Boston Sunday Globe

Roy Saltman, ballot expert, at 90

- By Sam Roberts

Roy G. Saltman, the federal government’s leading expert on computeriz­ed voting whose overlooked warning about the vulnerabil­ity of punch-card ballots presaged the hanging chad fiasco in Florida that came to symbolize the disputed recount in the 2000 presidenti­al election, died April 21 in Rockville, Maryland. He was 90.

His death, in a nursing home, was caused by complicati­ons of recent strokes, his grandson Max Saltman said.

In a 132-page federal report published in 1988 and distribute­d to thousands of local voting officials across the country, Mr. Saltman, an analyst working for the National Institute of Standards and Technology, cautioned that the bits of cardboard that voters were supposed to punch out from their ballots, known as chads, might remain partly attached (hence, hanging), or pressed back into the card when the votes were counted.

Either event would render the voter’s choice uncertain or, if the ballot appeared to be picking more than one candidate, invalid.

“It is recommende­d,” Mr. Saltman said flatly, “that the use of pre-scored punch card ballots be ended.”

His recommenda­tion was largely ignored, certainly in Florida, where the initial count in the 2000 election gave the Republican candidate, Governor George W. Bush of Texas, a 1,784-vote lead over the Democrat, Vice President Al Gore, a margin so close that state law required a recount.

Armies of lawyers and political operatives descended on Florida, suits and countersui­ts were filed, and recounts were started and stopped in various counties. The spectacle of election workers examining punchcard ballots through magnifying glasses, to try to determine a voter’s intent, popularize­d the term hanging chad as it raised doubts about the accuracy of the count.

After five weeks of recounts, the US Supreme Court stepped in on Dec. 12, 2000, and, in a 5-4 decision, stopped a state courtorder­ed recount, with Bush holding a 537-vote lead over Gore. Florida’s 25 Electoral College votes, and the presidency, were awarded to Bush.

“It has always puzzled me why my report never got a wider acceptance,” Mr. Saltman told USA Today in 2001. “It takes a crisis to move people, and it shouldn’t have.”

The counting crisis that crippled the presidenti­al transition in 2000 prompted congressio­nal hearings that led in 2002 to the Help America Vote Act, which outlawed the use of punch cards in federal elections.

As recently as last month, Fox News agreed to pay $787.5 million to resolve a defamation suit filed by Dominion Voting Systems after Fox TV personalit­ies falsely claimed that Dominion’s voting machines were susceptibl­e to hacking and had switched votes in the 2020 election from Donald Trump to Joe Biden.

The company’s patents cite Mr. Saltman’s early reports on punch-card vulnerabil­ities as proof that Dominion’s voting technology had overcome those flaws.

As early as 1976, Mr. Saltman warned that “we have a serious problem of public confidence in computers and a serious problem of public confidence in public officials, and around election time they tend to coalesce.”

When his bosses at the federal agency discounted his early concerns, Mr. Saltman got a $150,000 grant to study voting mishaps around the country.

He found a report that reviewed Detroit’s first punch-card voting experience in a 1970 primary election. It turned up “design inadequaci­es of the voting device” that had invalidate­d ballots because voters had unintentio­nally voted for more than the prescribed number of candidates.

Similar concerns about punch-card voting were raised after a 1984 election for property appraiser in Palm Beach County, Fla.

In 1988, Mr. Saltman’s prescient report, “Accuracy, Integrity and Security in Computeriz­ed Vote Tallying,” recommende­d banning the pre-scored punchcard voting machines that would create the counting crisis in Florida in 2000.

He also recommende­d against the use of computer systems that would prevent voters from examining their ballots for accuracy before leaving the polls, and that would not produce an immediate printed paper trail for election officials to examine in a recount.

Max Saltman said his grandfathe­r had expressed concern that nearly all electronic voting systems in the United States still relied on complex operating systems, despite his warnings about their vulnerabil­ities.

Charles Stewart III, a professor of political science at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology who consulted with Mr. Saltman, said by e-mail: “Roy appreciate­d how computers could help to make election administra­tion better, by automating vote counting, which is a very tedious and error-prone exercise when done by hand. But, he demonstrat­ed that these machines sometimes broke down, and it was foolish not to design systems that took this fact into account.”

Roy Gilbert Saltman was born July 15, 1932, in the New York City borough of Manhattan to Ralph Henry Saltman, a son of immigrants from Russia, and Josephine (Stern) Saltman, who had immigrated from Budapest as an infant. His father was a production manager in the garment industry and later at an electrical appliance factory. His mother was a homemaker.

Raised in the Bronx and in Sunnyside, Queens, Roy graduated from Brooklyn Technical High School.

He earned a degree in electrical engineerin­g from Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute in Troy, N.Y., in 1953. In 1955, he received a master’s in engineerin­g from MIT, where he worked on the guidance systems for the Nautilus, the first nuclear submarine. He also studied engineerin­g at Columbia University and was granted a master’s degree in public administra­tion from the American University in Washington in 1976.

In 1969, after jobs at Sperry Gyroscope Co., and IBM, he joined the Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology, where he worked on software policy and served on the US Board on Geographic Names, the agency charged with maintainin­g the uniform usage of geographic names within the federal government.

His first marriage, to Lenore Sack, ended in divorce. In 1992, he married Joan Ettinger Ephross. She died in 2008.

In addition to his grandson Max, he is survived by his sons, David and Steven, and a daughter, Eve, from his marriage to Sack; his stepchildr­en, David, Peter and Sara; two other grandchild­ren; and six step-grandchild­ren.

After he retired in 1996, Mr. Saltman became an election consultant.

The belated attention his reports received after the 2000 election, in part as a result of his testimony to the House Committee on Science in May 2001, prompted him to write what became a definitive book, “The History and Politics of Voting Technology” (2006).

‘It has always puzzled me why my report never got a wider acceptance.’

ROY SALTMAN, who warned of the dangers of hanging chads on election ballots more than a decade before they became a controvers­y in the 2000 presidenti­al election

 ?? VIA SALTMAN FAMILY/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mr. Saltman (left) was a longtime expert on voting methods for the federal government and his 1988 federal report, “Accuracy, Integrity and Security in Computeriz­ed Vote Tallying,” suggested banning the pre-scored punch-card voting machines that would create a counting crisis in Florida in the 2000 presidenti­al election.
VIA SALTMAN FAMILY/NEW YORK TIMES Mr. Saltman (left) was a longtime expert on voting methods for the federal government and his 1988 federal report, “Accuracy, Integrity and Security in Computeriz­ed Vote Tallying,” suggested banning the pre-scored punch-card voting machines that would create a counting crisis in Florida in the 2000 presidenti­al election.
 ?? KEITH MEYERS/NEW YORK TIMES/FILE 2000 ??
KEITH MEYERS/NEW YORK TIMES/FILE 2000

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