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To: ColtonGang who wrote (71828)11/12/2000 7:51:05 PM
From: ColtonGang  Respond to of 769667
 
Experts: Accurate vote count may be impossible in
Florida

News-Journal wire services

TALLAHASSEE - Think every vote counts? Think again.

Problems with automated vote-counting equipment, especially the computer
card punch type used in south Florida, have been well documented, said
Rebecca Mercuri, a visiting professor of computer science at Bryn Mawr
College.

"You will never get the same numbers," she said. "If you run thousands of
these cards through again and again, you will continue to get different numbers
that are coming up.

"An error rate of 2 percent to 5 percent, believe it or not, is considered
acceptable by most election officials ... if the error is evenly distributed across
all of the candidates."

In Florida's punch card system, tabulating equipment can fail to pick up cards
that aren't punched cleanly through. And the bits of paper punched out of the
cards - called "chad" - can then move around and become lodged in the open
holes of other ballots, causing machines to misread otherwise perfectly
punched ballots.

Problems also can arise when cards are misaligned, and there can be
problems with the computer software that keeps track of the tally.

Mercuri, who has testified in various municipalities about problems with voting
technology, said the National Institute of Standards and Technology criticized
punch card ballots in 1988.

Election officials often are willing to live with error margins because they
typically value ballot privacy over accuracy when they purchase vote-counting
machinery, she said.

Florida's 67 counties use 11 different systems, ranging from electronic
tabulating machines that scan the results of the ballot to punch card machines.
North Florida's Union County counts all of its ballots by hand.

In Broward and Palm Beach counties, where Democrats are seeking hand
recounts of the ballots, the voting tabulation systems were made by Election
Resources Corp. of Little Rock, Ark. Company President Paul Nolte
acknowledged Saturday that "hanging chad" is a known problem with punch
card systems.

Still, he said, "The chances of finding hanging chad after four machine recounts
are pretty remote." He said equipment used in those counties met Florida's
error tolerances and performed with zero errors on tests for state certification.

"It's more accurate than the critics are saying," Nolte said.

Republicans have filed suit to block manual recounts, contending they are less
accurate than machines. But Peter Neumann, principal scientist at SRI
International, a nonprofit computer research group, who has testified before
Congress on computer issues, says officials in England and Germany consider
manual counts to be more accurate than automated ones.

"You should do a manual recount of every card in the state," Neumann said.
"This is an endemic problem. It's high time that people woke up and realized
how flawed the process is."

Robert Rackleff, a Leon County commissioner and a member of that county's
canvassing board, maintains that punch card systems are eight times more
likely to miss a vote than optical scanners used elsewhere.

When Florida's next legislative session begins in March, several lawmakers
plan to propose changes to the system, said state Sen. Kendrick Meek, a
Democrat.

"We can definitely bring some uniformity to the ballots in the state of Florida,"
Meek said. "This is a major embarrassment for the state of Florida."

State Rep. Tom Feeney, the House Speaker-designate, said he would consider
measures to expedite the vote count, but he's reluctant to make hasty
changes.

"Can we modernize? Can we do things quicker? Yes," said Feeney, a
Republican. "But I don't like passing law based on anecdotal evidence."

---

Editors: AP writer Dara Kam in Tallahassee contributed to this report.