http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/08/opinion/08MON1.html?ex=1071896526&ei=1&en=a722402ffa658015
Published on Monday, December
8, 2003 by The New York Times
A Paper Trail for Voters
Ever
since the voting trauma in Florida three years ago, election officials have
been trying to find a better way to cast and count ballots. As progress is
beginning to be made, it is critical that the new strategies do not create as
many problems as they solve.
With
the help of $3.9 billion in federal funds set aside to improve elections,
states have begun the move to electronic voting machines. The new A.T.M.-style
machines are easier for most people to use and undeniably faster. But recent
glitches in Virginia and Florida have revived questions about how to recount a
computerized vote after a close or suspicious election. New machines can
already print a total of all votes cast, but that is simply a reflection of the
computerized tally. What is needed is a paper record of each voter's choices
that the voter can verify.
The
most reasonable answer is to require that the machines be equipped with
printers that will produce what Representative Rush Holt, Democrat of New
Jersey, calls a "parallel paper record" of the vote. That makes sense
to us. Like deeds, diplomas and other vital public documents, the nation's
votes still need to be preserved somewhere on paper.
This
view has drawn a lot of criticism, particularly from companies that make
electronic voting machines. They say that adding a paper trail will cost more
and that the printers will complicate the maintenance of the machines. Mainly, however, the machines' supporters say
no fail-safe system is necessary because the machines are extremely secure.
Companies
like Diebold Election Systems, which is one of the
largest manufacturers of computerized voting machines, have not done their case
much good by getting involved in politics. Walden O'Dell, the chief executive
of Diebold Inc., is an ardent Republican fund-raiser
who has committed to "helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes" to
President Bush in next year's election. Such comments naturally fuel concern,
especially among Democrats who note that Ohio is an important swing state in
presidential elections and that machines from Mr. O'Dell's operation are among
those being considered as new voting technology across the country.
Even
without conspiracy theories, however, election experts from both parties worry
that all these A.T.M.-style voting machines are not adequately protected
against an advanced computer geek aiming to scramble the votes or a political
hack turned political hacker.
California
last month took the lead in demanding a backup paper tally of the vote when
Secretary of State Kevin Shelley ordered that by July 2006,
all electronic screen voting machines must have a "voter verified paper
audit trail." Since California is expected to spend about $400 million on
its new machines, the big voting machine companies are scrambling to make the paper
options available and workable.
California's
push also may make it easier for other states that are still circling the
voting machine issue. New York is way behind, as Albany's politicians prefer to
direct their attention to the more pleasant question of who gets the big new
contracts for voting equipment. But New Yorkers - especially New York City
voters - need the assurance that their votes are available on paper for the
recounting. Too many elections teeter on a few hundred votes,
and candidates rightly expect human beings to be able to double-check the
results. America's election apparatus needs to move firmly and quickly into the
computer age. But the public must feel secure that each vote is really counted.
At this stage, a voter-verified paper trail offers the public that necessary
security.
Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company
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