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- From: harling@miki.pictel.com (Dan Harling)
- Subject: Re: Voting Booths
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.201332.11366@miki.pictel.com>
- Sender: Dan Harling
- Organization: PictureTel Corporation
- References: <1992Nov10.022514.13952@porthos.cc.bellcore.com> <palmer.721401771@news.larc.nasa.gov>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 20:13:32 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <palmer.721401771@news.larc.nasa.gov> palmer@icat.larc.nasa.gov (Michael T. Palmer) writes:
- >...It seems every year
- >I vote (at the SAME polling place) the machines are different. One year
- >the candidates will be listed in rows by office (columns = political
- >party) and the next year it will be reversed. And no matter which way
- >they're listed, the flip handle is never really close enough to the
- >name to give me a good feeling that I got the right one (notwithstanding
- >the choice of candidates in the first place).
- >
- >And talk about lack of feedback... when you open the curtain, how do you
- >know that your vote was really registered? I'd like some positive way
- >of knowing that I've been counted, like SEEING the punched paper ballot
- >falling into the bin (or something like that).
-
- By those standards, Massachusetts has a pretty good system. The ballot
- is printed on a piece of folded paper, and is marked with a pencil, so
- the "controls" are pretty basic: mark an 'X' in the appropriate box,
- which is clearly marked.
-
- The completed ballot is re-folded and dropped into the ballot box
- through a small hand-cranked machine, which pulls the ballot through
- and rings a bell each time a ballot is submitted (and probably stamps
- it too, but I don't know for sure). Your name is crossed off three
- lists: one when you receive your ballot, one when you hand it in, and
- one when you leave.
-
- It's pretty labor-intensive, as at least four people (usually six to
- handle crowds) must be on hand to cross off names and turn cranks, but
- I have more confidence in the process when a bunch of townsfolk are
- keeping an eye on the place. :-)
- ____________________________________________________________________________
- Daniel A. Harling (harling@pictel.com)
- PictureTel Corp. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of
- Peabody, MA 01960 PictureTel, but they ought to be!
-