http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/local/8058005.htm
Blunt says voting machines
must have paper backup
Associated Press, Friday, Feb. 27,
2004
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -
Secretary of State Matt Blunt said Friday that elections officials who want to
use electronic voting systems must find equipment that also produces a paper
ballot backup.
In St. Louis County, which is
among the areas considering the switch from punch cards to electronic machines,
the top election official said the mandate could prove costly.
County elections director
Judy Taylor said the requirement will add $12 million to the county's proposal
to purchase touch screens next year. Among other things, she said the county
would have to build climate-controlled storage facilities to keep the paper
ballots for the required two years.
Taylor supports a cheaper
approach, which would require that touch-screen machines have the capability to
produce paper ballots, after the polls close, if a dispute arose over a
particular contest.
Blunt said the requirement
will enable voters to ensure they cast their ballots correctly and give
election officials a paper record if results are challenged or if the
electronic equipment breaks.
Blunt also said not to expect
electronic voting to be used in any state elections this year.
The federal Help America Vote
Act requires all polling places to have at least one electronic voting machine
for use by disabled voters in place by January 2006. Missouri has received
$11.5 million in federal money to help the 37 counties that use punch-card
ballots replace them.
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