tic
that caused electronic polling books to reboot automatically
after checking in about 40 voters.
Burger did suggest that polling places stock an
"overabundance of provisional ballots" during the general
election. But that was as close as the discussion came to a move
toward a paper-based voting or voter check-in system.
Burger said the state board was never formally approached by
Ehrlich about moving to paper ballots for the general election.
But a spokesman for the governor said Ehrlich expressed his
opinion publicly at last week's Board of Public Works meeting
and has reiterated that stance every time he appears in public.
"His position for the better part of a year remains that he
does not have confidence in Maryland's overall reliance on
electronic voting," said Henry P. Fawell, Ehrlich's press
secretary.
Fawell said Ehrlich will continue to encourage voters to use
absentee ballots "as a convenient option to avoid long lines at
the polls and questionable voting technology."
After the meeting, Burger said the board was focused on
correcting problems encountered during the primary, and not on
overhauling the entire state voting process before Nov. 7.
"We
just can't change our system," he said. "We can't take any more
stress of changes."
He did, however, criticize the technical support and training
provided by Diebold leading up to and on the day of the primary.
"The State of Maryland has paid Diebold a lot of money over
the past four years," said Burger, who said he watched
an electronic polling book machine freeze when he went to check
in at the polls. "The allocation of those resources, how it is
being used and how they are being served, is of great interest to
the taxpayers. I think that we need to see some better support,
better training."
Diebold Election Systems officials assured the board their
system will be fixed in time for the Nov. 7 general election.
"We feel that we had, in many respects, a very excellent
election," said Vice President Mike Lindross, citing successful
vote tabulation and parallel monitoring of the voting process.
He said that after learning of the primary day e-poll glitch,
"We jumped on it, we found it, we fixed it."
Several county election board heads at the meeting defended
the work done by Diebold in the primary. Barbara L. Fisher,
elections director for Anne Arundel County, said the company's
technicians "made a very real effort to give us the support that
we requested."
"We're extremely grateful that they were there," she said.
Patricia L. Davis, elections director for Talbot County, said
the technical errors were "slight" and "Diebold gave 100
percent." She shifted some responsibility for the primary chaos
to the public.
"The polling books are the easiest part. Voters are the
rudest part," Davis said, receiving a round of applause from a
few fellow elections directors. She called on voters to be
patient with problems or lines encountered at the polls.
"A lot
of it has to go back to the voter," she said.
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