Virginia Voting Reform NOW!! Contact your reps for Monday's big vote

By: thegools
Published On: 1/19/2007 3:54:54 PM

I just received this from the people at Virginia Verified Voting (VaVV.org).

Monday, a key vote occurs regarding the Senate bill (SB840) that would require optical scan paper balloting and regular vote audits statewide.  This bill would effectively do away with the highly-flawed, electronic (DRE) balloting that has caused distrust of our voting system.

VAVV.org Action Alert Friday January 18, 2007

Send Letters to the following 11 legislators by Monday morning!
Action #1.
Please send letters to 3 P & E subcommittee members by Monday morning! Help keep our election count meaningful, auditable and transparent.

We have  learned that our verified voting bill, SB840, introduced 2 weeks ago, needed further discussion and now is rescheduled for a vote in the Senate Privileges and Elections subcommittee on Monday. 
  Please call and/or email these 3 Senators if you haven't (MONDAY the 22nd).  I have included a summary of the bill below the contact information for the subcommittee members.  Please call (or email) them and just let them know that you and the citizens of the Great Commonwealth of Virginia expect them to ensure the safety, security, and accuracy of our election system.  Ask them to vote in favor of SB840.

Thank you for your help at this time.

Sincerely,

Alice Whealin, VAVV.org volunteer

VAVV.org is a nonpartisan all volunteer organization.
Write my reply address for more information and for ML.
alicewhealin@yahioo.com


The three subcommitee members referred to are listed below:

Subcommittee Members to email and call:
1. Senator O'Brien:  Phone: (804) 698-7539, Email: district39@sov.state.va.us
2. Senator Obenshain:  Phone: (804) 698-7526, Email: district26@sov.state.va.us
3. Senator Puckett:  Phone: (804) 698-7538, Email: district38@sov.state.va.us

CALL BETWEEN 8AM-1PM (Friday or) MONDAY.  Tell them to vote in favor of SB840 in subcommittee today.

_________________________________________

On the flip side:
- Action #2 (contact 8 members of P&E committee)
- What is Verified Voting?
- Why is this important?
- A Sample letter to legislator.


Action # 2. Send 8 separate letters to these P & E committee by Tuesday morning! The following senators have not committed to voting yes to SB 840. Please ask them to patron Sen.Davis's budget amendment to fund this need for auditable elections. The savings will be more than just $. They are scheduled to meet at 4pm that afternoon to vote on this bill.
  The following 8 Privileges & Elections committee members have not committed to vote YES in favor of Senate Bill 840 for auditable elections in VA:

1. Sen. Dick Saslaw district35@sov.state.va.us
(804) 698-7535
  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
2. Sen. Mary Margret Whipple district31@sov.state.va.us 
  (804) 698-7531  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
3. Sen. Roscoe Reynolds district20@sov.state.va.us
  (804) 698-7520  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
4. Sen. Ben Lambert district09@sov.state.va.us (804) 698-7509
  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
5. Sen. Ken Stolle has stated he is against this bill. Please write him.
district08@sov.state.va.us
  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
6. Sen. Mark Obenshain district26@sov.state.va.us (804) 698-7526
  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
7. Sen. Jay O'Brien district39@sov.state.va.us
  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
8. Sen. Hawkins  district19@sov.state.va.us (804) 698-7519
  Constituent Hotline: (800) 889-0229 (Session Only)
_________________________________________

What is SB 840 & why do we need it?:




Bill Summary SB 840 for Secure & Verifiable Elections in Virginia:

The Verifiable Voting Coalition of Virginia supports SB 840. This legislation requires Virginia localities to use optical scan voting machines to provide a paper ballot that has been verified by the voter, and requires audits of a random sample of machines during canvasses and recounts. With this legislation, Virginians can have confidence in the accuracy and security of our elections.

