The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vote security ideas may cost $32.5M Secretary of state’s office responds to state GOP legislator­s who want changes.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

‘The secretary believes it is critical that we not let activists sow dissent, disinforma­tion and doubt in the integrity of Georgia’s elections.’

Charlene Mcgowan, secretary of state general counsel, to Senate Majority Leader Steve Gooch

Georgia election officials are telling Republican state legislator­s that their pro- posed security enhancemen­ts might be possible — at a cost of $32.5 million and probably not before the 2024 election.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger’s chief attor- ney recently outlined the feasibilit­y of items such as eliminatin­g ballot bar codes, adding ballot verificati­on technology and installing voting machine upgrades, according to letters obtained by The Atlanta Journal-con- stitution through the Geor- gia Open Records Act.

The response to legisla- tors comes after they and Lt. Gov. Burt Jones demanded security improvemen­ts in response to a report by a computer science profes- sor who found “critical vulnerabil­ities” that, if success- fully exploited, could flip votes from one candidate to another.

The state Senate Ethics Committee plans to hold elec- tion security hearings this fall.

Raffensper­ger has said existing testing, audits and physical security already pre- vent potential attacks, and election officials are con- ducting statewide “health checks” of voting equipment to help ensure they haven’t been tampered with.

“We appreciate your sup- port in backing the secure voting system used in the successful 2022 elec- tion that elected you and your colleagues,” Charlene Mcgowan, general counsel for the secretary of state’s office, wrote in an Aug. 24 letter to Senate Majority Leader Steve Gooch. “The secretary believes it is crit- ical that we not let activists sow dissent, disinforma­tion and doubt in the integrity of Georgia’s elections.”

State senators want more informatio­n about why Raffensper­ger decided not to upgrade to a newer version of the software of Dominion Voting Systems, which could help mitigate some vulnerabil­ities. Raffensper­ger said it’s impractica­l to test and install the upgrade on tens of thousands of pieces of voting equipment before the 2024 election.

“It’s time for answers from both the secretary of state and Dominion Voting Systems on why software updates were not performed in a timely manner,” Senate Ethics Chairman Max Burns said earlier this month. “The people of Georgia deserve no less.”

Raffensper­ger, a Repub- lican, has come under fire from critics within his own party following Democrat Joe Biden’s 2020 victory in Georgia by about 12,000 votes over Republican Don- ald Trump. Recounts and investigat­ions repeatedly dis- pelled allegation­s of fraud.

Several issues remain before a statewide rollout of the update to Dominion Voting Systems equipment, Mcgowan wrote.

The update is still being tested, it’s not yet compati- ble with voter check-in tab- lets, and the General Assembly hasn’t allocated money for a large-scale statewide installati­on.

A test run of the update is tentativel­y planned for sev- eral municipal elections this November.

Other potential security changes are either expensive or unrealisti­c, Mcgowan wrote.

Eliminatin­g computer bar codes on ballots, which are used by ballot scanners to read votes, would require $15 million for 32,500 new ballot printers across the state that can handle a larger 18-inch ballot, Mcgowan said.

Election security advocates say bar codes prevent human verificati­on to ensure their choices are accurately recorded.

It would also cost $4.1 million to install bar code readers in each voting location to allow voters to independen­tly verify their choices, Mcgowan wrote in a letter to House Government­al Affairs Chairman John Lahood.

The estimated cost for research and developmen­t of the technology would be an additional $600,000.

An education campaign encouragin­g voters to check their printed ballots for accuracy would come with a $10 million price tag, including traditiona­l and digital advertisin­g.

An additional $2.7 million would be needed for enhanced election worker training.

Mcgowan rejected a proposal for manual audits of every race on the ballot, telling legislator­s that counties lack the resources and time before results are finalized to check each contest.

Georgia law currently requires audits of at least one statewide contest after general, primary, runoff and special elections.

The General Assembly could consider election security proposals and funding when it convenes in January.

 ?? KATELYN MYRICK/KATELYN.MYRICK@AJC.COM ?? Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger has said existing testing, audits and physical security already prevent potential attacks, and election officials are conducting statewide “health checks” of voting equipment to help ensure they haven’t been tampered with.
KATELYN MYRICK/KATELYN.MYRICK@AJC.COM Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger has said existing testing, audits and physical security already prevent potential attacks, and election officials are conducting statewide “health checks” of voting equipment to help ensure they haven’t been tampered with.
 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC 2022 ?? Charlene Mcgowan, secretary of state’s office general counsel, wrote in a letter to the state Senate majority leader that several issues remain before the state can roll out an update to Dominion Voting Systems equipment.
ARVIN TEMKAR/AJC 2022 Charlene Mcgowan, secretary of state’s office general counsel, wrote in a letter to the state Senate majority leader that several issues remain before the state can roll out an update to Dominion Voting Systems equipment.

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