Premiere
'Future of Voting in California' Hearing, Sacramento, Feb. 8
Mon, 02/08/2010 - 10:00am - 4:00pm
Just learned of this. Not sure there has been any widespread public announcement by SoS office.
This announcement (attached) went out to the county registrars and clerks.
An important meeting to make in person, for those of you who can.
The original is posted at: http://www.sos.ca.gov/voting-systems/hearings/
--Dan Ashby
The Future of Voting in California:
Secretary of State's Office
II. Heading into 2010: Taking Stock of the Post-HAVA
See instructions below for submitting written testimony.
Privacy Statement | Free Document Readers
Copyright © 2010 California Secretary of State
Submit Written Testimony for the Record
February 2, 2010
County ClerklRegistrar of Voters (CCROV) Memorandum #10050
TO: All County Clerks / Registrars of Voters
FROM:
Jennnie Bretsclmeider
Assistant Chief Deputy Secretary of State
RE: Voting Systems: Public Infonnational Hearing on the Future ofVoling in California
Secretary of State Debra Bowen will be hosting a public informational hearing on "The Future of Voting in California: The People, the Equipment, the Costs" to be held Monday, February 8, 2010, at 10:00 a.m. in the Secretary of State's auditorium at 1500 11th Street in Sacramento.
Attached is the agenda for the hearing.
Anyone can view a live webcast of the hearing by going to
http://www.sos.ca.gov/voting-systems/hearings/
The public is invited to attend and to provide testimony during the public comment portion of the hearing.
Written comments may also be submitted prior to or following the hearing and should be addressed to:
Secretary of State Debra Bowen
1500 11th Street, 6th Floor
Sacramento, CA 95814
Attn: Jennie Bretschneider
or via email to votingsvstems@sos.ca.gov
All written comments will be posted on the Secretary of State' s website.
If you have any questions, please contact the Office of Voting Systems Technology Assessment
at (916) 653-7244 or via email at voyingsystems@sos.ca.gov.
Dan Ashby
Co-Founder, Director
ElectionDefenseAlliance.org
EDA mail: Dan@electiondefensealliance.org
Phone: 877.375.3930
EDA News and Alerts: Click Here to Subscribe for E-mail Updates
The right of voting for representatives is the primary right by which all other rights are protected.
To take away this right is to reduce a man to slavery. . . Thomas Paine
This announcement (attached) went out to the county registrars and clerks.
An important meeting to make in person, for those of you who can.
The original is posted at: http://www.sos.ca.gov/voting-systems/hearings/
--Dan Ashby
The Future of Voting in California:
The People, the Equipment, the Costs
Secretary of State's Office
First Floor Auditorium
February 8, 2010, 10:00 a.m.
I. Introductory Remarks
- Debra Bowen, Secretary of State
II. Heading into 2010: Taking Stock of the Post-HAVA
Voting System and Election Administration Environment
- Brian Hancock, U.S. Election Assistance Commission
- Lowell Finley, Office of the California Secretary of State
- Doug Chapin, Pew Center on the States
III. Existing Voting Systems in California
- John Groh, Election Systems & Software
- Eric Coomer, Sequoia Voting Systems
- Marcus MacNeill, Hart Inter Civic
- McDermot Coutts, Unisyn Voting Solutions
- Curt Fielder, DFM Associates
IV. New Developments in Voting and Election Administration
- Bob Carey, Federal Voting Assistance Program
- Gregory Miller, Trust the Vote/Open Source Digital Voting Foundation
- Efrain Escobedo, Los Angeles County, Voting Systems Assessment Project
- Bill O'Neill, Runbeck Election Services
- Sandy McConnell, King County Elections, State of Washington
V. Public Comment Period
See instructions below for submitting written testimony.
Privacy Statement | Free Document Readers
Copyright © 2010 California Secretary of State
Submit Written Testimony for the Record
February 2, 2010
County ClerklRegistrar of Voters (CCROV) Memorandum #10050
TO: All County Clerks / Registrars of Voters
FROM:
Jennnie Bretsclmeider
Assistant Chief Deputy Secretary of State
RE: Voting Systems: Public Infonnational Hearing on the Future ofVoling in California
Secretary of State Debra Bowen will be hosting a public informational hearing on "The Future of Voting in California: The People, the Equipment, the Costs" to be held Monday, February 8, 2010, at 10:00 a.m. in the Secretary of State's auditorium at 1500 11th Street in Sacramento.
Attached is the agenda for the hearing.
