Monday, May 28, 2007

Fayette: Not too late for paper ballot with optical-scan

Fayette doesn't need to switch to touch-screen voting machines, or switch vendors to update its voting system.

Commissioners have another option. That is to revisit the contract with Hart Intercivic which supplied the county with some 268 or so eSlate voting machines.

The county would still meet Help America Vote Act's requirements for handicapped accessibility and for the opportunity for second chance voting at the polling place by utilizing a dual system which includes Hart Intercivic's eScan voting system in addition to the eSlates.

HAVA requires one handicapped accessible voting system per precinct.

There are 103 precincts in Fayette. One eSlate per precinct would meet the requirement of HAVA. Like Bedford County and Lancaster County, Fayette could employ the eScan paper ballot optical scan system for voters to not only have a choice, but to provide for a voter-verifiable paper ballot record.

The eScans could be easily incorporated at the polling place in addition to the eSlates, thus affording every voter a choice of which unit to use.

Commissioners should renegotiate with Hart Intercivic to include the eScan voting system in addition to the eSlate.

Bedford County debuts eSlate voting machines

http://www.altoonamirror.com/articles.asp?articleID=663

New voting machines draw crowd By Helen Colwell Adams Sunday News
Published: Mar 18, 2006 11:35 PM EST

http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/21453

Chart shows how the two systems eSlate and eScan could be used in county-wide elections.

http://www.hartprintsolutions.com/files/eScan.pdf

About eScan
The eScan is a precinct-based, digital ballot-imaging component that relies on the fully integrated functionality of the Hart Voting System. After marking a paper ballot, the voter feeds it directly into the eScan at the precinct. The ballot image is stored as a Cast Vote Record on a Mobile Ballot Box flash memory card that can be retrieved and tabulated by Hart’s Tally application. eScan's capabilities include functionality to reject overvoted, undervoted, and blank ballots, thereby providing second-chance voting at the precinct.

http://www.hartintercivic.com/pr_view.php?prid=48

http://www.hartprintsolutions.com/files/eScan.pdf

This display shows the eSlate system which uses Ballot Now for tabulating of absentee ballots. The foregoing system display showed use of both the eSlate and the eScan, and is very clear on the differences.
Electronic Voting System - eSlate®

The eSlate System automates the balloting and tabulation process, eliminating the need to work with multiple paper ballot styles and offering accuracy, security and efficiency. The components provide central, regional, and precinct tabulation, as well as complete reporting and auditing, making the eSlate System a comprehensive and integrated election solution.

http://www.hartprintsolutions.com/innerpage.php?pageid=26

Commissioners hear of polling place problems
By Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard
05/25/2007
Updated 05/26/2007 12:06:04 AM EDT


The Fayette County commissioners Thursday heard about several problems that occurred at county polling places during the May 15 municipal primary.

During public comment, Uniontown City Councilman Joseph N. Giachetti characterized the problems as "chaos" in the city polling places. The primary marked only the third time in which the county's electronic voting machines were used.

Giachetti, who won the Democratic nomination for Uniontown City treasurer on May 15, said at the Jewish Community Center, where voters from Ward 1 cast their ballots, many people left because there weren't enough machines. Giachetti said that 147 people left one polling place without voting, adding that the number of people who did not vote was likely much higher throughout the city. He said a sample machine should be available, the way the old lever machines were on display in the past...

In response to Giachetti's comments, Zimmerlink said the three commissioners did not choose to replace the lever machines, it was required because of the "Florida fiasco with the chads." She said the commissioners had to comply with a federal mandate, and she thinks the eSlate system in the county was the most voter-friendly of any available.

Zimmerlink pointed out that there were very few complaints after the 2006 primary and general elections. She said a longer ballot this year may have contributed to the problems. Zimmerlink said training was held for poll workers and judges of election, and the street list has been cleaned up. She said the number of machines to place at each poll was the result of analyzing the number of voters in each precinct and the voter turnout for the past five years. She said additional public demonstrations will be done on the machines prior to the November election, and the commissioners could look at changing the number of machines at some polls.

Commissioner Vincent A. Vicites said it was "unfortunate" the commissioners were forced to get rid of the lever machines, which had 25 years of life left in them. He said the lever machines were decertified, making it illegal to use them. "We have to continue to focus on outreach," Vicites said, using the Fayette County Fair as an example of a place where a machine could be placed on display.

Vicites said the turnout for the 2006 and 2007 primaries was almost exactly the same, but the extensive ballot this time took extra time. "I don't know if you could ever get a more lengthy ballot," Vicites said.

Although Butela said touch screen machines instead of the dial, or "Etch a Sketch," machines the county purchased would have been better, Zimmerlink said it is too late to change machines.

"It is what it is. We already bought the machines. We need to continue with the education process," Zimmerlink said.

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18386243&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6

Fayette Added DRE Machines Should Include Paper Ballot Opti-Scan

The following letter to the editor writer assesses the county of Fayette needs more voting machines. That being the case, the county should consider the viability of choosing the Hart Intercivic's paper ballot based system with the optical scan reader as the only system which provides a paper ballot record marked by the voter and available in the case of a need for a "hand" recount.

Voters need more machines
05/24/2007

Hats off to the registered voters of Uniontown's First Ward for their diligence and persistence on primary Election Day. They ran the gauntlet of campaign workers who occupied the parking spaces with their vehicles and lawn chairs, only to gasp with dismay when confronted with the line of waiting voters inside the poll.


They were unhappy but waited patiently in line with crying children, growling stomachs and weary bodies ... waiting to reach one of the only two voting machines. The final voter pushed the red "cast ballot" button at 9:30 p.m., a mere 1-1/2 hours following the close of the polls.

What was the problem? Had the voters come out in droves? On the contrary. The final count of 348 voters was 187 less than the number of voters in November 2006. The answer is that the allotted two voting machines is insufficient to accommodate elections with a lengthy ballot.

This was compounded by the tedious and time-consuming scrolling process required to review the entire ballot. Many discouraged people left without voting at all, and it appears Ward 1 was not the only precinct in this predicament.

We ask the county commissioners to purchase the necessary voting machines so that this situation does not arise again. The commissioners want people to vote. Please permit them do so in a timely fashion.

Sushila Warman

Uniontown

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Initiative Referendum Measure in PA?

Problem is, the United States is not a representative democracy, and each of the states are guaranteed a republican form of government.

Careful what we want as initiatives and referendums would be binding, even on the people who "passed" the "legislation."

But if the citizens of PA really want this obligation, even though only 25 percent turn out to even vote in hotly contested primary elections, then go for it. Pretty soon, it will become obvious that those behind these kinds of movements really want centralized government and eventually world government.

They give the people these kinds of "bones" to make them think they'll have a say when that comes about.

Pa. may get 'initiative and referendum'
State senate panel eyes proposal that would give citizens greater voice in legislative process
Thursday, May 24, 2007

By Tom Barnes, Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau



HARRISBURG -- For more than 20 years, state Sen. James Rhoades has been trying to give Pennsylvanians the power of "initiative and referendum,'' allowing citizens to enact new laws directly without going through the state Legislature, as well as the power to overturn measures passed by the Legislature.

No one has seemed interested, until now.

"It's been so long, I had to dust off my old proposals to review them for this hearing,'' the Schuylkill County Republican joked yesterday to the Senate's State Government Committee.

The committee will vote by June 30 on Senate Bill 137, Mr. Rhoades' proposal to create the possibility of "initiative and referendum'' in Pennsylvania.

Such a major change "will give individual citizens a greater voice in the legislative process, and will help government be more responsive to those we serve,'' said Mr. Rhoades. "Increasing the public's say in the laws we pass in Harrisburg will stimulate public involvement.''

His proposal got support yesterday from Common Cause/Pennsylvania and the Commonwealth Foundation, a conservative think tank. Common Cause Executive Director Barry Kauffman said 28 states already give their citizens the power of initiative and referendum, the most notable being California, where election ballots sometimes contain 10 or more measures up for a popular vote.

"Initiative'' gives a citizens group the power to collect a certain amount of signatures of registered voters, based on the number of votes cast in the last election for governor. If the signatures are verified, a proposed law or constitutional change is put to a statewide referendum without waiting for the Legislature to act.

For example, citizens could put on the ballot a measure to change the state tax structure, such as rolling the income tax back to 2.8 percent, where it was until the Legislature increased it to 3.07 percent in 2004.

"Referendum'' means a citizens group can collect signatures to try to overturn a law passed by the Legislature. For example, citizens could have used such power to overturn the legislators' 2005 pay raise.

"Our organization has been a strong advocate of initiative and referendum for nearly two decades,'' said Mr. Kauffman. "Citizens recognize these tools for what they are, essential legislative safety valves necessary to ensure an effectively functioning representative democracy.''

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07144/788629-85.stm

Fayette Another Grant Program Cause We're Distressed

Unfortunately, most taxpayers are just too busy working 12 hours or two jobs to pay for increasing taxes and really don't notice when another redistribution of taxes scheme comes along.

Grants from state government are taxpayers monies. Keystone Opportunity zones are virtually tax-free zones for a period of years.

The memo-of-understanding is the local taxing bodies agreeing to waive or exempt for a period of time some taxes for the chosen who will locate, or re-locate, from one end of the county to the zone.

The KIZ is another venue for one business to be forgiven taxes in some measure while another pays and pays and pays...

Meanwhile, taxpayers still pay for maintenance of a ferry boat which services primarily state correctional institution employees. How is this cost effective?

Keystone Innovation Zone on county agenda
By Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard
05/24/2007
Updated 05/23/2007


The Fayette County commissioners will vote today on ratifying a partnership with Fay-Penn Economic Development Council regarding the Fayette/Washington Keystone Innovation Zone, a program designed to promote and foster collaboration among institutions of higher education, their surrounding communities and local businesses.


The commissioners were sent a letter earlier this month by Fay-Penn President/CEO Michael Krajovic asking them to sign a memorandum of understanding in support of officially establishing the KIZ, which when established, can receive up to $750,000 in grant funds.

