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Other Iowa Web Sites:
http://www.iowavoters.org
http://www.voterownediowa.org
http://www.blogforiowa.com
National Web Sites:
http://votetrustusa.org
http://blackboxvoting.org
www.verifiedvoting.org
www.votersunite.org
http://accurate-voting.org
http://coalition4visibleballots.
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Sean Flaherty, Co-Chair
Iowans for Voting Integrity
sean@iowansforvotingintegrity.org
www.IowansForVotingIntegrity.org
CITIZENS' GROUP
PRAISES IOWA'S FIRST STEP TOWARD VERIFIED VOTING
All Iowa Counties Will Eventually
Replace Touch Screen Voting Machines
North Liberty, Iowa, April 28, 2007- Noting that
more work still needs to be done to secure the
accuracy of Iowa's elections, a citizens'
advocacy group praised legislation passed by the
Iowa House of Representatives today. Senate File
369, which passed the Senate in March, cleared
the House 52-42 Saturday afternoon. SF 369
brings an end to paperless electronic voting in
Iowa, and will eventually make voter-marked
paper ballots the universal standard in Iowa
elections.
“It's a welcome first step toward verified
voting in Iowa,” said Iowans for Voting
Integrity co-chair Sean Flaherty.
The bill will require that all direct-recording
electronic, or “DRE,” voting machines in Iowa
offer a voter-verifiable paper record in time
for the November 4, 2008 elections. As many as
20% of Iowa's voters cast their votes on DRE
machines in the November 2006 elections.
Counties could continue to use the touch screen
DRE machines as long as they have a paper trail,
but when the machines wear out, counties would
have to replace them with optical scan equipment
that is compatible with traditional paper
ballots. For voters with disabilities, each
precinct will eventually have a “ballot-marking
device,” which also has a touch screen function,
but only to help the voter mark a traditional
paper ballot. Unlike a DRE machine, a
ballot-marking device does not tabulate the
vote. A ballot is inserted into the machine, the
voter makes choices using the touch screen, and
the machine then ejects the ballot, which can be
scanned or counted by hand. 21 counties,
including Wapello County, Polk County, and
Woodbury County, now use optical scan with a
ballot-marking device; eventually all Iowa
counties will use this system.
“Having a paper trail roll is much better than
having paperless e-voting, but we need to get
back to paper ballots for all voters,” Flaherty
said. “This bill gets us there.” Paper ballots
are superior to the paper trail printers because
the paper trail printers store all the votes on
a continuous roll, raising questions of voter
privacy. The quality of paper they use is very
poor, and the printers have been prone to
printer jams. The continuous paper rolls take
much more time to count by hand than separate
paper ballots.
The Assembly approved $2 million from the
Rebuild Iowa Infrastructure Fund for grants to
counties to purchase new voting equipment. Rep.
Mary Gaskill, D-Wapello, says the Assembly may
look at adding more grant money in the next
session.
Virginia passed a law that phases out DREs
earlier this year, and Florida's new Republican
Governor, Charlie Crist, is pushing hard for
legislation to get rid of DREs and use optical
scan with ballot-marking devices statewide.
Maryland's legislature is also taking steps to
convert the state to optical scan voting.
In the last year, serious security questions
have been raised about both types of touch
screens used in Iowa, the Diebold company's Tsx,
used in 71 counties, and the Election Systems &
Software's iVotronic, used in 8 counties [correction:
the iVotronic is used in 7 counties].
“Computer scientists have said that the iVotronic needs significant security upgrades
before it's safe to use it another election,”
Flaherty said.
The next step for verified voting advocates is
pushing for legislation to require routine hand
audits of the paper ballots to check the
electronic tallies. Even with paper ballots, the
vote totals are almost always generated by
computer scanners. Last year, a panel of
computer scientists that included Microsoft's
former security chief Howard Schmidt, University
of Iowa voting machine expert Douglas Jones, and
scientists from Stanford, MIT, and other
institutions concluded that all types of voting
equipment used in the United States are
vulnerable to error or fraud. Unless governments
hand count a sample of ballots to check the
electronic tallies, paper ballots “are of
questionable security value.”
“When a team of the best computer security
experts in the world tells us we need to hand
count a sample of ballots to be confident of
election results, we'd better listen,” Flaherty
said. Pending legislation in the U.S. House
would require hand audits of of federal
elections, but audits are necessary up and down
the ballot. “We have a lot of work ahead of us,
but this is a very good day for voters who have
been paying attention to voting system issues.”
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