Anyone can view a live webcast of the hearing by going to
http://www.sos.ca.gov/voting-systems/hearings/
The public is invited to attend and to provide testimony during the public comment portion of the hearing.
Written comments may also be submitted prior to or following the hearing and should be addressed to:
Secretary of State Debra Bowen
1500 11th Street, 6th Floor
Sacramento, CA 95814
Attn: Jennie Bretschneider
or via email to votingsvstems@sos.ca.gov
All written comments will be posted on the Secretary of State' s website.
If you have any questions, please contact the Office of Voting Systems Technology Assessment
at (916) 653-7244 or via email at voyingsystems@sos.ca.gov.
Dan Ashby
Co-Founder, Director
ElectionDefenseAlliance.org
EDA mail: Dan@electiondefensealliance.org
Phone: 877.375.3930
EDA News and Alerts: Click Here to Subscribe for E-mail Updates
The right of voting for representatives is the primary right by which all other rights are protected.
To take away this right is to reduce a man to slavery. . . Thomas Paine
Who Knows What Really Happened in MA Senate Election?
Source: E-mail communication from Bev Harris at Blackboxvoting.org Jan. 20, 2010
EDA is reproducing this content as a public service, with full credit to Bev Harris and Blackboxvoting.
Hand-counts Favored Coakley
By Bev Harris
This article is about our right to know, not about Martha Coakley or Scott Brown. And lest you think something here favors a Democrat, just you wait, I'm still working on anomalies in the NY-23 election that are just plain hard to 'splain. As Richard Hayes Phillips says when people tell him to forget it, "I'm a historian, I've got all the time in the world." NY-23 still has history to be written. My public records are starting to arrive. But that's another story.
Back to Massachusetts, I think you have a right to know that Coakley won the hand counts there.
You can discuss this here: http://www.bbvforums.org/forums/messages/8/80830.html
That's right.
According to preliminary media results by municipality, Democrat Martha Coakley won Massachusetts overall in its hand counted locations,* with 51.12% of the vote (32,247 hand counted votes) to Brown's 30,136, which garnered him 47.77% of hand counted votes. Margin: 3.35% lead for Coakley.
Massachusetts has 71 hand count locations, 91 ES&S locations, and 187 Diebold locations, with two I call the mystery municipalities (Northbridge and Milton) apparently using optical scanners, not sure what kind.
Of course, as Mark Twain used to say, there are three kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, and statistics. These statistics don't prove anything, and probably shouldn't be discussed without a grain of salt handy before examining more detailed demographics.
EDA is reproducing this content as a public service, with full credit to Bev Harris and Blackboxvoting.
Hand-counts Favored Coakley
Hand-counted Results Generally Arrived Faster Than Machine Counts
Machine Counts Favoring Coakley Arrived Late -- After Concession
Sole-source E-voting Contractor, LHS Associates
. . . and No Exit Polls to Check Any of It
__________________________________________________By Bev Harris
This article is about our right to know, not about Martha Coakley or Scott Brown. And lest you think something here favors a Democrat, just you wait, I'm still working on anomalies in the NY-23 election that are just plain hard to 'splain. As Richard Hayes Phillips says when people tell him to forget it, "I'm a historian, I've got all the time in the world." NY-23 still has history to be written. My public records are starting to arrive. But that's another story.
Back to Massachusetts, I think you have a right to know that Coakley won the hand counts there.
You can discuss this here: http://www.bbvforums.org/forums/messages/8/80830.html
That's right.
According to preliminary media results by municipality, Democrat Martha Coakley won Massachusetts overall in its hand counted locations,* with 51.12% of the vote (32,247 hand counted votes) to Brown's 30,136, which garnered him 47.77% of hand counted votes. Margin: 3.35% lead for Coakley.
Massachusetts has 71 hand count locations, 91 ES&S locations, and 187 Diebold locations, with two I call the mystery municipalities (Northbridge and Milton) apparently using optical scanners, not sure what kind.
ES&S Results
The greatest margin between the candidates was with ES&S machines -- 53.64% for Brown, 45.31% for Coakley, a margin for Brown of 8.33%. It looks like ES&S counted a total of 620,388 votes, with 332,812 going to Brown and 281,118 going to Coakley. Taken overall, the difference -- 8.33% Brown (ES&S) added to 3.35% Coakley (hand count) shows an 11.68% difference between the ES&S and the hand counts.Of course, as Mark Twain used to say, there are three kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, and statistics. These statistics don't prove anything, and probably shouldn't be discussed without a grain of salt handy before examining more detailed demographics.