Although the item is on today's agenda, it is a ratification since two of the three commissioners have already signed off on it. Commissioners Vincent A. Vicites and Joseph A. Hardy III have already given their written approval, while Commission Chairwoman Angela M. Zimmerlink has not.

According to an official Web site, the idea behind the program is for the Department of Community and Economic Development to provide grant funds to community/university partnerships to generate job growth through tech transfer and entrepreneurship. It is focused around campuses and the property near colleges and universities.

Vicites said he is in support of the program because Fayette has to compete with other counties across the state for similar state programs and he doesn't see anything wrong in supporting such a venture.

"We have to have every incentive available to attract jobs," Vicites said. "If we don't get involved with the KIZ, we won't have the opportunity other counties do."

Vicites said the KIZ program, through the state DCED, is a great opportunity involving higher education, which is designed to expand and develop employment efforts. Vicites said a study is being done first and signing the memorandum is a step in the process to support the effort.

Zimmerlink said Wednesday she is against the program and others like it, saying it has been proven that these programs do not work. "Gov. Rendell's economic development stimulus program for Pennsylvania continues to fail. These programs take money from us the taxpayers and then the government and bureaucratic agencies redistribute it to others as they see fit, under the guise of economic development," Zimmerlink said.

"Under both the Democratic and Republican leadership, Pennsylvania has been one of the top five states in spending in these economic development schemes yet continues to rank in the bottom five in growth yet they continue down this path," added Zimmerlink.

Zimmerlink said the KIZ is "just another corporate welfare program, which gives tax breaks to selected businesses and now adds the colleges and universities to share in the money after the economic development agencies get their share."

As she has in the past, Zimmerlink said endeavors to bring jobs should be spent on other efforts. "Rather than continuing to redirect our tax dollars to these proven ineffective taxpayer subsidized programs, our governor and state legislators need to lower taxes for all Pennsylvania businesses and individuals because we can decide for ourselves how best to spend and invest our money," Zimmerlink said.

A spokesman for Joseph A. Hardy III said Hardy had no comment, but will be available today to discuss the issue.

Once approved, the KIZ partnership will include Fay-Penn, Penn State Fayette, California University of Pennsylvania, Washington and Jefferson College, Fayette and Washington counties and the Redevelopment Authority of the County of Washington.

Krajovic said Wednesday that program was launched five years ago by the state through the DCED. Krajovic said to date, Fay-Penn has received $25,000 in matching funds in addition to $25,000 from the state for a planning grant for a KIZ.

Krajovic said Fay-Penn has been seeking memorandums of understanding from businesses, legislators and other agencies in preparation for submitting an application for "full designation" of a KIZ. He said the application would be sent as soon as possible...

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18381365&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6



Back zone
Saturday, May 26, 2007

Fayette County commissioners voted Thursday to support Fay-Penn Economic Development Council's partnership in creating a Fayette-Washington Keystone Innovation Zone.
Commissioner Vince Vicites said the collaboration of local companies and colleges will benefit the county, while board Chairwoman Angela Zimmerlink lamented that similar programs funded by state grant tend not to work.

Commissioner Joe Hardy did not give his opinion about the topic during the public meeting.

A Keystone Innovation Zone offers grants through the state Department of Community and Economic Development to generate job growth through the tech fields...

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/dailycourier/news/uniontown/s_509930.html

...Commissioners also approved a contract Thursday with Campbell Transportation, of Charleroi, for an inspection of the Fredericktown Ferry.

Fayette will split the $57,000 cost with Washington County.

Each county pays half of the cost to operate the century-old ferry, which crosses the Monongahela River.

Ridership surveys have shown the ferry has been a popular mode of transportation for employees of Fayette's State Correctional Institution at Luzerne Township since its opening in August 2003...

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/dailycourier/news/uniontown/s_509930.html

Keeping track: Identification for U.S. workers

Never-ending attempt to track valid citizens of the United States. Why don't the border security guards who attempt to apprehend illegal aliens simply shoot em with an embedded chip.

Work bill would create new ID database
By Anne Broache and Declan McCullagh
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: May 21, 2007, 1:28 PM PDT

The U.S. Congress is poised to create a set of massive new government databases that all employers must use to investigate the immigration status of current and future employees or face stiff penalties.

The so-called Employment Eligibility Verification System would be established as part of a bill that senators began debating on Monday, a procedure that is likely to continue through June and would represent the most extensive rewrite of immigration and visa laws in a generation. Because anyone who fails a database check would be out of a job, the proposed database already has drawn comparisons with the "no-fly list" and is being criticized by civil libertarians and business groups.

All employers--at least 7 million, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce--would be required to verify identity documents provided by both existing employees and potential hires, the legislation says. The data, including Social Security numbers, would be provided to Homeland Security, on penalty of perjury, and the government databases would provide a work authorization confirmation within three business days.

There is no privacy requirement that the federal government delete the information after work authorization is given or denied. Employers would be required to keep all the documentation in paper or electronic form for seven years "and make it available for inspection by officers of the Department of Homeland Security" and the Department of Labor. It would also open up the IRS' databases of confidential taxpayer information to Homeland Security and its contractors.

Even parents who hire nannies might be covered. The language in the bill, called the Secure Borders, Economic Opportunity and Immigration Reform Act (PDF), defines an employer as "any person or entity hiring, recruiting, or referring an individual for employment in the United States" and does not appear to explicitly exempt individuals or small businesses. (Its Senate sponsors did not immediately respond on Monday to queries on this point.)...

http://news.com.com/2100-1028_3-6185466.html

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Taxpayers Ferry Boat vs Clean Voter Registry

The ferryboat is on the agenda of county commissioners, again. Meanwhile, the county's voter datatabase was under partial scrutiny in March due to a challenge to nomination petitions. A judge noted on the final day of proceedings the county's database needed an update, but commissioners were strapped for funding.

Commissioners to vote on ferry maintenance
By: Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard
05/23/2007
The Fayette County commissioners voted Tuesday to enter into an agreement with a Charleroi company to perform the five-year dry dock and inspection services for the Fredericktown Ferry.

Commissioners Vincent A. Vicites and Angela M. Zimmerlink voted to place on Thursday's agenda a motion to award the contract to Campbell Transportation Co. for a total cost of $57,000. Commissioner Joseph A. Hardy III was absent.

The cost of the contract will be split between Fayette and Washington counties, which share the cost to run the ferry across the Monongahela River. Paul Nixon, head of the bridge department, said he sent out 10 bid packets and received two in return. Nixon said the second bid was received from Ohio River Salvage of Cresson.
Last month, Nixon said the U.S. Coast Guard mandates that the work be performed every five years.

He said the ferry must be towed to the site where the service will be performed and then pulled out of the water, and any needed repairs are performed.
Nixon said five years ago the work was conducted in Elizabeth, and the total cost was about $15,000...

Zimmerlink also instructed Nixon to provide information to her about the last time the work was performed, when it was not put out to bid...

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18374521&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Highway Toll on Taxpayers

The 99-year taxpayer boondoggle
by Henry Lamb Posted: May 19, 2007 World Net Daily


American roads are the hottest commodity in the international marketplace. State and local governments are falling all over themselves to sell off highways, bridges and all sorts of other revenue-producing infrastructure to international financiers who are eager to snap up structures Americans have already paid for – and for which they continue to pay maintenance costs through endless taxes.

The Chicago Skyway, for example, brought $1.83 billion from a Spanish-Australian partnership. The 157-mile Indiana Tollway brought $3.85 billion from the same partnership. And the state of Texas has recently concluded a deal to sell a Trans-Texas Corridor for $7.2 billion to the same Spanish company that partnered with a Texas construction company.

What's going on here? Why are government officials so eager to sell off our infrastructure? Because it's a win-win deal for everyone – except the people who pay taxes and use the highways. Governments get a pot full of cash up front, and the "public-private" partnerships get a long-term cash cow. The taxpayers and highway users get ______ – well, you fill in the blank...

Actually, these "sales" are long-term leases, which is much worse than an outright sale. The Chicago Skyway deal is for 99 years. The Indiana Tollway is for 75 years. In what condition will these important roads be when they are returned to government? The folks who celebrate the deals today – and spend the billions – will be pushing up daisies by the time a new crop of government officials will have to explain why the roads have crumbled.

The roads that exist today were bought with taxes and tolls. They are maintained with taxes and tolls. Neither taxes nor tolls will be reduced when these roads are sold to public-private partnerships. In fact, taxes are likely to increase, and the tolls are certain to increase. Tolls for commercial use on the Indiana Tollway were scheduled to double during the first three years of the deal. Auto tolls would remain flat for the first three years, and then "catch up" with the commercial rate.

When the taxpayers and highway users get slapped in the budget by these increases and complain to their elected officials, the elected officials can do nothing but say "We're sorry; it's out of our hands for the next 99 years." When the roads begin to crumble and potholes begin to appear, elected officials can do nothing but say, "We're sorry; it's out of our hands for the next 99 years."

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=55771


See our previous highlight of the issue of leasing PA highway scheme

Outsource Giveaway: PA Toll Roads & NAFTA Superhigh-jack

http://netthetruthonline.blogspot.com/2006/12/outsource-giveaway-pa-toll-roads-nafta.html

More

Selling Our Toll Road: Good or Retrograde Idea? Neal Pearce

http://www.publictransportation.org/news/features/documents/070409_leasing_roads.pdf

http://www.postwritersgroup.com/archives/peir0408.html

Pennsylvania Must Join Private Sector, Boost Infrastructure
Public-private partnerships can facilitate shift towards 21st century transportation network
By Geoffrey Segal
Patriot News Jan. 21, 2007


http://www.reason.org/commentaries/segal_20070121.shtml

Spinning toll roads' asphalt into goldPennsylvania and New Jersey are considering leasing them to firms. The states could get billions. But at what cost?
By Paul Nussbaum
Inquirer Staff Writer


What is a turnpike worth?
The answer to that billion-dollar question is critical in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, where venerable state-owned toll roads now are being viewed less as ribbons of commerce than as streams of revenue.

