From the Sun-Times:
Second time not the charm for new voting equipment
November 9, 2006
BY KATE N. GROSSMAN Staff Reporter
New voting equipment flopped again in suburban Cook County on Tuesday, just as
it did during its March debut, prompting county officials to launch an investigation.
Voting went far smoother than in March, but delayed results from the suburbs left
the outcome of the hotly contested Cook County Board president race uncertain
until midday Wednesday.
Both candidates stormed Cook County Clerk David Orr's office Wednesday morning.
Republican Tony Peraica called the election "a disaster."
Orr insisted changes he instituted since March produced significant improvements
in voting and ballot tallying Tuesday but said speed remained a major problem.
"We did expect to do better, and we can improve," Orr said Wednesday
afternoon. "There is a problem, and we're going to uncover it."
Chicago and suburban Cook County switched in March from punch card ballots to
a dual system of touch-screen and paper ballots that are optically scanned. It
is provided by Sequoia Voting Systems at a cost of about $50 million.
The main snafu Tuesday was slow electronic transmission of results from polling
sites to a central location. Ultimately, results from half of the 2,400 precincts
were hand-delivered to the Cook County Administration Building, 69 W. Washington.
Some municipalities, such as Thornton Township, complained of poorly trained elections
judges.
In March, results also were delayed, up to a week in some races. Complaints mounted
about election workers' training, malfunctioning machines and problems merging
results from the two types of ballots. The county has since retrained poll judges,
placed "equipment managers" at all polling sites and, with Sequoia,
improved and simplified the voting and transmission equipment.
Cook County worse than city
Orr plans to assemble a panel of experts to uncover why the county's problems
continued Tuesday. One area to consider is why Chicago, which uses the same equipment
and also had problems in March, produced results more quickly.
On Tuesday, Chicago and Cook County tabulated ballots cast before Election Day,
but the city transmitted them before 7 p.m., avoiding the data bottleneck experienced
by the county. The law, Orr says, requires waiting until 7 p.m. to transmit.
Neither Orr nor a Sequoia official cast blame, saying they would work together
to fix the problem. Sequoia, which has contracts in 16 states, had only minor
problems elsewhere Tuesday. Spokesman Christopher Lackner said Cook County results
were slower than in its other jurisdictions.
Peraica blamed both Orr's office and Sequoia, saying he was considering a lawsuit
for breach of contract against Sequoia. Orr urged voters not to lose sight of
the bigger picture.
"We have the results, and we believe them to be accurate and secure,"
Orr said.
Contributing: Mark Konkol, Abdon M. Pallasch