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Date Published: August 14, 2004   

Leventis, Jones debate lawsuit, other issues

By LESLIE CANTU
Item Staff Writer
lesliec@theitem.com

State Sen. Phil Leventis and his opponent in the Nov. 2 general election, Republican Dickie Jones, each blasted the other's point of view Friday on two issues that have been center stage this month.

Leventis is the chairman of the Sumter County Legislative Delegation, which decided it would not endorse switching to electronic voting machines this year. He also threatened to sue Department of Corrections Director Jim Ozmint to stop him from negotiating with private medical providers before the Budget and Control Board finished studying the pros and cons of privatization.

However, Leventis, a Democrat, said his letter to the Department of Corrections only became an issue when the office of Republican Gov. Mark Sanford released it to the media.

"It's all an orchestrated effort to see if they can make people lose confidence in me," Leventis said. Leventis said he believes that waiting for the results of a study that costs $20,000 makes sense if it could save the state millions in the end. The study should be finished between Oct. 5 and Nov. 1, he said.

He didn't publicize his letter to Ozmint and turn it into an issue, Leventis said. According to Leventis, Upstate senators and the governor's office are the ones who want this to be an issue in this election year.

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JONES
Jones, who is making his first bid to represent Senate District 35, countered that Leventis would want to keep a threatened lawsuit against a state official a secret.

"I suppose he does want to make it private," Jones said. "The community is and should be offended by a state senator who sticks his nose in a corner he has no business in."

Ozmint is right to be looking at all the options, Jones said, to see if the state can provide medical services to inmates more economically.

"The easy way to do it would be to do what the guy ahead of him did," Jones said.

The problem with medical care in the state's prisons is not the health care workers but their management, Leventis countered. The best bet for deciding the issue might end up being looking over the contract Ozmint negotiates, he said.

In the ongoing debate regarding electronic voting machines, Jones advocates an immediate change to the new system. Arguing about the reliability of the new Election Systems and Software machines is pointless because the state has already signed a contract to buy them, he said. Sumter County's decision not to use the machines this year just means a loss of $185,000 to Sumter County.

"I don't see anything but a loss all the way around for Sumter County," he said.

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LEVENTIS
In Leventis' point of view, the money should not be the deciding factor. The price tag isn't so great when spread over five to 10 years, the approximate life span of the machines, he said, especially since the county spends more than $36 million a year.

"One hundred eighty-five thousand out of 10 years is less than one-tenth of 1 percent of the money they spend," Leventis said.

Sumter would only get 283 of the new machines, far fewer than the 586 punch card machines the county currently uses. He also pointed to problems other states have had with electronic voting machines.

"That argument has already been dealt with and disposed of," Jones said. All voting machines have some problems, he said.

"I am confident that as long as there are voters, there will be problems with voting machines," Jones said. "Difficulties with voting machines are not peculiar to the new machines."

Still, Leventis believes it wouldn't hurt for Sumter to see how the election goes for the counties that have decided to adopt the new machines. Although some of the machine's proponents have said opposition to the machines is politically based, Leventis said he doesn't think using the punch card system benefits either party any more than the other.

"The people who have made contributions to (Jones) keep trying to draw me out to make decisions — and I'm happy to make those decisions," Leventis said. "I'll always decide to have elections people can have confidence in ... The guy who's running against me hasn't said one word about public policy."

Contact Staff Writer Leslie Cantu at lesliec@theitem.com or 803-774-1250.

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