Political leaders in both states are considering leasing the toll roads to private operators. What the states receive is clear: lots of cash. What they lose is the subject of intense debate.

Estimates of the roads' value vary wildly - from $2 billion to $30 billion for the Pennsylvania Turnpike and from $12 billion to $38 billion or more for the New Jersey Turnpike and the Garden State Parkway. Because there are few examples to look to for guidance, the two states are essentially guinea pigs in their own experiments.

"We're all feeling our way along here," said Tim Carson, vice chairman of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. "A lot of people will be looking to Pennsylvania and the kind of decisions we make because the impact will be felt for generations."

The states, eager to get money for transportation projects or debt relief, see their toll roads as potential cash cows.

In a leasing arrangement, the state gives the right to operate the road - and collect tolls - to a company. In exchange, the company pays the state a lump sum, or a cash payment plus periodic shares of the revenue.

So the crucial issue, for motorists and potential investors, is how high could tolls go? The higher the tolls, the more valuable the turnpike. So states find themselves with competing interests - to get as much money as possible or to keep highway users happy. And state residents also may be conflicted - as owners of the toll roads and as payers of the tolls...

http://www.philly.com/philly/business/20070225_Spinning_toll_roads_asphalt_into_gold.html

Friday, May 18, 2007

Paper Ballot with Optical Scan Second Chance Voting

Net the Truth Online has provided both sides of the issue of paper ballot vs only electronic direct recording voting systems on this site.

The issue has become dramatically different over the course of some mere 5 years.

There is a split among election watchdogs, election integrity activists that has recently developed on the issue of Rush Holt's bill, known as HR 811.

Review the site for material and information on that issue.

What the issue should boil down to is this:

What do voters who show up at the polling place want when they vote?

Do they want a paper ballot? Do they want to use an electronic voting machine to record their vote?

Because of the prevalance of individuals making unintended errors on a paper ballot one of the major requirements of the Help America Vote Act is for what is known as second chance voting.

That affords the voter a chance to correct a ballot before actually casting the ballot and having the ballot then recorded and subsequently counted according to the laws of the state.

I cite Dr. David Dill's recommendations for this reason. A paper ballot is produced on an optical scan voting system. In the event of a need for a recount, a paper ballot marked by the voter with the opportunity for second chance voting is the only viable "evidence" of a voter's true and clear intent.

However, a paper ballot without the chance for review before casting the ballot could contain errors and illegible, or stray, marks which may invalidate the ballot. Many absentee ballots are so voided and left uncounted many often become subject to someone else's interpretation of the "intent of the voter" during a hand recount.

Some activists call for a complete overhaul of technology - eliminating it - and going to paper ballots with only hand counts.

It is up to you to weigh the presentations of any and all experts.

It is the suggestion of Net the Truth Online to employ a paper ballot with optical scan system and the opportunity for second chance voting at the polling place.

We provide the following for your information.

Senate Rules Committee Testimony of David Dill

by David Dill, VerifiedVoting.org
June 21st, 2005

Testimony David L. Dill, Professor of Computer Science, Stanford University and Founder of the Verified Voting Foundation and VerifiedVoting.org

Before the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, June 21, 2005
Hearing on Voter Verification in the Federal Election Process

http://www.verifiedvoting.org/article.php?id=5789

Electronic Voting An Overview of the Problem

http://www.american.edu/ia/cfer/0418test/dill.pdf

The perils of paperless e-voting
ASK THIS | July 08, 2005
Let’s say your state or local election officials have a paperless e-voting system or are thinking about switching to one. Here are some questions you should ask to see if they’ve really thought it through.
By David Dill

dill@cs.stanford.edu

http://www.niemanwatchdog.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=ask_this.view&askthisid=00122










http://www.verifiedvoting.org/article.php?id=5789

Fayette County Saga of Electronic Voting

An article in the Herald-Standard today Poll problems challenged election officials By Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard 05/18/2007 has highlighted the long lines throughout the county of Fayette on election day.

We noted the unacceptable occurrence in a previous post.

Long Lines at Polls Hour Waits

http://netthetruthonline.blogspot.com/2007/05/fayette-long-lines-at-polls-hour-waits.html

We've also presented a solution which doesn't include a replacement of our current eSlate machines with the formidable and controversial electronic touch-screen voting machine system.

The solution is the option of paper ballots with optical scan readers.

Both Hart Intercivic's eSlate and eScan are certified for use in Pennsylvania.

http://www.hava.state.pa.us/hava/lib/hava/votingsystemexamination/vs_certification_status.pdf

According to the Help America Vote Act's requirements, there is to be one handicapped accessible voting system per precinct available. For Fayette that means 103 handicapped accessible units.

A second unit and third and fourth if necessary do not have to be equipped with the handicapped accessible features as the initial unit and they are not.

Those additional units can include the eScans known as an optical scan voting system which Hart Intercivic produces and incorporates into its overall system.

Further, because of the Help america Vote Act's requirements for second chance voting and handicapped accessibility, the eScan voting system is usable to provide the second chance voting.

The eScan, used in Boulder County, is a precinct-based, digital ballot-imaging component that relies on the fully integrated functionality of the Hart Voting System. After marking a paper ballot, the voter feeds it directly into the eScan at the precinct. The ballot image is stored as a Cast Vote Record on a Mobile Ballot Box flash memory card that can be retrieved and tabulated by Hart’s Tally application. eScan's capabilities include functionality to reject overvoted, undervoted and blank ballots, thereby providing second-chance voting at the precinct.

http://www.hartic.com/pr_view.php?prid=57

This isn't to claim that there are not the potential for problems associated with paper ballot optical scan systems. The Internet is replete with the Hursti Report and so forth for your own research purposes. A visit to Black Box Voting Forum is an absolute must for reading and obtaining valuable information.

But if the county of Fayette needs a solution to long lines at the polling place and the potential for more disenfranchisement of voters in November 2007, it is not to replace our current voting system with touch screen machines.

And the solution isn't to obtain 3rd, 4th, or 5th eSlate voting machines.

The issue absolutely does need to be studied more prior to the presidential election of 2008.

It may be that the next administration of county commissioners will determine another vendor that provides an automark paper ballot system which is fully handicapped accessible should replace Hart Intercivic's offerings. It may be that Hart Intercivic is in the development stages of adding on the accessibility features to the eScans.

At this time, with a mere few months fastly going, Fayette has to address the situation of voters leaving the polls before voting, thus foregoing their right to vote, and the situation of unfamiliarity of the machines, and the cumbersome eSlate turn wheel that takes a long time to use to cast a write-in vote.

The only way to address those situations is with a paper ballot optical scan system. Now.

In addition, there were incidences of problems with using the eSlate for the offices of justices on the ballot. Those have not yet been reported upon, and the board of commissioners needs to make a full report on any and all such reported problems.

Net the Truth Online opinion

Prior to the current board of county commissioners purchasing the eSlate only voting system back in March 2006, a series of informative emails had been sent to each of them requesting consideration of purchasing both the Hart Intercivic eSlate and eScan voting systems.

The final letter to Fayette Commissioners Thursday, March 30, 2006 is duplicated here to show the 2006 board of commissioners was well aware a year ago that at least one other county with the Hart Intercivic vendor had selected the dual system to provide citizens with a choice of using either the electronic eSlate (handicapped accessible) or the eScan (paper ballot with optical scan reader/counter.

In the event the current board of commissioners determines more machines are needed for November's election, the commissioners should revisit the contract with Hart Intercivic.

They should contact Bedford and Lancaster counties to determine how their dual systems worked during the past elections, particularly this election.

Our board should provide a system that gives voters the choice on election day of which system to use as their preference.

That can include one eSlate (DAU) unit for each precinct (handicapped accessible per HAVA requirements) and one - or more if necessary - eScans.

Anything less at this time for Fayette County is unacceptable.

My final letter to Board of Fayette County Commissioners Thursday, March 30, 2006

Since the board of commissioners has not yet finalized a contract with Hart InterCivic concerning the purchase of the eSlate voting machines, I am supplying further information to the board to consider providing the voters of Fayette County with both the eSlate and eScan (Hart InterCivic) units at each precinct polling place.

Lancaster County chose to have one eSlate (DAU) and one eScan (Precinct Digital Capture of Voter Selection) for voters to have a choice at the polling place on Election Day. Comments made in the article linked convinced me this would be right for Fayette.

“I found the electronic machine was very easy,” said John Dodson, of Conoy Township, after getting an explanation of how the eSlate works and taking the time to play with the machine.

His wife, Ruth Dodson, agreed, and said the eScan, which reads marks on paper ballots, is a good way to keep a paper trail of votes.

“I think it’s a doable thing,” said one poll worker, who asked not to be named; while older people still are likely to be uncomfortable with a new way of voting, the combination of electronic and paper ballots gives voters a choice of technologies.

http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/21453

The Lancaster system seems to satisfy the person who found the eSlate easy to use, the person who felt the eScan was suitable for a paper trail, and according to the poll worker, the combination of electronic and paper ballots gives voters a choice of technologies.

The following chart shows how Hart InterCivic utilizes both the eSlate (Disabled Access Unit) and eScan Precinct Digital Capture of Voter Selection.

http://www.hartprintsolutions.com/files/eScan.pdf

Unfortunately the Pennsylvania legislature has not yet acted on the Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail for electronic voting systems.

With the eScan - voters (who also don't want to vote absentee because second-chance voting is not afforded) will have the opportunity to use the paper-ballot at the voting precinct in accordance with second-chance voting (a HAVA requirement), and most importantly, the capability to verify their ballot on paper.

In the event Fayette doesn't provide the paper-ballot eScan Optical Scan Reader (PA certified 1/30/06), I am attempting to find information to answer whether it is a right of a citizen to demand the use of a paper ballot at the polling place on Election Day.

http://www.hava.state.pa.us/hava/cwp/view.asp?a=1187&q=442284&havaNav



Poll problems challenged election officials
By Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard
05/18/2007
Updated 05/18/2007 12:20:22 AM EDT
An extensive ballot and unfamiliarity with the new electronic voting machines apparently combined to make it a very long day for some of the Fayette County voters who took to the polls for Tuesday's municipal primary.


