New Voting Machines May Help With Early Voting But Advocates Say They Could Undermine Ranked-Choice Voting

The Expressvote XL is not only undermines ranked-choice voting, but would undermine election security. Read Common Cause New York’s report, and sign their petition: The ExpressVote XL Machine: Bad for New York’s Elections.

https://www.commoncause.org/new-york/resource/express-vote-xl-voting-machines-are-bad-for-new-york/

Allegra Dengler

A “war game” that tried to simulate the 2020 transition ended in violence.

Vox…" key flaws in our electoral system, ranging from the rickety 18th-century design of the presidential election system to our modern plague of hyperpartisanship. ... make the electoral system particularly vulnerable to a catastrophic collapse in 2020 — and some of them could still be addressed before it’s too late….Legislators in key electoral states need to “affirm [in advance] the process they’re going to use” to count votes and challenge results so everyone can agree on how to proceed after Election Day….”[New York is especially vulnerable to drawn-out vote counts since the only way for a “losing” candidate to get a recount is to sue, even if they lose by only a handful of votes. A lawsuit can drag on for months. Legislation mandating automatic recounts if the vote count is close is bogged down in Albany. Gov Cuomo authorized automatic recounts in close races for 2021, but nothing is protecting New York from a post-election nightmare this November.

The Post Office Is Deactivating Mail Sorting Machines Ahead of the Election

The Post Office Is Deactivating Mail Sorting Machines Ahead of the Election

New York must have ballot boxes or drive-through lanes for dropping off ballots for those who might not have confidence that the post office will be there for them. Trump appointee and USPS critic Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is making "drastic changes on the eve of the presidential election in which the USPS will play a critical role.”

Allegra Dengler

Vote-By-Mail Worries Mount As Election Nears

HuffPo— "The rapid introduction of new technologies and processes in state voting systems heightens the risk of foreign interference and insider tampering. That’s true even if simple human error or local maneuvering for political advantage are more likely threats.”

Note: Westchester just passed a bond for new hackable technology, the Dominion ICE voting machines, just in time for the November elections. If this concerns you, take action at this link:

Ask County Executive George Latimer to #VetoTheBond. Send your letter now!

Opponents cited state and national groups that questioned the security of the Dominion ICE system that was selected by the county Board of Elections from those machines certified by the state Board of Elections. Legislator Catherine Parker, D-Rye, noted that legislators on the state and federal level have bills pending that would ban the technology used by the Dominion ICE machines, which critics say could be susceptible to hacking.

Ransomware continues to be election-security fear for local officials 

The 2020 presidential election has already been upended by a disastrous pandemic that’s forced states to re-evaluate the methods by which people will vote this year. But election administrators, especially at the local level, must still contented with digital threats, like ransomware attacks, that could potentially disrupt voting infrastructure and create chaos on or after Nov. 3, county officials were warned last week during a webinar. The hour-long event, hosted by the National Association of Counties, laid out what a ransomware attack could do to a county’s ability to safely and accurately carry out an election. