http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/computersecurity/2004-02-12-evote-fall-2004_x.htm
Posted
2/12/2004 8:39 PM
Report: More e-voting
systems to be used this fall
By
Hope Yen, Associated Press
WASHINGTON
— More than 61% of the nation's voters this fall will
use electronically enhanced voting systems aimed at avoiding a repeat of the
disputed 2000 election, but the changes won't be enough if the tally is close,
according to a new study.
The
study released Thursday by the political consulting company, Election Data
Services, said 50 million voters, or 28.9%, will use touchscreen,
ATM-style machines to cast their ballots — an increase from 12.5% in 2000.
About
55.7 million, or 32.2%, will turn in paper ballots with filled-in ovals similar
to SAT tests that will be read by optical scan equipment. That's up from 29% in
2000.
However,
nearly 32 million voters, or 18.6%, will continue to vote on punch cards
despite the federal Help America Vote Act's push to retire the equipment that
was at the center of the Florida deadlock in 2000. In 2000, the figure was 28%.
The
remaining voters will use mechanical lever machines or other methods.
"It
is a possibility you can still have a 2000 (stalemate) in 2004," said
Kimball Brace, president of EDS. "If the election is close, election
administrators need to make sure they're cognizant and have all the procedures
down, because a lot more people will be watching."
Congress
authorized $3.9 billion for states in 2002 to replace outdated equipment, but
only about $650 million has been distributed so far amid political wrangling
and doubts about the reliability of electronic voting.
Critics
say electronic systems could be vulnerable to hacking, and in the event of a
recount, election administrators would not have a definitive paper trail but
rather a computer memory bank.
"After
HAVA was passed, everyone was writing about how everything was going to change
for the 2004 election," Brace said. But the "continued controversy
over voter-verified ballots with electronic systems has led to a slowdown of
changes."
The
EDS survey covers about 3,100 election jurisdictions in the United States, and
made its projections based on data as of Feb. 9.
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