Laurie Lint, director of the Fayette County Election Bureau, said she spent most of Wednesday fielding complaints about problems that occurred throughout the county on Election Day. Lint said people complained that lines at the polls were too long and some voters complained that they didn't like the machines. Tuesday marked only the third election with the machines, which replaced the lever machines that were used in the county for decades.

Fred Lebder, chairman of the Fayette County Democratic Party, said a lot of people did not vote. Lebder said it took him 45 minutes to vote at Third Presbyterian Church in Uniontown and he spoke with someone who said it took an hour and 15 minutes for him to vote.

"There is no question a lot of people went to the polls and didn't vote because of the time factor," Lebder said. "When I was there people left (without voting)."

Last year, the county commissioners voted to purchase 268 eSlate voting machines from Hart Intercivic of Texas, after a federal mandate requiring the purchase of electronic machines throughout the country. The machines cost $2,500 each.

The eSlate voting machines are not touch-screen machines; instead, voters must turn a dial and push buttons to register their choices on the screen. "The machines are probably the worst things they could have gotten," Lebder said, although he added that once you vote on them, they are not that bad.

Lebder said in elections with the old lever machines, there was always a model machine at every poll, but nothing like that is being done today.

Vincent Zapotosky, who received one of the two Democratic nominations for Fayette County commissioner, said the county commissioners should have invested in more voter-friendly machines.

"I saw people walk away," Zapotosky said. "This dial thing is ridiculous."

Zapotosky said he knows of at least one woman who votes at Clark School in North Union Township who did not vote. "I lost a vote at Clark School," Zapotosky said.

According to unofficial results with 103 out of 103 precincts reporting, 27,590 of the county's 89,403 registered voters went to the polls, or slightly less than 31 percent. Lebder had predicted a turnout of about 44 percent.

Lebder said some people might not have come out to vote because they were in doubt of the machines. He said the machines used in the county are not the ones the election director recommended.

Sushila Warman, judge of elections for Uniontown's First Ward where voting is held at the Jewish Community Center, said the lines were so long that the final ballot wasn't cast until 9:30 p.m., an hour and a half after the polls closed.

Warman said the two voting machines at that polling place were insufficient to accommodate voters, especially with such a lengthy ballot for city residents.

"Many discouraged people left without voting at all and it appears Ward 1 was not the only precinct in this predicament," said Warman, urging the the commissioners to purchase additional machines.

Lint said it is not uncommon for polling places to remain open after voting ends at 8 p.m., particularly when there is a longer ballot.

Commission Chairwoman Angela M. Zimmerlink, who visited several polling places throughout Tuesday, said she received both negative and positive feedback from people. Among the negative feedback was a woman who had difficulty finding a parking place at the Jewish Community Center, a judge of election at Redstone Recreation Center typing in the access code too soon (which expires in 10 minutes if you have not logged into a machine) and long lines at Third Presbyterian Church in Uniontown.

Among the complaints that have been made to the Herald-Standard are that some people inadvertently voted before they were finished making their selections.

Lint said what voters need to remember is that hitting the "cast ballot" light "is the same as opening the curtain" with the old lever machines, only when you push it, the voting session is over.

Zimmerlink said that although for most voters this was the third time using the machines, "some people young and old alike did forget how to use them." Zimmerlink said she did not get any complaints from people who left without voting, but did talk to one person who said they felt like leaving.

Zimmerlink said since the machines were purchased, she believes the county has made great improvements in getting the word out. She said prior to the primary, HSTV and Armstrong Cable ran instructional videos, and the county libraries had tapes on hand and an interactive demonstration is available on the county's Web site.

Zimmerlink said that additionally, a sample machine was available outside the election bureau office in the Public Safety Building for the past few weeks. She said she doesn't agree that at this time purchasing additional machines is the answer. "People need to realize it is not an issue of money. There are ways to make additional improvements," Zimmerlink said.

The number of machines at each precinct was determined last year by calculating the number of voters and average turnout in the last several elections, Zimmerlink said. "We purchased more than we thought we needed," she said.

Last year's primary and general elections went more smoothly, with Zimmerlink saying she believes the lengthy ballot this time around contributed to problems.

She said in addition to the public demonstrations held for the machines, there are instructions in the voting booth and posters outside the voting booths. Zimmerlink said the she is not necessarily an advocate of the electronic machines, saying she would have kept the lever machines if that were an option. She said the new machines make the voter more aware of what they are doing because you have to take your time and read.

Although Zimmerlink said she heard from about a half-dozen people that the county should have purchased touch screen machines, she believes the dial machines are more voter friendly than the other ones the commissioners could have chosen...

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18356622&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6


Letter to editor online posted to Herald Standard May 18, 2007 (Poll problems challenged election officials By Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard 05/18/2007)

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18356622&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6

The solution to the situations that arose during the Primary is not touch-screen voting machines. Those would be a nightmare as has been shown around the country.

The solution is the option for voters to have a choice at the polling place. That choice includes a paper ballot based system.

Hart Intercivic makes both the eSlate electronic voting machine and the sScan paper ballot optical scan electronic voting machine.

Both are certified by the state of Pennsylvania.

http://www.hava.state.pa.us/hava/lib/hava/votingsystemexamination/vs_certification_status.pdf

4 Pennsylvania counties selected Hart Intercivic systems. But unlike Fayette, Bedford and Lancaster counties selected a dual system for their voters: the turn-wheel eSlate and the paper ballot based eScan.

Should the county have to purchase more electronic voting machines for November, the county commissioners should strike a new deal with Hart Intercivic to employ at least one paper ballot optical scan voting system - eScan - in each precinct.

Like Bedford and Lancaster counties, voters who arrive at the polling place should be afforded a choice of voting systems.

Those counties could be contacted to determine how their dual voting systems worked during the past voting experiences.

It may be that long lines are not able to be prevented, however, use of a paper ballot based voting system has the added advantage of providing a true paper ballot at the polling place.

That should be afforded as a right of the individual voter to have that choice.

Bedford County debuts eSlate voting machines

http://www.altoonamirror.com/articles.asp?articleID=663

New voting machines draw crowd By Helen Colwell Adams Sunday News
Published: Mar 18, 2006 11:35 PM EST

http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/21453

Chart shows how the two systems eSlate and eScan could be used in county-wide elections.

http://www.hartprintsolutions.com/files/eScan.pdf

About eScan
The eScan is a precinct-based, digital ballot-imaging component that relies on the fully integrated functionality of the Hart Voting System. After marking a paper ballot, the voter feeds it directly into the eScan at the precinct. The ballot image is stored as a Cast Vote Record on a Mobile Ballot Box flash memory card that can be retrieved and tabulated by Hart’s Tally application. eScan's capabilities include functionality to reject overvoted, undervoted, and blank ballots, thereby providing second-chance voting at the precinct.

http://www.hartintercivic.com/pr_view.php?prid=48

http://www.hartprintsolutions.com/files/eScan.pdf

This display shows the eSlate system which uses Ballot Now for tabulating of absentee ballots. The foregoing system display showed use of both the eSlate and the eScan, and is very clear on the differences.
Electronic Voting System - eSlate®

The eSlate System automates the balloting and tabulation process, eliminating the need to work with multiple paper ballot styles and offering accuracy, security and efficiency. The components provide central, regional, and precinct tabulation, as well as complete reporting and auditing, making the eSlate System a comprehensive and integrated election solution.

http://www.hartprintsolutions.com/innerpage.php?pageid=26


Related


submitted Tuesday March 28, 2006 to Fayette commissioners via email

I breathed a long sigh of relief when Fayette Commissioners unanimously chose a non-touch screen Direct Recording Electronic (DRE) voting system, Hart InterCivic’s eSlate.

I remember the Hart InterCivic representative’s refrain from the meetings held at the Election Bureau in January for poll workers, judges of election, commissioners, and the public - Tough Screen versus Touch Screen.

What a difference one letter makes.

All vendors responded to a series of questions about security, battery backup, hard-drives, and the Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail. Lifetime of the units, memory storage, handicapped accessibility, data flow, and transmission of results were discussed. Vendors supplied informational brochures.

Hart InterCivic’s White Paper Securing the eSlate Electronic Voting System Application Security Information is also online as well as demonstration of the eSlate as linked from the Fayette County website.

http://www.hartic.com/files/HART_SYMANTEC_SECURITY_REPORT_White_Paper.pdf

My sigh of relief continued after locating (Internet) supportive material. An Austin Chronicle piece, “How Safe Is Your E-Vote?” touted Hart InterCivic’s eSlate as “an apparently more reliable product,” as distinguished from systems known as “touch-screen” which have suffered “reports of malfunctions, computer or human in origin, that have caused problems in actual elections. Among other things, there have been instances of more votes being registered than were actually cast, voters pressing on one candidate but the machine registering the vote for another, or votes simply vanishing.”

The article covers technical and security-related concerns which have been the focus of computer scientists around the country. ”Perhaps most important, the eSlate system has no external connections – no hookups to phone lines, the Internet, or an intranet. While some systems allow results to be sent by modem to a central vote-counting facility, the eSlate is comparatively old-fashioned – much like an old-style ballot box, the devices ("mediums") into which votes are recorded are removed by the election judges after the polls close and physically transported to the central counting station.“

http://www.austinchronicle.com/issues/dispatch/2004-02-20/pols_feature.html

My sigh of relief was intact. No modems, no touch screen, no phone lines.

Then, citizen activists pointed me to an October 2005 Government Accountability Office report entitled: “Federal Efforts to Improve Security and Reliability of Electronic Voting Systems Are Under Way, but Key Activities Need to Be Completed.”

http://www.gao.gov/htext/d05956.html

I found Lawrence Norden’s November 28, 2005 piece “Following up on an important GAO report on electronic voting” which posed “Questions for your state and local election officials raised by the Government Accountability Office Report.”

http://niemanwatchdog.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=ask_this.view&askthisid=00154

Doubt about all electronic voting systems surfaced, not just “touch screens.”

