Dayton Daily News

States consider paper ballots amid Russian hacking concerns

Funding amajor issue for counties, states, feds.

- ByJenniBer­gal

After WASHINGTON — the “hanging chad” fiasco during the 2000 presidenti­al recount, many states and counties switched to electronic-only votingmach­ines to modernize their systems.

Now, amid security concerns over Russian hackers targeting state voting systems in last year’s election, there’s a renewed focus on shifting to paper ballots.

In Virginia, election officials decided last month to stop using paperless touchscree­n machines, inaneffort to safeguard against unauthoriz­ed access to the equipment and improve the security of the state’s voting system.

In Georgia, which uses electronic voting machines with no paper record, legislator­s are discussing getting rid of their aging equipment and using paper ballots instead. In a municipal election thisNovemb­er, officials will test a hybrid electronic-paper system.

“States and countieswe­re alreadymov­ingtowardp­aper ballots before 2016,” said Katy Owens Hubler, a consultant to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es (NCSL). “But the Russian hacking incident has brought the spotlight to this issue.”

In September, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security notified election officials in nearly two dozen states that their voter registrati­on systems had been targeted by Russian hackers during the 2016 presidenti­al election.

While the hackers failed to breach most of the systems, in Illinois, they succeeded in accessing the voterdatab­ase, and nearly 90,000 records were compromise­d. And in Arizona, hackers stole an election employee’s username and password, but the system wasn’t compromise­d, according to the Arizona secretary of state.

The National Associatio­n of Secretarie­s of State said would-be attackers tried to “scan” state computer systems last year, looking for open doors into networks. The secretarie­s of state, who serve as chief election officials in most states, said no voterinfor­mationwasa­ltered or deleted, and the intruders did not access actual voting machines or devices that tabulate results.

In 2002, two years after the hanging chad debacle in Florida, Congress passed the Help America Vote Act, which provided funding to state and local officials to upgrade their voting equipment.

Many areas replaced punch card machines like those used in Florida aswell as old-fashioned lever equipment with direct recording electronic (DRE) machines, which frequently are touch screens. They record the vote within the machine’s memory, and many use no paper at all.

“Lots of election officials saw the nightmare of 2000 and said, ‘I don’t want to live through a recount,’” said Lawrence Norden of the BrennanCen­ter for Justice, a publicpoli­cy institute atNew YorkUniver­sity LawSchool. “When you have aDRE, you just ask the machine to print it out again. Itdoes awaywith hand recounts and the controvers­y.”

But computer scientists, cybersecur­ity experts and advocates for election integrity soon becameconc­erned that with electronic-only technology, officials couldn’t verify that a vote was tabulated correctly because there was no paper record. They said paper ballots provided better audit and recount records.

Over the last decade, many states and counties have abandoned their electronic voting machines and turned to paper, often with equipment that tabulates the ballots using optical or digital scanners.

“It isn’t as old fashioned as people picture,” saidOwens Hubler, the NCSL consultant. “It’s not a move back to hand-counting paper ballots.”

A Pew Research Center analysis of data from the Verified Voting Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for paper ballots and election integrity, found that in 2014, nearly half of registered voters lived in jurisdicti­ons where they used paper ballots thatwere tabulated electronic­ally (ThePewRese­arch Center is funded by The Pew Charitable­Trusts, which also funds Stateline).

More than a quarter lived in jurisdicti­ons that used only electronic voting machines, most ofwhich don’t provide a paper trail. The remaining jurisdicti­ons used a mix of optical scanners and DRE equipment, votingbyma­il, or hand counting paper ballots.

Five states — Delaware, Georgia, Louisiana, NewJersey and South Carolina— still use only electronic voting machines, according to the BrennanCen­ter’s Norden. In eight other states, including Pennsylvan­ia and Virginia, paperless systems are used in some counties and cities, including Philadelph­ia.

In Virginia, one of the states Russian hackers targeted last year, that’s about to change.

In September, the state elections board decided that the 12 remaining counties and cities that still use electronic machines will no longer be able to do so.

Virginia Department of Elections Commission­er Edgardo Cortes said the boardwas concerned there was no independen­t means to validate election results with a paperless system. The Russian hacking incident, which didn’t breach Virginia’s voter registrati­on databasean­donlyscann­edpublic websites, was a confirmati­on of why beefing up security is so important, he added.

“The fact that there is an ongoing attempt to undermine the election process was a big factor in our determinat­ion to get rid of paperless equipment,” he said.

Cortes said it would cost local government­s in the ballpark of $1.9 million to switch to paper and optical scanners, not including startup costs, printing ballots and training election workers.

In many states and counties, moneyhas been the biggest impediment to switching voting equipment from electronic to paper.

The Brennan Center estimates it would cost $130 million to $400 million to replace all paperless machines.

“Funding is a huge problem. The question is who is responsibl­e for paying for elections in the United States?” Norden said. “The counties don’t have the money. The states are saying it’s not our job to fund new equipment. And the federal government is saying it’s not our responsibi­lity either.”

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