Voters in Utah to get electronic machines in '06
But the devices won't provide ballot printouts
But state and county officials won't be able to buy what many Utahns want: an electronic machine that provides a paper printout or other "hard copy" of their ballot to prove their vote was counted correctly.
"None of the major vendors" offer electronic machines that can print out hard-copy ballots, Salt Lake County Clerk Sherrie Swensen told a newly formed state committee that will select exactly what kind of voting machines the state and counties will purchase.
Swensen, who sits on the committee, said, "I'm already getting letters and e-mails" asking that the new voting system demanded and funded by Congress after the 2000 voting fiasco in Florida have hard-copy proof of each voter's ballot.
Florida officials were criticized in last Tuesday's presidential primary for not having electronic machines with printouts. Maybe in a year or two, some manufacturer will have that capability, said Swensen, but not now when Utah officials are picking which machines to buy.
Officially called the Voting Equipment Selection Committee, the Utah group will pick one vendor by September to supply more than 3,000 machines. By federal law, the new machines must be in place and working by the 2006 elections. But the new machines will be tested in a few "pilot precincts" in this November's general election, said Amy Naccarato, state elections officer.
But what kind of system to buy, and how many machines the state can get for its $20.5 million, is still very much up in the air.
Under a state elections plan already adopted by a separate planning committee, Swensen said Salt Lake County, with 40 percent of the state's population, will have 1,067 fewer electronic voting machines than it currently has computer punch card ballot machines. And that could mean long lines of unhappy voters on Election Day 2006.
Salt Lake and other Wasatch Front counties may end up buying, on their own, more electronic machines.
"We may want to pay for the machines outright, we may want to lease them," said state Chief Information Officer Val Oveson, who has been put in charge of the selection committee by Lt. Gov. Gayle McKeachnie.
The political implications of the decision could be great. Some public service careers could be greatly harmed, maybe even ended, if come 2006 there are huge lines on Election Day, miscounted votes, disputed elections or other voter-confidence-shaking mishaps.



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