Remember the Voter Verified (Verifiable) Paper Audit Trail?

According to the GAO report, there are concerns with defining and agreeing on it. Experts have varying positions.

Vivion Vinson interviewed Dr. Ted Selker who developed “his own method for paperless, secure electronic voting” and Dr. Rebecca Mercuri who developed “a model for secure electronic voting with a paper ballot.”

http://www.afsc.org/pwork/0312/031214.htm

Faced with the commissioners about to enter a contract with Hart InterCivic, and all of this information, I recalled how I felt after personally using the electronic DREs at Election Bureau meetings.

I had no visible paper record of the ballot about to be finally cast. I could see my selections on the eSlate screen, but couldn’t review and verify my selections according to Rebecca Mercuri’s method.

What’s the solution? Should Fayette wait until computer experts all agree, or for Harrisburg and the Federal Government to iron out differences of opinion on audit trails and other technical issues?

Should Fayette revert to an all paper-ballot system with hand counts?

Of course not, the whole point of technology is to cut down on problems inherent in paper-ballot voting, namely over-votes which result in spoiled discarded and uncounted ballots and under-votes or a blank ballot which may be re-interpreted incorrectly when hand-counted.

But like Lancaster County, which adopted both Hart InterCivic’s eSlate and eScan, Fayette Commissioners have in their power a means to provide a choice of a different kind to all voters at the polling place.

Commissioners have not yet “signed” a contract with Hart InterCivic

When they do, it should be for a mix of both Hart InterCivic’s eSlate and eScan.

Both machines comply with HAVA and are PA-certified.

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/id86.html


Related material and information

Vote Fix

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/

Paper Ballot Make it a Voter Choice

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/id85.html

Holding Breath Will Fayette Purchase Paper Ballot eScan and Electronic eSlate?

submitted Tuesday March 28, 2006 to Fayette commissioners via email

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/id86.html

Activists Absent?

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/id81.html

Know it: Second Chance Voting

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/id88.html

Opinion: None of the Above

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/id78.html


7 PM Wednesday, March 22, 2006 Uniontown (PA): according to a 7 PM HSTV News 19 report, (transcript) the Fayette County Board of Commissioners chose unanimously Hart InterCivic's e-slate voting system. Training sessions for judges of elections and poll workers may begin at the end of the month.

opinion submitted to Board of Fayette County commissioners via email
opinion posted Herald Standard "Commissioners to make decision on voting machines today" Added: Wednesday March 22, 2006 at 09:07 AM Vote None of the Above

http://dirtline.tripod.com/votefix/id78.html


Related

http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=329196

Lancaster County escan test cards used caused glitches

http://www.votersunite.org/electionproblems.asp?offset=40&sort=&selectstate=&selectvendor=&selectproblemtype

Glitch to keep polls open until 9 p.m.
1 in 5 paper-ballot machines malfunction, causing delays.

By Jane Holahan, Anya Litvak And Ryan Robinson
Lancaster New Era
Published: Nov 07, 2006 2:31 PM EST

LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - Last May, Lancaster County voting officials declared themselves pleased with the new eScan and eSlate voting machines used for the first time in the primary election.

http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/27525

Thursday, May 17, 2007

David Dill vs Nancy Tobi On Holt HR 811

For our information

It's Time to Outlaw Paperless Electronic Voting in the U.S. (13 comments ) by David Dill 4-29-2007

Four years ago, when I began publicly opposing paperless electronic voting, passing a federal law to require voter-verified paper records (VVPRs) seemed an impossible dream. Rep. Rush Holt introduced such a bill in 2003, and another in 2005, but both bills languished in committee until the clock ran out.

The dream is now achievable, due in part to the unending stream of problems caused by paperless voting machines in recent years.

HR 811, the third incarnation of the Holt bill, is a critical measure needed to protect the integrity of our elections, and it now has very good prospects of being enacted. It already has 210 co-sponsors in the House, where only 218 votes are required to pass it.
There are two provisions in HR 811 that are especially vital for restoring trust in American elections: A nationwide requirement for voter-verified paper records, and stringent random manual counts of those records, to make sure they agree with the announced vote totals. The requirements in the Holt bill are superior to those in almost every state of the country (there are now 22 states with significant amounts of paperless electronic voting, and only 13 states require random audits of VVPRs).

Success is not assured, however. The forces that have blocked previous bills are still active, especially vendors of current poorly performing equipment. Also, various concerns, reasonable and otherwise, have been raised about the bill by other parties.

Some groups insist on optical scan machines, which read and count hand-marked paper ballots, and are not supporting HR 811 because it still allows the use of touch-screen machines. However, under HR 811, those machines must be equipped with so-called voter-verifiable paper trails, which print a paper copy of the vote that can be reviewed by the voter before being cast. Most of the current generation of inferior paper-trail machines would not be allowed under HR 811, which requires the machines to preserve the privacy of voters and requires the VVPRs to be printed on high-quality paper. This will create a strong incentive for local jurisdictions to purchase optical scan equipment. Furthermore, HR 811 makes the paper records the official ballots of record in audits and recounts, and requires election officials to post a notice explaining to voters the need to verify their VVPRs.

I would personally prefer to see optical scan machines be used nationwide, if supplemented by equipment to allow voters with disabilities to vote privately. If groups objecting to HR 811 can cause such a bill to be introduced and line up the votes in Congress to get it passed, that bill will have my support. Meanwhile, those of us who have actually talked to Congressional staff have not seen any significant support for such a requirement. It seems that we have a choice between HR 811 or continuation of our current "Kafka-esque" paperless system (as a French politician recently described it).

Another small but noisy contingent is opposing HR 811, sometimes without revealing their true agenda, because they will be satisfied only with a nationwide system of hand-counted paper ballots. In theory, we could adopt hand-counting of all ballots. However, hand counting is rarely used now. It is politically unrealistic to believe that the overwhelming number of jurisdictions that have been using automated voting in various forms for 40 years or more are going to go back to hand counting. HR 811 does not prevent hand counting for those communities who want to do it, but it provides a realistic solution for the rest of us...

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-dill/its-time-to-outlaw-paper_b_47202.html

http://avi-rubin.blogspot.com/2007/04/david-dills-excellent-essay-on-holt.html



Shame on all of you for mistaking technology for democracy


http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/043007T.shtml

Rebuttal to Dill's Support of the HR 811 Trojan Horse
By Nancy Tobi OpEd News Friday 27 April 2007

...Dill writes:

"There are two provisions in HR 811 that are especially vital for restoring trust in American elections: A nationwide requirement for voter-verified paper records, and stringent random manual counts of those records, to make sure they agree with the announced vote totals."
Dill is correct in that we need to have auditable paper in our elections. He is incorrect in stating we need to have paper "records" (as opposed to ballots), but at least he is honest enough to make the differentiation. The Holt Bill itself disingenuously refers to "paper ballots" throughout the bill, even while referring only to paper printouts generated by a computerized voting machine.

But I believe that if Holt had produced an ingenuous "paper trail" bill with only the two items Dill mentions above, it is highly unlikely the bill would be receiving such a wide swath of broad based opposition.

(And it should be noted here that the bill is opposed by a strange group of often oppositional bedfellows: the voting industry, the National Association of Secretaries of States, the National Conference of State Legislatures, the National Association of Counties, The Election Center, the American Association of Persons with Disabilities, and election integrity activist organizations and individuals nationwide.)

It is doubtful that, had the bill only contained the two items Dill points to, it would be receiving such strong opposition even from those citizens Dr. Dill claims have a "hidden agenda" for hand counting.

I will not belabor the particular issue of hand counting that he raises - in somewhat of a sidelong manner - in his piece, but it is worth rebutting his positioning of it.

Those patriotic Americans who support hand counted paper ballot elections, of which I include myself, support hand count elections because we have spent considerable time over the past several years analyzing requirements - not for TECHNOLOGOLICAL elections - but for DEMOCRATIC elections.

After several years of rigorous debate, dialog, dissent, and discussion, after years of this evolutionary thought by patriotic American citizens, we have arrived at the simple conclusion that democratic elections require citizen oversight of the entire voting process, and that this is impossible when computers - with their processes invisible to the human eye - are involved. In other words, we have come right back to what the founders of our nation and the framers of our early state constitutions understood full well, which is why both the Massachusetts and New Hampshire constitutions state that our votes must be "sorted and counted" in "open meeting".

This raises doubt as well on optical scanners, which, as Dr. Dill full well knows, have been the perpetrators of at least as much electoral crime, fraud, and failure as the touch screens he derides in his piece...

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/043007T.shtml


Bev Harris Black Box Voting:

HR 811: Representative Lofgren's substitute amendment

the new version is NOT improved! It's actually worse than its predecessor.

UNPRECEDENTED POWER GRAB

- It rides roughshod over the Constitutional rights of the states, by taking the unprecedented step of recommending that states violate their own state laws if needed in order to comply with the bill. It then says the states can catch up with their own laws later.

Let me explain just how wrong-headed this is, and "wrong-headed" is a polite term for "power grab":

Laws are supposed to be passed following a deliberative process. That deliberative process is not supposed to have a foregone conclusion, and if it does, the deliberative process is just a sham process. So, when the federal government encroaches on the fundamental checks and balances giving certain powers to the states, by telling the states to violate their own state laws, and then says "you can change your laws to match later", that is saying "do a sham deliberative process with a foregone conclusion" to create your legislative changes...

http://www.bbvforums.org/forums/messages/36349/47369.html?1179416469


Related

Avi Rubin's Blog
Thursday, April 26, 2007
David Dill's excellent essay on the Holt Bill


http://avi-rubin.blogspot.com/2007/04/david-dills-excellent-essay-on-holt.html

May 10th, 2007
Paper trail bill voted out of House committee. Would such a law have prevented Sarasota?
Posted by ZDNet Government @ May 10, 2007 @ 9:25 PM

Categories: Government technology, Congress, Elections


http://government.zdnet.com/?p=3137

Rush Holt Paper Audit Trail Bill HR 811 Scrutinized

H.R. 811: Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act of 2007
To amend the Help America Vote Act of 2002 to require a voter-verified permanent paper ballot under title III of such Act, and for other purposes.

