Dori Smith Reports At Brad Blog

Dori Smith of TalkNationRadio.org provides a report on Connecticut issues at Brad Blog.  A summary of her excellent broadcasts this fall, along with the issues raised  for Connecticut by memory card problems with the Diebold Premier AccuVote-OS optical scanners in Florida.

Diebold Optical-Scan Failures Reported in Florida May be Affecting Connecticut As Well  <read>

Meriden Record-Journal: Recounts raise questions about voting machines

Excellent article.  A significant issue is raised.   We will need to carefully review the results of the post-election audits and the recounts.  If the machines regularly fail to accurately count votes with an accuracy well within the mandatory recount level of 0.5% then we will need to set the recount trigger at a significantly higher level.

Despite the rollout of high-tech voting machines in all towns and precincts, errors still turned up during recounts in Wallingford, Southington and elsewhere. In both of those towns, all of the Town Council candidates saw their totals change once the paper ballots had been examined by humans and not just by the optical scanning machines.
Some candidates lost more than one-half of one percent of the total votes cast, which is the threshold for a mandated recount in a close race.
The election results didn’t change, but the system was shown to have flaws.

Also read comments by Rep Lawlor, Andy Sauer of Common Cause, and yours truly:

but at least one voter advocate would like to see that increased. “The chance of an error or fraudulent behavior even being detected is two to four percent in a local race,” said Luther Weeks, executive director of CTVotersCount.org, based on his analysis. “I personally am not satisfied with (that).
“Weeks said he doesn’t expect fraud to happen, but that the standard should be raised in such a way that the state has a one-third chance of catching it if it does. Audits cost pennies per vote, he said.

Read the entire article <read>

Harftord Courant: Vote Recounts Prove Tedious, Time-Consuming

We are likely to see more articles like the one in the Courant today: Vote Recounts Prove Tedious, Time-Consuming, <read>.

General comments on the article:

We arrived at this point by knee-jerk reactions in Washington, resulting in the Help America Vote Act and little heed to advocates in Hartford when the audit law was written this year. We do not need to determine the future of a critical piece of democracy by further off-the-cuff assessments followed by further knee-jerk reactions.

We need a rational process to determine the most accurate and efficient process to actually perform the recounts and audits. Several states in New England have such experience. PEW is funding research on best practices for manually counting ballots. Just like highway inspections, building inspectons, bridge inspections, and functioning parole boards, we need to pay a small price for insuring integrity of our elections.

In Connecticut we have seen a flurry of reactions to electronic voting, along with reactons to the costs and work of recounts and audits – let us hope that the result will not be a knee-jerk reaction by the legislature resulting in weakened audits at a time when we need stronger audits. The costs of recounting and auditing are much lower than one would gather from the flurry, the value of preserving our votes and insuring democracy, priceless.

My further comments on some of the statements in the article below. Continue reading “Harftord Courant: Vote Recounts Prove Tedious, Time-Consuming”

TalkNationRadio: Interview with Deputy Secretary of State Lesley Mara on Voting Machine Glitches: Breaking News re LHS Violations and State Elections

Another very informative show <read/listen>

Random Audit Drawing – While Everybody Was Watching East Haven

I was at the Random Audit drawing yesterday. A Press Conference at the Secretary of the State’s office at 1:00pm.

We drew 70 districts to be audited along with 15 extras in case there are additional contested races which prevent audits in any of the 70 selected districts.

If my preliminary count is correct there are 44 towns required to audit at least one district. Several towns have mutiple districts with Waterbury and New Haven having quite a few to audit. Also several towns with only two districts will audit both of them! <read the press release>

East Haven Recount#2 Lessons – Will We Learn?

Update: More lessons from the Wallingford Recount <read>

This was a town council race with 17 candidates and 9 elected. 11,000 votes 59 poll workers counted in 6 hours.

If we assume a $0.05 per vote (9) that would $0.45 per ballot. If so it works out to paying an average of $14.00 per poll worker per hour. I don’t know what they were paid, but its in range of best practice claims.

Also we see that there is need for public education about what to expect for accuracy. Counting each vote per voter’s intent vs by the machine’s reading ability should yield slightly different results — the very reason why close races should be recounted manually. The machine will never be able to judge voter’s intent perfectly.

We have repeatadly warned that claiming the the machines performed “flawlessly” or “perfectly” sets up false expectations.

