Reporter's notebook: Excitement, fear on the e-vote trail
By
Marc Ferranti
,
IDG News Service
, 11/04/2008
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No one's doubting the outcome of the massive turnout in the U.S. presidential election in Democratic New Jersey, but for some
voters and elected officials, e-voting glitches and long lines are undermining confidence in the electoral process.
"Our voting machine is down. It's broken and they don't appear to have a backup machine," said Bill Grafton, an IT professional
who was frustrated in his attempt to vote early Tuesday morning on a Sequoia AVC Advantage machine in Maplewood, a leafy suburb
30 minutes from New York City.
Poll workers for the district said they had only 16 emergency ballots and had to turn away voters when they ran out. More
ballots were brought, and when the poll workers ran out of those, they ran down the corridor to use an elementary school photocopier
to make more ballots.
"I don't have much faith in these machines," said one poll worker.
People are concerned that in all the confusion, ballots will not be tallied correctly.
"There's a huge feeling that our ballots will not be counted," Grafton said. A few dropped votes in a state expected to go
for Barack Obama will not make a difference in the presidential election. But it might make a difference to the town's vote
on a referendum Grafton is backing, on a project to lay down artificial turf in a local park.
A New Jersey class-action lawsuit involving voting machines was filed in 2004 and charges that direct-recording electronic
devices (DREs) with no paper audit possibilities are illegal. The suit cites state law concerning accurate vote counting,
but was not resolved before the November elections.
"If there's a problem, there's no paper trail to actually show how people may have voted, unlike the old machines," said David
Lyons, a town councilman standing outside a polling station in Irvington, a working-class town bordering Newark. "I've had
conversations with people who have told me they were concerned about it. They're concerned that people might be able to hack
into them."
Despite such issues, there was a palpable sense of excitement in the air.
"I've never seen this kind of crowd, it's exciting to see," said Grafton. "It's gonna be a pretty electric day for everyone
in the country."
But lines hundreds of people long put a damper on things for some voters.
"I was in line two hours," said Sylvia Green-Robinson, a retired nurse in Irvington. "This morning everyone came out, the
sick, the lame and the lazy!" Still, she would have spent a little extra time to make sure there was a paper trail for her
vote. "It's two minutes to do the electronic, so if you have to do the paper I would do it too, to make sure the vote counts."
"The voting machines are OK, but they need more," said Alex Bush, an Irvington retiree. "Later today there's gonna be a mob."
That seemed to be the consensus in a town where exceptionally high turnout was expected because of its African-American population.
"They didn't prepare," said Lyons." I mean this municipality is mostly African-American. I don't know how it is that they
didn't prepare for this."
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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