To cite this information, we recommend the following:
GovTrack.us. H.R. 811--110th Congress (2007): Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act of 2007, GovTrack.us (database of federal legislation) (accessed May 17, 2007)

http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h110-811

National: Text of H.R. 811 as amended by the Committee on House Administration by Robert Kibrick, Legislative Analyst May 11th, 2007

On May 8, the Committee on House Administration (chaired by Rep. Robert Brady of Pennsylvania), during its consideration and mark-up session on H.R. 811, adopted a substitute amendment by Rep. Zoe Lofgren of California, who chairs the Comittee's Elections subcommittee. That amendment completely replaces the text of H.R. 811, as originally introduced by Rep. Rush Holt of New Jersey in February 2007.

While much of the language of the Lofgren substitute is identical to that of the original H.R. 811, some of the substitute's provisions differ in a number of significant ways. Those differences are intended to address various concerns raised during hearings held by the Committee's Elections subcommittee earlier this year.

In addition, during the May 8 mark-up session, the Committee considered several other amendments, some to amend the original text of H.R. 811 and others to amend the Lofgren substitute. Most of those other amendments were not approved by the Committee. However, two amendments to the Lofgren substitute were approved:

1. An amendment, offered by Rep. Charles Gonzalez of Texas, providing two technical corrections.

2. An amendment, offered by Rep. Michael Capuano of Massachusetts, enabling voters in elections for Federal office to request and receive a paper ballot.

As a result, the current text of H.R. 811, as approved by the Committee and referred to the full House, is reflected by the Lofgren substitute as amended by the Gonzalez and Capuano amendments:...

http://www.verifiedvotingfoundation.org/article.php?id=6467


Related to be separately covered herein

Recommendations for Hand Counted Paper Ballots and discussion includes sample letter

http://www.texaskaos.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=3099

Notes divergent groups opposing HR 811

Rebuttal to Dill's Support of the HR 811 Trojan Horse
by Nancy Tobi OpEd News Friday 27 April 2007


... (And it should be noted here that the bill is opposed by a strange group of often oppositional bedfellows: the voting industry, the National Association of Secretaries of States, the National Conference of State Legislatures, the National Association of Counties, The Election Center, the American Association of Persons with Disabilities, and election integrity activist organizations and individuals nationwide.) ...

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/043007T.shtml

Unofficial election results minus absentee ballots

Just what we asked yesterday. The election is not yet decided. Wonder why some candidates concede so early on? Also, factor in provisional ballots, which have to be determined within a certain period as well, might add a dozen or more votes in a tight race, with the potential of one lone vote throwing the win to the next candidate!

And what about the write-in votes cast at the polling place using the electronic voting machines - those should be tallied as well, just in case an effort was mounted behind the scenes to write-in candidates as occurred in Allegheny County.

All valid votes should be recorded and counted, no exceptions.

The vote totals do not include absentee ballots.

Cavanagh looks back on gamble that ended in defeat
By Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard
05/17/2007
Updated 05/17/2007 12:04:29 AM EDT
Email to a friendPost a CommentPrinter-friendly
Former Fayette County Commissioner Sean M. Cavanagh said Wednesday he knew he risked losing out on a Democratic Party nomination when he teamed up with Vincent Zapotosky. But Cavanagh said he doesn't regret the tactical move because he didn't want to spend the next four years serving in office with Commissioner Vincent A. Vicites.


In Tuesday's election, Zapotosky and Vicites secured the party's two nominations, while Cavanagh finished in third place. Finishing a distant fourth and fifth were John "Sonny" Mikita and John "Toots" Croftcheck, respectively.

Cavanagh and Vicites previously served eight years together, and Cavanagh said Wednesday he wanted to avoid that happening again at all costs.

Cavanagh said numerous people advised him that teaming up with Zapotosky was a risk because it could cost him a nomination, but Cavanagh said he doesn't regret the decision.

"I wanted to win on my terms, and my terms were to win with Vince Zapotosky," said Cavanagh. "I'm glad Zapotosky won and I'm glad I lost, because I didn't want to be in there four years with Vince Vicites."

According to unofficial vote totals with all 103 precincts reporting, Zapotosky received 9,953 votes; Vicites received 8,815 votes, which was 1,138 fewer than Zapotosky; and Cavanagh received 7,910 votes, which was 905 fewer than Vicites.

Mikita received 2,877 votes and Croftcheck received 2,549 votes. The vote totals do not include absentee ballots.

Cavanagh said he believes that Mikita and Croftcheck were put into the race by Vicites to cut the vote. "I don't operate that way. Where did they mount a serious campaign?" Cavanagh asked. "Vince Vicites wouldn't dare ever run one-on-one against me. He played his little game and that round is over, and we'll see what happens in the fall."

During the last weeks of the campaign, Zapotosky and Cavanagh officially teamed up and ran numerous advertisements critical of Vicites, calling him the highest-taxing commissioner in Fayette County history and criticizing Vicites for taking a $20,000 campaign contribution from Republican Commissioner Joseph A. Hardy III.

The November election will feature voters selecting two candidates from among Vicites, Zapotosky, Hardy and Commission Chairwoman Angela M. Zimmerlink. The top three vote getters will get the positions...

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18351044&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6


http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18351044&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Fayette long lines at polls hour waits

Word is also there was only a 30 percent turnout of voters in the county. (Laurel computer system website unofficial report)

http://server.lcsys.net/vote/vote.asp?select=5

Where's the article about the obscenely large lines in many Fayette precincts? What happened if there was such a low voter turnout - why were people such as myself waiting in line to vote and taking up to one-and-a-half HOURS to reach the electronic voting machines? OK the ballot was lengthy on the Democratic side, and there was a ballot question. In my experience of the day, 15 people were ahead of me and behind me. That translates to a good bit of disgruntled people over the course of the day.

How many people left the polling place when faced with standing for over an hour?

Hopefully, there will be a report from the election board on how the situation of such long lines can be averted come the November General Election, given the potential of a larger voter turnout because of independents and no party voters.

What about the absentee ballots? A seven vote lead in the magisterial district judge race isn't a solid win, exactly, until the official results are in...

Zapotosky, Vicites lead in commissioners' race
By: Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard
05/16/2007
Updated 05/16/2007 02:43:35 PM EDT
Only one member of a Democratic team seeking two party nominations for Fayette County commissioner was successful in the quest Tuesday when Vincent Zapotosky was the top vote-getter, according to unofficial election results.

With 102 out of 103 precincts reporting, Zapotosky received 9,791votes and one of the Democratic nominations.
Incumbent Democratic Commissioner Vincent A. Vicites secured the second nomination with 8,672 votes despite a campaign push against him by Zapotosky and Sean M. Cavanagh.

Cavanagh, who had officially teamed up with Zapotosky late last month to form "The New Democratic Team for Working Class Families," finished behind Vicites and without a nomination. Cavanagh received 7,801 votes.

Zapotosky and Cavanagh had run numerous advertisements in the days leading up to Tuesday's municipal primary, criticizing Vicites, who is seeking his fourth term in office. Cavanagh is a former two-term commissioner who lost his bid for re-election to a third term four years ago...

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18346442&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6



Fayette Democrats give nod to Zapotsky, Vicites
By The Tribune-Review
Wednesday, May 16, 2007



Vincent Zapotosky and Vincent Vicites were on their way to winning Democratic nominations for Fayette County commissioner, according to unofficial results Tuesday.

Zapotosky, 43, is the director of administrative services at Douglas Education Center in Monessen, while Vicites, 46, is a third-term commissioner.

Republican incumbents, Angela Zimmerlink, 46, and Joe Hardy, 84, were unopposed.

With their election in 2003, Zimmerlink and Hardy gave Republicans their first majority in the commissioners' office since the 1930s...

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribunereview/news/fayette/s_507896.html


Blair looks to have won nomination for district judge
By Josh Krysak, Herald-Standard
05/16/2007
Updated 05/16/2007 12:15:15 AM EDT

With seven of seven Uniontown wards reporting late Tuesday, it appeared that incumbent Mark L. Blair earned the Democratic nomination for Uniontown Magisterial District Judge besting Uniontown Police Lt. Michael "Mick" Metros by a mere 7 votes.


Blair gained 375 votes for the Democratic nomination while Metros collected 368, according to unofficial results.

Former Uniontown police chief Ronald K. Machesky finished third on the Democratic ticket with 358 votes for the nomination after the bitter and hotly contested race.

On the Republican ballot, Machesky earned the Republican nomination, collecting 147 votes to 107 votes gained by Gary Altman and 84 votes garnered by Metros. Altman received only 169 votes in the Democratic ticket, while Blair collected 73 votes.

Other candidates included Dan Campbell, who garnered 88 votes on the Democratic ticket and 44 votes for the Republican nomination, according to unofficial totals and Brian Miller, who received 131 votes for the Democratic nomination, unofficial results revealed. Miller did not cross-file.

Election officials reported about a 30 percent turnout Tuesday across Fayette County.

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18346207&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=468520&rfi=6

PA Voters: No Tax-Shift We Say

Act 1 defeat

Across Pennsylvania, voters during the Primary election which featured a referendum question said No on the question of shifting some local school property taxes to an earned income tax.

The Gov said people were "confused" about Act 1.

Right, but if it had passed, guess they were not confused. What a joke tax-shifing is, was, and always will be.

Just quit exempting businesses that give out large campaign contributions in schemes like tax incremental financing, LERTA, and Keystone Opportunity Zones. Spend taxpayers monies only on those things the state is constitutionally obligated to do. Quit adding useless program after useless program to educated students, and spend wisely...

Better yet, consolidate PA schools thereby decreasing costs of areas such as Fayette county seeing some 4 to 5 school administratings for 4-5 different school districts earning upwards of $100,000 each, and allowing to be employed in many many many cases the relatives of elected school board directors.

It's a sick system to begin with and should be privatized.