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The East Haven re-recount ended yesterday on a reassuring note. The problem apparently being a human error in the recount process itself. East Haven Politics has the story and videos <read>

What we might learn from this:

  • It would be a good idea to publish detailed recount procedures and develop best practices. We do not have to reinvent the wheel.
    • One of the advantages of selecting Dieblod/LHS optical scanners, often cited by the Secretary of the State, is that they have been in use in other New England states…so we can learn from how they perform recounts and audits efficiently.
    • PEW is funding research into best practices for manual counting of ballots, hopefully, that study will be complete and available in time for consideration in creating procedures in Connecticut for the November 2008 election.
    • The legislature can also fund research into best practices as requested in the petition on this site: “Request that you fund research into mechanisms for counting votes, looking carefully at practices employed elsewhere that indicate an average cost of $0.04 per ballot per race counted are attainable.”
  • A lot of negative publicity and drama can be avoided by semantics: When counting shows huge discrepancies, count again until at the minimum the same result is produced at least twice. You do not have to announce a huge discrepancy as the result of a recount until you verify it. What caused all the excitement here was announcing the result before verifying it.
  • Its a good idea not to jump to conclusions, especially those that blame election officials and the voters. As suggested on this site, it was highly unlikely that more than 100 voters took two ballots by mistake or that several ballot clerks in one municipality each lost track of ballots or that checkers made a significant number of errors. As we said here “We don’t know what happened. It could be human error, but more likely one or a sequence of two or three errors rather than 130 errors by multiple people in multiple places.”

Finally, East Haven Politics quotes a figure of $15,000 for the initial inaccurate recount. I don’t know where that figure came from, however, it seems wildly out of line. Best practices in New Hampshire indicate that $0.04 per ballot per race counted is obtainable. That may take some doing, however, $15,000/8,000 votes yields about $1.87 per vote.

Update: My answer to a question posed on my cross post on MyLeftNutmeg

greenpeas: I don’t see any way out of saying there’s a discrepancy
The press is waiting for a result and the registrar could not announce one the day of the first recount, nor did she want to announce a recount without making sure she had to do one. I think we should encourage, not discourage, coming forward to provide open and transparent access to information about what is going on so people have confidence in the process. finding mistakes and correcting them will be part of getting the process right, and se should both try to vastly improve our overall processes as well as inform the public what it will look like to witness this process and what is normal/not normal about sorting out a manual count.

I think the problem was not the discrepancy announcement; it was the lack of SoTS office involvement that would have allowed the registrar to either to confirm the vote achieved or to confirm the next step to be taken.

It would also be helpful for the SOTS to explain what voters should expect on recounts — perfect recounts? discrepancies? What margin of discrepancy is acceptable to the SOTS office?

We may have to look to other states and cumulative studies to figure this out, since as we know, in CT everything is coming up roses.

Luther Weeks (aka BlastFromGlast) I still think that the announcement could be different
Such as “We have all had a long day, the initial count we have is way off. What we need to do is secure everything, get a good night’s sleep and comeback again and carefully count again, until we get the same results twice. Perhaps we counted some votes more than once or added incorrectly of transposed some digits, or perhaps it is more serious. Right now we need to relax and get some sleep and continue deliberately”. As I have said there is a need for more detailed procedures. That should be done by the SOTS and/or ROVAC (Registrars Of Voters Assn Connecticut). Yet, counting again and simply counting the number of ballots to balance with the result, should only require common sense.

We have heard over and over from registrars in the last few months that going all paper would be bad, for one reason because of the difficulty of counting the paper and getting it right. Here we have an example of that but suddenly normally rational people find it surprising that we don’t count the paper correctly the 1st time.

EAC spokeswoman answers questions about agency

Interesting interview with an Election Assistance Commission spokesperson. <read>

What role does the EAC have in dealing with election systems that are currently being used in the U.S. albeit not certified by the EAC? EAC does not have any regulatory authority over states with respect to the voting systems they use. All of EAC voting system programs are voluntary. HAVA very clearly states that EAC has no regulatory authority, except regarding the National Voter Registration Act.

Includes an extensive listing of information in their clearing house. Also a reminder that it is the public comment period for their Voluntary Voting System Guidelines. Next month I will review the guidelines and comment on them to the EAC. I would encourage everyone to take a look at them and reach their own conclusions.

  1. EAC posted its 2005 voluntary voting system guidelines, and just launched an online comment tool for the next iteration of voluntary voting system guidelines. Comments submitted are also available to the public. In addition, the Commission adopted a policy to establish a voting system reports clearinghouse, which is available here.

