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New Yorkers Burdened by 'Ins' and 'Outs' of New Voting System

New Yorkers Burdened by 'Ins' and 'Outs' of New Voting System
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When the federal government passed the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) and forcibly transitioned New York from what most agree were reliable lever-based voting machines to the new, unexplored frontier of electronic balloting in 2010, the New York Board of Elections gave part-time Election Day poll workers many more new and different tasks that must be completed in order to properly administer elections.

New York City’s Board of Elections describes the new voting system to the public on a website specifically dedicated to explaining it:

In compliance with federal and state law, New York City voters now vote using a paper ballot. They mark their choices on a paper ballot using a pen or ballot marking device, and insert their marked ballot into a scanner. The scanner then tabulates the votes after the polls close on Election Day. This poll site voting system provides a verifiable paper record and allows all voters, including voters with disabilities, to vote privately and independently at their poll site. 1

Though succinctly outlined, “Voting The New Way” is actually much more complicated for voters. “Out” were the lever-operated machines used for generations where the three-step process involved entering the voting booth at your election district table, flipping the levers to vote, and leaving the voting booth.“In” was the new greater-than-three-step process spread out over three separate stations for voters to travel between: their designated Election District table to pick up the ballot, the rolling privacy kiosks where voters fill out their ballots, and the scanner area where the voter deposits the ballot.

“Out” was the giant ballot built into the machine with large text. “In” was the new ballot ripped from a paper pad with candidates’ names written in less than seven-point font.

The “New Way” is more complicated for Election Day poll workers as well.

“In” are new types of job descriptions: along with the inspectors at the Election District Tables, voters would be assisted by Privacy Booth / BMD (Ballot Marking Device) Inspectors who set up and man the privacy booth area where voters go to fill out their ballots, and Scanner Inspectors who ensure that the paper ballots filled out by voters in the privacy booth area are properly fed into scanners located in a separate area of the poll site.

Also “in” are a multitude of new tasks for Election Day poll workers contained in a significantly larger training manual.

The 2009 Poll Worker’s Manual (the last one issued for the lever-based voting machines) seems a light read at eighty-three pages when compared to the 2012 Poll Worker’s Manual’s 158 pages, which includes an expanded glossary of terms. Here’s a sample of some of the changes:

Voters and BOE officials were so skittish about the administration of the 2013 elections in New York City that state officials allowed the lever machines to come out of mothballs for the September primaries – a sure sign that “Voting the New Way” has many New Yorkers longing for the good ol’ days.

Photo Credit: meunierd / Shutterstock.com

Gene Berardelli

Attorney at IPG Legal and recognized NY Election Law expert. Served as Law Chairman of the Brooklyn Republican Party and sits on the NYC Bar Election Committee.

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