http://www.heraldnet.com/stories/04/12/04/100loc_locvote001.cfm
HeraldNet
The Herald -
Everett, Wash. - www.HeraldNet.com
December 4,
2004
Touch-screen
votes give county a daunting task
By Scott
North
Herald
Writer
No matter
who comes out on top in the statewide hand recount in the governor's race, the
story in Snohomish County will be told in paper.
Lots of
paper.
Enough paper
to keep a squad of computer printers churning for five straight days. Enough to
lay a paper trail stretching from Everett to Edmonds.
"It's
going to be a long, long process," county election supervisor Carolyn
Diepenbrock said Friday.
Before the
recount can begin here, election officials must first print out paper ballots
to record the more than 96,200 votes that were cast on Nov. 2 using
touch-screen computer voting machines, Diepenbrock said.
Each vote
was recorded on electronic data cartridges, technology that makes it quick to
tally the votes by machine.
A hand
recount - that's another story.
Starting
Wednesday, election officials plan to begin downloading the data to create a
computer file for each ballot, saved in the standard portable document format,
or pdf, Diepenbrock said.
The ballots
will then be printed out, each on its own sheet of 81/2- by 11-inch paper.
"We are
going to have five different computers with five printers, and they are going
to be printing for five days," Diepenbrock said.
The county
Auditor's Office estimates it will churn through 20 cases of paper to create
hard-copy ballots of all the votes cast on touch-screen machines. Laid end to
end, all those printouts would stretch 16.7 miles. Stacked, they would form a
tower about three stories tall.
Only Yakima
County, which also uses touch-screen machines, will face a similar, but
smaller, printing job, Diepenbrock said.
The
Auditor's Office plans to begin on Dec. 15 its hand recount of the nearly
292,000 votes cast by Snohomish County voters in the gubernatorial race. In
addition to the computer ballots, the recount will include all mail-in ballots.
The
certified election results show Republican Dino Rossi carried the county with a
6,483-vote lead over Democrat Christine Gregoire.
The hand
recount will be conducted precinct-by-precinct by two-person teams; one
Democrat, one Republican.
The pair
must first sort the ballots cast in each precinct into stacks for each
candidate. They must agree on the exact number of votes for Rossi and Gregoire
before moving on to count other precincts, Diepenbrock said.
If everything
goes according to plan, the hand recount will be certified by Dec. 22. However,
Diepenbrock isn't convinced the results will be any more accurate than those
tabulated by machine.
"Humans
make errors, and as soon as you put a human element into any sort of process,
the potential for error goes up," she said.
Reporter
Scott North: 425-339-3431 or north@heraldnet.com.
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