There is a lot of material in the interview but it seems to be loaded with excuses for not doing all that much, which I can only assume is a reasonable representation of the EAC’s actual value. See a critique of the operation of the clearinghouse in the same newspaper  <read>   Related to the Diebold Premier memory card failure story we have been following <here>

Recount Does Not Match – Mystery? Discrepancy? Error?

Update: Middlefield, a sensible recount discrepancy report, a few votes off in the count, some sensible advice to count again, and a reasonable possible explanation <read>

Update, Colin McEnron interviews Rep Mike Lawlor <listen>

We learn that the counts of votes were higher in several districts, not just one. Lawlor likes a similar explination to that of Head Moderator Jaffe. Lawlor speculates that the checkers did not do their job and did not check off all voters. I am skeptical, election officials can make mistakes, but it just is hard to believe that multiple checkers in one town all made similar mistakes or that 130 voters made the same mistakes without being noticed.

I doubt either of these explanations. Just like the airlines and the aircraft manufacturers like to blame pilot error rather than the aircraft design or manufacture.

Blaming the Secretary of The State’s office is a bit of a smokescreen. Perhaps they should be available on Sunday, or maybe there should be no recounts on Sunday’s and holidays, but that takes attention away from the real issues here.

We don’t know what happened. It could be human error, but more likely one or a sequence of two or three errors rather than 130 errors by multiple people in multiple places.

Update, possibly the most rediculous attempt at an excuse ever <read>

[Head Moderator Lori] Jaffe told the New Haven Register that the new voting system may have confused some voters. “They might get a ballot, make a mistake on it, then go to the clerk and get a second one,” she said.

No – the ballot clerk is responsible to give one ballot to each voter. And to give another one the clerk must give one back and mark it spoiled and is responsible for it. (I don’t believe any Head Moderator would confuse that)
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The East Haven recount shows more votes than on election day and more votes than voters checked off <read>

the recount has completed. Now they are trying to figure out why they have more votes for mayor in the recount than they had voters voting.
… the results of the recount will not be certified by the recount moderator, Lori Jaffe due to significant discrepencies(sic) noted in the previous update. There are 114 more votes cast than people that are thought to have voted. The moderator and the Registrar of Voters will contact the Secretary of State on Tuesday to get instructions.

We also have unconfirmed reports of discrepancies and procedural questions with the recount performed Friday in East Hampton — and that the recount will be redone today.

TalkNationRadio – Raindrops Keep Falling

This week’s TalkNationRadio by Dori Smith, Raindrops Keep falling on Connecticut’s Diebold Voting Machines: <read and listen>

Interviews with Connecticut Registrars, Deputy Secretary of State Lesley Mara, and True Vote Connecticut member George Barnett.  Coverage of the November 6th election and the problems with wet ballots.

Former corporate auditor George Barnett:

‘In 2006 twenty eight of the 550 recounts from seventeen districts there were differences of ten votes or more between the machine counts and the hand counts. In 19 of those of those 28 recounts the machines recorded a higher votes than the hand counts. Now, after these audits the Secretary of State put out a press release saying the optical scan machines performed very well on election day without any problems and that any changes in vote totals found in these audits were due to ballots being marked incorrectly by the voter–not to any problems with the optical scan machine.

So if 19 recounts the machine count was higher than the hand recount during the audit, that contradicts that statement. And I personally reviewed an audit in Monroe where the machine had a higher count than the hand recount and I talked to the Registrars there and they never spoke to the Secretary of State. So it seems like the Secretary of the State made this statement without basing it on fact. She did not look into any of these differences.

Barnett has also written about these issues at CTVotersCount <here> and <here>.

Take Action – Be A Post-Election Audit Observer

UPDATE: The Secretary of the State has extended the audit period. The audits will be conducted through December 12, 2007. Still time to sign up!

Connecticut Citizen Election Audit Coalition

Four Groups Organizing Citizens To Observe
Post-Election Audits

CTVotersCount.org is one of the coalition members and requests that members of our mailing list and readers seriously consider spending a day observing our post-election audits. You will contribute to democracy, be a part of the election process, and learn something valuable – every time I have attend an audit I have learned something new and unanticipated, you will too, please join us.

Learn more and sign-up at www.CTElectionAudit.org

From the Press Release: Continue reading “Take Action – Be A Post-Election Audit Observer”