Ballots found out of sync with precincts
Deirdre Newman
Somehow, 264 ballots were cast at Kaiser Elementary School on March 2
in a precinct with 91 registered voters.
For the other precinct represented at Kaiser on election day,
there were only 60 ballots cast out of 681 registered voters.
At a polling place in Newport Beach where three precincts were
represented, 122 ballots were cast for a precinct with no registered
voters and only 29 ballots were cast for a precinct with 400
registered voters. Precincts with no registered voters are typically
in industrial areas.
The problems were caused by poll volunteers bringing up the wrong
ballots on voters’ electronic voting machine screens, said Brett
Rowley, spokesman for the Orange County Registrar of Voters. While it
didn’t matter in some cases because the legislative races were the
same, it did in others.
The registrar’s office is in the midst of going through all the
ballots and identifying close contests to see if they were affected
by the mix-up, Rowley said. On March 30, the registrar will give a
report on the election troubles to the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, he added.
Problems such as this throughout Orange County prompted 35th
District state Sen. Ross Johnson to call for ditching the new,
paperless electric voting machines for the November election, which
is expected to draw larger crowds to the voting booths than the
primary did.
“Democracy is too important to be left to a machine,” Johnson
said. “There were far too many problems in last week’s election to
continue using the electronic voting machines. I don’t want to see
California become the Florida of 2004.”
While he couldn’t speak about the specific polling places, Rowley
said the ballot mix-ups throughout the county were a result of
inadequate volunteer training. The inspectors, or supervisors, at
each polling place were responsible for giving voters access codes
that, when entered into the electronic machines, were supposed to
bring up the right ballots. The inspectors got the access codes by
pulling up the appropriate ballot on electronic boxes they had. But
in some cases, where there were multiple precincts at one polling
place, the inspectors didn’t scroll down far enough on their
electronic boxes to bring up the ballots for the second precinct,
Rowley said.
“There were some folks that weren’t comfortable [with the
equipment],” he said. “What we were trying to get across during the
day, as we were getting these phone calls when the inspectors called
in, was to remind them to scroll.”
In some cases, the voters realized that they got the wrong ballots
and were able to ask for the appropriate ones, Rowley said. But that
was not the case at Kaiser, inspector Carol Hamilton said.
As the inspector, Hamilton was prepared to resolve any problems
that occurred on election day. But none did that she was informed of.
“Nobody complained,” Hamilton said. “I would say about 90% of the
people said, ‘This is a piece of cake.’”
Hamilton said that all of the voting materials that she and the
three volunteers had showed just one precinct.
None of the clerks noticed anything odd about the precinct numbers
either, Hamilton said. She and her crew are veteran volunteers,
having worked together for the past six years, she added.
In Newport Beach, the ballot errors occurred at a polling place at
the Schabarum residence. The precinct represents the Bay View area,
which is one of the unincorporated islands of Costa Mesa, Rowley
said. For this precinct, there were 122 ballots cast with no
registered voters, and for the other precinct, there were only 29
ballots cast for 400 registered voters.
The inspector, Jeanne Schabarum, said there were no balloting
errors as far as she knows.
“That couldn’t possibly be,” Schabarum said. “Those machines saved
our bacon. ... We’re very pleased with everything about them. Very
pleased. Nobody complained.”
Rowley said the registrar’s office would work on training
volunteers better on making sure they are bringing up the right
ballots for the November election.
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