http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/miami/sfl-delections28may28,0,6680437.story?coll=sfla-news-miami
Sun-Sentinel
Miami-Dade's
elections chief urges new system
By Chrystian
Tejedor and Ihosvani Rodriguez
May 28, 2005
After
repeated embarrassing glitches at the polls, elections officials in Miami-Dade
County have recommended scrapping the county's $24.5 million electronic voting
system in favor of paper ballots with optical scanners.
Supervisor
of Elections Lester Sola made the recommendation Friday in an initial analysis
of the county's voting system and the feasibility of adopting a new one. In his
report, Sola said that adopting the simpler system could save county taxpayers
millions and restore voter confidence by providing a paper record of ballots
cast.
In April, an
outraged Mayor Carlos Alvarez requested a study on the merits of the optical
scan system after revelations that the Elections Department lost hundreds of
votes during the March 8 slot machine referendum because of a coding error.
The
revelations led former Supervisor of Elections Constance Kaplan to resign on
March 31 and were the latest embarrassing chapter in the county's elections.
Sola took over the same day.
Alvarez also
fumed that the current system has increased the cost of running an election to
about $7 million per election.
Sola's
report comes days after a voter advocacy group released a disparaging report
that cited a litany of problems during last fall's general elections, among
them malfunctioning voting machines.
After County
Manager George Burgess reviews Sola's report, the issue could head to county
commissioners, who could decide to switch systems Sola estimated that replacing
the voting machines with paper ballots and optical scanners would take at least
15 months.
Alvarez was
attending a funeral late Friday and could not be reached for comment, staff
said. In a one-paragraph written statement, Burgess said he would meet with
Sola in the coming weeks before making any specific recommendation.
In his
report, Sola recommended that county leaders move carefully in exploring
purchasing a new system.
But Sola
said an initial analysis showed that the county would save more than $13
million over five years with an optical scan system through lower operating
costs and the elimination of costly maintenance expenses.
Staff Writer
Madeline Baro-Diaz contributed to this report.
Ihosvani
Rodriguez can be reached at ijrodriguez@sun-sentinel.com or 305-810-5005.
Copyright ©
2005, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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