After the hullaballoo over reporting primary-night results in the NY-13 race, the board commissioners voted today to have the flash drives (aka “memory sticks”) that capture results from electronic voting machines transported to police precincts and downloaded directly into BOE laptops. The change will, it’s hoped, avoid the lost in addition/transfer problems that led state Sen. Adriano Espaillat to prematurely concede to incumbent Rep. Charlie Rangel the night of the June 26 Democratic contest. Bronx GOP Commissioner J.C. Polanco, who lobbied heavily for a change from the old cut-and-add system, called it “a good day. “I think New Yorkers are going to appreciate having accurate tallies at the end of the night. I think that working closely with the NYPD, we’ll be able to get it done and make sure that the numbers that are reflected in the unofficial results are close to the results on the scanner,” Polanco, who’s presumably still waiting for that apology from Espaillat, told The Daily Politics. Under the new plan, cops will take the memory sticks back to precincts, where BOE staffers (under bipartisan supervision) will dump the results into the computers. The change will cost about $300,000 in new laptops. “The good thing about this proposal is that it eliminates the potential for human error that is present when we have our co-workers tallying results at the end of the night and doing data entry back at the precincts,” Polanco said. “That’s why I’m excited about it and that’s why I’m happy it passed unanimously.”
In a statement, Susan Lerner of Common Cause/NY cheered the board’s decision, but sounded a cautionary note. “More fundamental change is needed for real long term reform. The cronyism by which county leaders appoint members to serve on the board leaves them more beholden to their political patrons than the election process, as is evidenced by recent events. In turn, the county leaders, most of whom are legislators, have little incentive to pass legislation to dilute their own power. Ultimately, the voters lose and repeated fiascos by the board continue to drive down the embarrassingly small number of people who participate in our elections,” she said. “It’s time for a review and overhaul of election law so that our statutes provide 21st Century procedures for 21st Century voting technology. The public must be assured that their votes are being counted quickly and accurately.”
Full Article: NYC Board Of Elections, Meet The 21st Century | New York Daily News.