Plan to buy voting
machines faces heat Group asks
attorney general to step in, says devices violate law by not leaving
paper trail of votes By LEE
BANDY Staff
Writer
S.C. Attorney General Henry McMaster was asked Tuesday to halt
the State Election Commission’s plan to buy new touch-screen voting
machines.
Meanwhile, the State Law Enforcement Division confirmed it is
investigating the commission’s original plan to buy new machines
from Election Systems Software.
At a press conference outside the commission’s offices, S.C.
Progressive Network members said the planned purchase of new voting
machines violates federal law because the machines do not provide a
paper trail of ballots, allowing a recount.
“The problems that the commission is having with the purchase of
a statewide, unified voting system underscore our concern that every
vote count,” said state Rep. Joe Neal, D-Richland, vice chairman of
the Progressive Network.
The network wants McMaster to sue to halt the process, Neal
said.
Leaders of the group met privately with McMaster afterward.
“Henry told them he would issue an opinion on the matter and would
consider their request for injunctive relief,” said Trey Walker,
McMaster’s spokesman.
The commission originally awarded a $32 million contract to
Election Systems Software for computerized voting machines. That
award was thrown out after a state official ruled the bidding did
not comply with procedures. Bidding has been reopened.
Acting on complaints filed by other bidders, SLED confirmed
Tuesday it is investigating possible conflicts of interest in
awarding the contract to Election Systems. A SLED spokeswoman
declined to provide details.
Omaha, Neb.-based Election Systems did nothing wrong, spokeswoman
Ellen Bogard said, adding the company has submitted a new bid.
The Election Commission is considering bids of about $30 million
to buy new voting machines. It says machines that produce a paper
trail for each ballot cast cost too much.
The state plans to pay for the machines using $48 million it
expects to get as part of the federal government’s effort to improve
U.S. voting systems. Congress approved the money after problems with
Florida punch-card machines during the 2000 presidential
election.
The Help America Vote Act of 2002 requires that any voting system
used in a federal election produce a paper record of each ballot
cast. Specifically, it states, “The voting system shall produce a
permanent paper record with a manual audit capacity for such
system.”
More than 2,500 signatures from South Carolinians calling for a
voter system that produces a paper trail were presented at Tuesday’s
press conference.
“There is an unseemly rush by the State Election Commission to
buy a high-tech voting system that will not allow the intention of
individual voters to be recounted,” said John Crangle, director of
Common Cause of South Carolina. “The two most important aspects of
voting are accuracy and verifiability. The systems the commission
intends to buy provide neither.”
Said Progressive Network director Brett Bursey, “We believe the
state is about to violate the federal Help America Vote Act, and the
attorney general needs to step in and ensure that we have a
fail-safe method to make every vote count.”
The state stands to lose $2 million in federal money if it fails
to replace punch-card voting machines in 11 counties, including
Lexington and Kershaw.
Reach Bandy at (803) 771-8648 or lbandy@thestate.com. |