State of PA returns

http://www.electionreturns.state.pa.us/

Shift in school tax loses
Moving burden from property to income levy fails to persuade taxpayers that different is better
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
By Eleanor Chute, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Western Pennsylvania residents voted a strong "no" against shifting some of their property taxes to larger local income taxes to pay for public schools, a pattern that appeared to be mirrored throughout the state...

Where at least partial results were available, they often were voting 2-1 or 3-1 against the specific proposals in their school districts.

In more than 100 school districts in seven area counties, votes were running against the measure. The counties are Allegheny, Beaver, Butler, Fayette, Greene, Washington and Westmoreland. That accounts for about one-fifth of the state's districts.

In addition, rejections were reported elsewhere by the Patriot-News in Harrisburg, the Reading Eagle, Scranton Times-Tribune, Morning Call in Allentown, Erie Times & News and York Record. One or two districts in Berks County appeared to be headed toward acceptance.

Gov. Ed Rendell had pushed hard for the referenda. His spokesman, Chuck Erdo, said, "The governor doesn't believe that the defeat of the local tax shifting question is an indication of anything other than confusion."

He added, "Many voters didn't have the information they needed to make a good choice."

The referenda were the result of a new state law -- known as Special Session Act 1 of 2006 -- which required each school board to adopt a referendum that would lower the property tax by raising an income tax. Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Scranton were the only districts exempt under the law.

David Baldinger of Governor Mifflin School District in Berks County and administrator of the Pennsylvania Taxpayers Cyber Coalition, made up of more than 20 taxpayer groups, said he thinks the vote confirms that Act 1 is "just unacceptable to Pennsylvania taxpayers because it's not school property tax reform."

He said he talked to about 100 voters at three polling places in Berks County. He said some didn't even know the question was on the ballot, and some were confused.

Mr. Baldinger said, however, "Of people who understood what Act 1 was, almost to a person, they said they were going to vote 'no' on it."...

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07136/786355-181.stm


Tax shift: No way
By Mike Wereschagin and Mark Houser
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Wednesday, May 16, 2007


Not good enough.
That's the message voters in Southwestern Pennsylvania school districts were sending to Harrisburg on Tuesday by rejecting Act 1 referendums asking them to trade higher income taxes for property tax cuts. The referendums appeared to be failing in every school district in the region by about a 70 percent to 30 percent margin.

Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Scranton were the only school districts in the state not to offer referendums.

Richard Mason, 62, of Murrysville, was outraged that the question even made it to the ballot.

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/cityregion/s_507897.html

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

PA Election Tax-shift Referendum Returns

In Fayette County looks like the tax-shifting referendum question is a resounding NO
Unofficial election results link

http://server.lcsys.net/vote/vote.asp?select=20

Commissioner Race Watch Democrats 5 candidates (voters choose 2)

Commissioner Race Watch Republicans 2 candidates (voters choose 2)

http://server.lcsys.net/vote/vote.asp?select=5

Monday, May 14, 2007

No Primary Republican Candidate for Fayette Controller

Maybe we should do a write-in campaign for the new wife of sitting county commissioner Joseph A. Hardy III

Joe Hardy heading to Las Vegas to marry third wife

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/breaking/s_505507.html

If she gets enough votes, (250 is the requirement for announced candidates for nomination petititons) she gets the spot on the blank Republican side of the ballot for Fayette County Controller.

Come to think of it, anybody whose name appears on that side with the (required) majority vote would get the spot!

Fayette election bureau

http://www.co.fayette.pa.us/fayette/cwp/view.asp?a=2139&q=527565

Lebder sizes up primary ballot
By Amy Zalar, Herald-Standard
05/14/2007
Updated 05/15/2007 12:06:07 AM EDT
The Fayette County commissioner race will draw the majority of interest from Democratic voters in Tuesday's municipal primary, according to the county's party chairman.

Longtime Fayette County Democratic Party Chairman Fred Lebder said there is interest in the county commissioners race because of the personalities involved and a lack of opposition for other incumbent row offices, with the exception of controller, clerk of courts and sheriff.

It's an interesting primary," Lebder said. He said although there are five candidates seeking the two Democratic county commissioner nominations, the contest is between three candidates, namely incumbent Commissioner Vincent A. Vicites, former Commissioner Sean M. Cavanagh and Vincent Zapotosky, a former coordinator of constituent services for two congressmen. Cavanagh and Zapotosky have formed a team, while Vicites is running on his record of the last 12 years.

Lebder said the other two candidates, John "Sonny" Mikita and John "Toots" Croftcheck, would not factor much into the race.

The Democratic race will feature three of the same individuals as 2003. Lebder said an "amazing" statistic of four years ago is the fact that 9,149 Democratic voters, or 17.02 percent of those who took to the polls, did not cast a ballot for any county commissioner candidate. Lebder surmised that voters were "turned off" with the commissioner's race four year ago, and some may have just voted for school director, road supervisor or auditor candidates and not county commissioner.

Lebder said in the 2003 primary, Vicites was the top vote getter with 13,847 votes; Bill Lincoln got 9,406 votes; Cavanagh got 8,452 votes, Zapotosky got 7,961 tallies and then-Commissioner Ronald M. Nehls received 4,949 votes.

Lebder said while it is not unusual for voters to not cast votes for any commissioner candidate, it happened at a greater number four years ago. He said if Cavanagh, Lincoln or Zapotosky had gotten the 9,000 votes, they would have led the ticket, and if Nehls had gotten the votes, he would have secured a position on the fall ballot.

Lebder, a 33-year head of the Democratic Party and 28-year county commissioner, ran advertisements in favor of Lincoln four years ago, and this year has only run an ad supporting Zapotosky.

In other contested races, incumbent Controller Mark Roberts is facing a challenge from Sean P. Lally, clerk of courts incumbent Janice Snyder is challenged by Gary Crozier, and Sheriff Gary Brownfield is facing opposition from Robert "Ted" Pritchard Sr.

"Others are running with no opposition," Lebder said. Those running unopposed include District Attorney Nancy Vernon, Prothonotary Lance Winterhalter, Coroner Dr. Philip Reilly and Register of Wills Donald Redman.

In one of the more hotly contested primary races, six area men are vying for magisterial district judge in Uniontown. Incumbent Mark L. Blair will square off against Gary N. Altman, Dan Campbell, Ronald K. Machesky, Michael M. Metros and Brian Miller for the four-year post on the Democratic ticket. All the candidates, with the exception of Miller, cross-filled as Republicans as well.

Lebder said four years ago the voter turnout was 44 percent, and this year it will "run about the same," predicting the turnout could go as high as 46 percent. Lebder said although there have been two elections with the new electronic voting machines, some people are still apprehensive about using the machines. "Once you do it they are simple," Lebder said. He urged anyone hesitant to use the machines to go ahead and vote, and ask the judge of election for help.

On the Republican ballot in Fayette County, the only individuals seeking countywide positions are incumbent Commissioners Joseph A. Hardy III and Angela M. Zimmerlink, who are seeking their party's two nominations...

http://www.heraldstandard.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18337112&BRD=2280&PAG=461&dept_id=480247&rfi=6

Independent Registered Voters Afforded Access for Primary Ballot Question

Don't forget, if there is a question on the Primary Election ballot, independent registered voters are afforded access to the polling place to vote on the question.

Act 1 Tax Shifting
Referendum Ballot
Question Explanation
Ballot Question
Tax Shifting Referendum Question
Do you favor your school district imposing an additional 1% earned income tax?


http://pa.mypublicnotices.com/PublicNotice.asp?Page=PublicNotice&AdId=519626

Voters to decide Act 1 tax trade off
By Mike Wereschagin
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Monday, May 7, 2007


http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/cityregion/s_506095.html

PA School Boards Assoc.

http://www.psba.org/news/details.asp?id=868

Turnout on referendums a coin toss
By Rich Cholodofsky
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Monday, May 14, 2007



Municipal primaries have rarely been a vehicle to drive out the vote.
Still, with tax referendums on Tuesday's ballot, local election officials aren't sure whether that will attract more voters.

"I have no clue," said Laurie Lint, director of the Fayette County Election Bureau.

In Westmoreland County, Elections Director Jim Montini said he could not predict turnout because of uncertainty over just what impact the referendums will have...

...In Fayette County, computerized ballots will run between five and eight pages. The referendum also will appear on the last page.

Voters in Fayette County will have contested races for county commissioner on both the Democratic and Republican ballots. Democrats also have contested row office races...


http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribunereview/news/fayette/s_507574.html


Pa. voters to consider lower property tax for higher income tax

By MARTHA RAFFAELE
The Associated Press


HARRISBURG, Pa. - The prospect of paying lower property tax bills looms large this year for homeowners in most Pennsylvania school districts , but there's a catch.

Voters will have to decide in Tuesday's primary whether they are willing to pay higher local income taxes to offset residential property tax cuts.

The question is being asked in all but three of the state's 501 school districts under a 2006 law that promises to deliver as much as $1 billion a year in tax cuts financed by slot-machine gambling. That money is not expected to become available until next year at the earliest.

"It gives local voters an opportunity to reduce property taxes even further than the billion dollars in state property tax relief that they're already in line for," said Chuck Ardo, spokesman for Gov. Ed Rendell.

The ballot questions call for shifting part of the local school-tax burden , at least 25 percent, but not more than 50 percent , to a higher earned income tax, which most school districts already levy on wages and other compensation, or to a new local personal income tax. The personal income tax would apply to both wages and unearned income such as interest and dividends. Pensions and Social Security benefits are not taxed.

http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/103-05122007-1345555.html


Public Notice

NOTICE
The Fayette County Board of Elections submits the following non-legal interpretive statements of Act 1 Taxpayer Relief Act. FAYETTE COUNTY
BOARD OF ELECTION
Laurie A. Lint Director Fayette County Election Bureau


http://pa.mypublicnotices.com/PublicNotice.asp?Page=PublicNotice&AdId=519626

google search results

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=pennsylvania+act+1+ballot+question+fayette+county&btnG=Search

National Healthcare Plans In Democrats Presidential Candidates Blood

C-Span is discussing the issue: Pay More taxes for national health care?