Why we need this bill:  Currently, most Virginians vote on Direct Record Electronic (DRE) election machines that do not provide a paper record or other independent means of verifying that the machine is accurately recording the voter's intentions. Without this paper record, machines cannot be audited for accuracy after an election, and there can be no meaningful recount in the event of a close or disputed election. DREs provide no means to detect or remedy programming errors or fraudulent software that evades pre-election testing.



Bill Provisions

Optical scan voting machines:  The centerpiece of the legislation is the requirement that all jurisdictions use paper ballots read by optical scan tabulators, retaining an exemption for very small counties.  This proven, reliable and economical technology is already in use in several Virginia counties including: Chesterfield, Hanover, Loudoun and Stafford. Voters mark paper ballots and feed them through the scanner (tabulator). The tabulator checks the ballot, and gives the voter a chance to correct undervotes or overvotes. The paper ballots provide a robust paper trail without the complications and risks of adding printers to existing DREs.

Assistance for disabled voters:  The bill provides for ballot-marking devices to assist voters with disabilities in preparing and verifying paper ballots on their own. Such devices are already in use in Virginia and are required by the federal Help America Vote Act.

Ban on wireless communications:  Wireless communication is a serious security risk that far outweighs any minor convenience it provides election officials. This bill bans such devices.

Post-election audits during canvasses and recounts:  Audits are a critical step in ensuring the integrity of elections. The bill requires post-election random audits during canvasses of two or five percent of machines based upon population. Machines are audited by comparing a hand count of the paper ballots with the machine totals to check the machine accuracy.  In recounts, an additional three percent of machines would be audited. If significant discrepancies are detected, the paper ballots become the ballots of record.

In 2002, post-election audits detected a software error in Wayne County, NC that changed the result of the election. Because Wayne County used optical scan tabulators, the error was detected and remedied. Now North Carolina requires paper trails and audits for all elections.

The Verifiable Voting Coalition of Virginia includes:
Virginia League of Women Voters 
Virginia Libertarian Party
Virginia Verified Voting 
Common Cause
New Electoral Reform Alliance for VA 
Virginia Organizing Project
Southern Coalition for Secured Voting.


 
Here is the sample letter provided by VaVV.org: 

 


  Dear Senator  ___________:

Currently, most Virginia jurisdictions use direct record electronic machines (DREs) to record and count voters' choices.  The DRE machines do not generate a visible record that a voter can see to verify that the machines have recorded their votes correctly. Without a paper record, they also do not permit meaningful recounts or audits.  Because of this lack of accountability, many computer security experts have raised concerns about possible malicious attacks or programming errors changing the outcome of elections in ways that would be undetectable to voters and election officials.  It does not have to be this way. 

I urge you to support legislation, specifically S.B.840, that would require all voting machines in Virginia to be voter-verifiable and both auditable and subject to regular random audits.  Some of the other bills regarding election machines this year are not going to accomplish this. Senator Devolites Davis has introduced Senate Bill 840 that would require the use of optic scan tabulators for most precincts and would require routine audits. 

I believe that these simple changes will help ensure the integrity of elections in Virginia and urge support of Senate Bill 840.  Please vote YES on S.B. 840.

Sincerely,

Your name
Your city, state of residence
Your phone #



Comments



question (JD - 1/20/2007 9:57:01 AM)
Does anyone know what the State Board's position on this bill is?  Was it part of their legislative agenda?


There are two bigger problems that this does not address (Used2Bneutral - 1/20/2007 10:23:14 AM)
There are really three elements to security and in this case Voting security..... and all have to be present to guarentee minimum to NO tampering.  The Electronic which this works for is one. The Physical control of all elements of the voting systems is the second, but the third is even more important I think. The third element is Procedures..... For example in fact the re-count procedures that are in place today as only one piece of the picture are a joke. All they allow is the checking for minor clerical problems. There needs to be robust honest double checking and cross checking that can detect voter fraud and machine tampering OR at least go a long way toward eliminating the opportunity to tamper. It can be done. The financial industry and banks already do things of this type today.  Georgia has put in place some excellent processes involving one of their Universities that also works well as a non-partisan model.