From the Tribune:
ELECTION '06 COVERAGE
County to probe slow count
Computer glitches cause repeat of primary election woes
By John McCormick and David Kidwell, Tribune staff reporters. Tribune staff reporter
Hal Dardick contributed to this report
November 9, 2006
Half of Chicago and suburban Cook County precincts failed to transmit vote results
after the polls closed, officials said Wednesday, despite improved training and
extra pay for technology specialists in polling places.
The biggest stumbling block, as in the March primary, was a small computer used
to transmit results, a key component in the new, $50 million-plus electronic balloting
system.
Although poll workers in both the city and county struggled to operate the identical
machines, the city quickly overcame the problems. The county could not.
The difference: The county's problems snowballed because of a failed backup system,
which resulted in overnight delays in close contests.
A day after the voting ended--with the last ballot still not counted--county election
officials were scrambling to assign blame for a sluggish vote count that embarrassed
them for the second election in a row. Much of the county's anger was directed
at California-based Sequoia Voting Systems.
"I clearly expected faster results," Cook County Clerk David Orr said.
"I'm disappointed, and we need to get to the bottom of it.
"If it leads to errors in my office, if it leads to errors with Sequoia,
if it leads to errors elsewhere, it will be tracked down."
Although they experienced plenty of their own voting glitches, Chicago election
officials were able to more than double the precincts accounted for by 11 p.m.
Tuesday compared with their performance in March.
The county, meanwhile, reported results at an even slower rate Tuesday than in
the primary. By 10 a.m. Wednesday, it crossed the 90 percent threshold of precincts
reporting but remained stuck near that level late in the day.
Although they often work in collaboration, the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners
tallies city votes, while Orr's office is responsible for the suburban Cook County
ballots.
Experts to study delays
Orr said he plans to appoint an independent panel of experts to study the delays.
"These questions must be answered before the next election," he said.
Orr's criticisms focused on technology, not poll workers.
"I do believe the election's supervisors performed well," he said. "I
don't think that's the heart of this at all."
For instance, Orr said election workers had nothing to do with the failure of
memory cartridges in 45 precincts that forced his staff to recount thousands of
votes.
Orr insisted that the slow returns did not affect the election's outcome. "We're
not worried about the integrity of the ballots," he said.
Interviews Wednesday, meanwhile, suggested the biggest difference in the speed
of reporting results was due to the city having built a more robust backup system
to process data packs driven to processing centers after attempted transmissions
failed.
The city had high-speed data connections at its centers, while the county had
a network that depended on wireless signals, which weren't capable of moving data
as quickly.
County officials maintained they had never been told not to use wireless access.
But Sequoia provided the Tribune with a copy of an e-mail it said it sent on July
13 stressing the importance of using a faster, wired approach.
"Placing the work stations at the remote sites on the ... wide area network
is the best solution," the e-mail to Orr's information technology manager
said.
The city had also uploaded early vote totals onto its servers around 4 p.m., well
before the polls closed at 7 p.m. That prevented the type of traffic jam that
happened on the county's computers.
County officials said they were sensitive to criticism from election watchdogs
about counting any votes before polls closed. So they chose to wait until 7 p.m.
to begin that process.
David Allen, a Sequoia project manager, said the county's computer logjam happened
shortly after the polls closed.
An enormous data backlog
The data represented only about 32,000 votes from 160 touch-screen machines, but
it also included thousands of ballot configurations in various languages.
"While it's only 32,000 votes, the file is enormous," Allen said. "So
while the computer was still churning on all these early votes, the precincts
started transmitting, and data started backing up."
Ed Smith, a Sequoia vice president, said he was surprised to hear the county is
looking for independent experts to examine the system. He said it's premature
for county officials to exonerate poll workers.
"Right now, it's irresponsible to say what caused this or didn't cause it,"
Smith said.
Orr said that if the problems cannot be resolved, there could be "more, very
serious, consequences."
Clem Balanoff, the county's director of elections, said he and Orr have not discussed
whether the county should withhold its portion of the $24 million still owed to
Sequoia by the city and county. "Right now we just want answers," he
said.
The front line of defense against equipment problems was supposed to be a specially
trained group of poll workers. The county paid 1,600 equipment managers $500 each,
rather than the standard $150 for an election judge.
But with half of precincts failing to transmit remotely, the extra training proved
not to be enough to master the $525 Hybrid, Activator, Accumulator & Transmitter
machine.
Central processing centers where poll workers could drive data cartridges for
processing were to be the next line of defense. In this backup role, the receiving
stations were designed to handle only about a quarter of all transmission traffic.
When more than that hit them, they bogged down.
Shortly before midnight, county officials determined that the receiving stations
were not working fast enough and instructed workers to drive data cartridges and
ballots downtown.
County officials say they cannot yet quantify how many precincts did not even
attempt to transmit results remotely. They said those driving the ballots and
data cartridges downtown during the night were escorted by sheriff's deputies.
The county's historical practice of counting votes in the precincts adds to the
complexity. But Dan White, executive director of the Illinois State Board of Elections,
said there is no state law requiring in-precinct tabulation. He said Chicago and
Cook County are the only jurisdictions he knows of that do it that way.
In theory, it should speed tabulation. But that has not been the case since electronic
voting was introduced in March in Chicago and Cook County.
----------