They're asking a question, but candidates for the presidency of the United States aren't asking. They're already proposing plans, with the most recent mind game by Senator Hillary Clinton so timely around Mother's Day - for the children...

Obama: "The Time Has Come For Universal Health Care In America"
By Greg Sargent

http://www.tpmcafe.com/blog/electioncentral/2007/jan/25/obama_the_time_has_come_for_universal_health_care_in_america

Moms join Clinton to press for health insurance reform
By Holly Ramer, Associated Press Writer | May 11, 2007


EXETER, N.H. --Two days before Mother's Day, Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared with a group of New Hampshire moms to highlight what she called the "inequities and absurdities" that prevent children from receiving quality health care...

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2007/05/11/moms_join_clinton_to_press_for_health_insurance_reform/

Related

Illinois Tax Implosion
May 14, 2007; Page A16

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB117911179638401619.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Resources

Of course, as long as the increase in taxes doesn't affect well, you, it's ok. Or if you don't actually see the increase because it is "disguised" that's ok.

What happens when government gets involved? Excellent books show how government intrusion doesn't work...

Code Blue http://www.jpands.org/hacienda/codeblue.html

Harry Browne's pertinent work on the issue of "Governement" Health Care

http://www.harrybrowne.org/

Get government out of health care & costs will plummet
Browne agrees that providing health care is not a responsibility of the federal government. He says, “By getting government out of the healthcare industry, healthcare costs will plummet, innovation will increase, and more people will have access to the healthcare they need.” Browne would not support increasing taxes on alcohol and cigarettes to help defer costs of Medicare and Medicaid.

http://www.issues2000.org/Archive/Why_Government_Health_Care.htm

http://www.ontheissues.org/Celeb/Harry_Browne_Health_Care.htm

Chicago trashes second amendment

Confiscation of Registered Guns Begins in Illinois
The Chicago Police Department and the Illinois State Police have teamed up to make good on Mayor Daley's pledge that, if it were up to him, nobody would have a gun. Daley and his elite "CAGE" unit are apparently taking advantage of gun privacy loopholes to pinpoint certain individuals for inclusion in the confiscation program.

The ISRA is following up on leads in one case that has disturbing implications. An elderly first-generation Chicago resident was recently paid a visit by an Illinois State Police trooper. After asking to come inside the man's home, the trooper asked if the man owned a gun - to which he replied yes. The trooper then directed the individual to surrender the firearm. The man complied with the officer's demand and the trooper left with the gun. And the story gets better...

The gun in question was purchased legally by the man in the 1970s shortly after he became a U.S. citizen. When Chicago's infamous gun registration scheme went into effect in the early 1980s, the man registered the firearm as per the requirement. However, over the years, the fellow apparently forgot to re-register the firearm, and forgot to renew his Illinois FOID Card.

So...what does this all mean?

In the last edition of The Illinois Shooter, we reported on the activities of a shady taskforce known as the Chicago Anti Gun Enforcement (CAGE) unit. This elite squad, operated jointly by the Illinois State Police, the Chicago Police Department, and the Cook County State's Attorney's Office, supposedly exists to identify illegal gunrunners. However, information gained by the ISRA makes it clear that the CAGE unit is targeting law-abiding citizens, not criminal gunrunners.

Thanks to a ruling by a liberal federal judge, the CAGE unit now has the name of every single person in the United States who, since 1992, lawfully purchased more than one handgun in the period of a week. The CAGE unit also has all the makes, models and serial numbers of those guns. In essence, the Chicago Police Department is now registering guns and gun owners nationwide...

More later as this story develops.

Source: Illinois State Rifle Association


http://www.isra.org/

Reference site Constitution Party of PA message board

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cppaofficialforum/message/744

Sunday, May 13, 2007

No room for countywide mailing to confirm voters valid

Seeing red, green, blue, purple, orange... valid registered voters? In Fayette County, there's taxpayers' money to keep a ferry boat running, but not for purging the local voter registration database of invalid electors. There's taxpayers' monies available for fees for tourism promotion but not for checking whether individuals whose names remain on the voter registry have moved and no longer reside in the county.

It's the obligation of elected county commissioners who comprise the county voter registration commission to ensure an accurate voter registration database.

The Ferry Boat isn't a constitutional duty of the board of commissioners. Overseeing the accuracy of the voter registration list is.

No room in the budget of Fayette County for commissioners to ensure a valid registry of voters $50,000 plus for tourism and so-called regional economic development agencies

http://www.co.fayette.pa.us/fayette/lib/fayette/genfundbudgets/2007_adopted_general_fund_budget.pdf

Ferry Boat costs big bucks (counties tax monies go to maintenance)

http://www.pacounties.org/fayette/cwp/view.asp?a=2091&q=515924

http://www.auditorgen.state.pa.us/Reports/County/LiqFuels/ctyFayetteCounty010207.pdf

Funds to encourage "ridership"

http://www.spcregion.org/pdf/TIP2007-10/fayco_projects.pdf

Meeting minutes

http://www.co.fayette.pa.us/fayette/lib/fayette/commmtgs_2007/february_22_2007.pdf

Bidders wanted for ferry service
April 25, 2007

The Fayette County commissioners voted Tuesday to seek bids for the five-year inspection and dry dock service of the Fredericktown Ferry, which transports passengers between Fayette and Washington counties ...

http://www.topix.net/city/fredericktown-pa/2007/04/bidders-wanted-for-ferry-service


Fayette lacks funds to cull registration roll
By Chris Foreman
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Sunday, May 13, 2007


Before last fall's election, Fayette County Commissioner Angela Zimmerlink broached the topic of inaccuracies in the list of registered voters after hearing comments from candidates, party committee members and poll workers.

Beyond that, the election bureau scans obituaries in local newspapers and collects information from precinct judges about citizens who might have moved, Fayette Election Director Laurie Lint said.

The Department of State also advises that counties may implement an annual confirmation mailing program by sending a notice to all registered voters.

But Fayette commissioners have never found room in the general fund for that expense.

On her Net the Truth Online blog, Dee Young said she "almost jumped out of her seat" on March 22, when Fayette County Judge Steve P. Leskinen concluded after a four-day election challenge that the county should update its registration rolls.

Young, of Uniontown, has been questioning the accuracy of voter databases for more than a decade.

The political activist also served a term on the county's voter fraud committee before a 1999 grand jury issued its recommendation for a purge after the indictment of former U.S. Rep. Austin J. Murphy and two others for voter fraud at a personal care home.

Fayette's rolls again came under inspection this spring after incumbent Controller Mark Roberts challenged hundreds of signatures on the petitions of his Democratic primary opponent, Sean Lally.

Leskinen and Commonwealth Court Senior Judge Joseph F. McCloskey ruled that Lally had enough signatures to stay on Tuesday's ballot.

In an interesting snag, Leskinen refrained from ruling on several women's signatures because of the possibility they might have married or moved since they registered but failed to inform the county.

The Pennsylvania Voter Registration Act permits valid signatures by persons who have moved or married, or both, since the November 2004 election, even if they haven't filed a registration change, according to Leskinen's written opinion in the case.

The exception is if the citizen already has voted once since moving.

"I think that is unfortunate," Leskinen wrote. "I think that the database should be upgraded so that married names and addresses are updated more rapidly, but that requires the expenditure of money that the county evidently does not have."

Young, who resigned in 2004 after serving as Zimmerlink's administrative assistant for nine months, argues that a lack of resources is a poor excuse by the county.

"Because we cannot be assured that the database is indeed accurate, the potential exists for abuse," Young said in an interview.

After the grand jury's findings, county officials estimated a mailing program would cost $20,000...
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribunereview/news/fayette/s_507440.html


Related

Friday, March 23, 2007
Fayette Judge: county voter database needs update

http://netthetruthonline.blogspot.com/2007/03/fayette-judge-county-voter-database.html

Thursday, March 22, 2007
Lally retains primary ballot access

http://netthetruthonline.blogspot.com/2007/03/lally-retains-primary-ballot-access.html

Thursday, March 22, 2007
Names and Addresses of Voters Need Full Review

http://netthetruthonline.blogspot.com/2007/03/names-and-addresses-of-voters-need-full.html

Southwestern Pa. counties lose residents, gain voters
By Chris Foreman
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Sunday, May 13, 2007


If it weren't a trend throughout Southwestern Pennsylvania, Fayette County might have a bit of explaining to do.

After all, how does a county lose almost 3,000 residents since 2000, while its voter registration rolls balloon by more than 7,444 names?

But Fayette is not alone. Allegheny, Westmoreland, Indiana, Armstrong and Somerset are also among 35 counties statewide where there's an inverse relationship since the U.S. Census report of April 2000.

Election officials in the region say the swelling databases reflect the ease of registering at various state agencies and the restrictions placed on purging county rolls since the federal Motor Voter Act went into effect in 1995 and Help America Vote Act of 2002.

Fayette leaders insist they're following state and federal procedures to maintain their rolls, although they haven't budgeted for a direct-mail campaign that could identify problem registrations.

After a population upswing from 145,351 to 148,644 during the 1990s, Fayette's residency slipped to 145,760 through July 1, 2006, according to the March U.S. Census Bureau estimate.

The number of registered votes has ticked steadily upward, with 89,377 listed through the April 16 close of registration.

"I certainly want to keep them as accurate as possible, but there is a significant cost involved if you purge," said Commissioner Vincent Vicites.

Increases statewide

The registration figures continue to move up throughout the Keystone State.

Since April 2000, Pennsylvania has gained only 159,567 residents, but the Department of State reports a gain of 740,879 more voters as of last fall.

A county voter registration commission must mail a notice to any registered elector who hasn't voted or appeared to vote within a five-year period, according to state regulations. That name is then placed on an inactive list.

"The county (then) must wait for two federal general elections to remove the voter from the poll books," said Catherine Ennis, a state department spokeswoman. "If after nine years the voter does not respond and does not vote, he/she is removed from the poll books."

That leaves counties with a constantly changing population, like Indiana, with a slightly inflated list.

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribunereview/news/fayette/s_507439.html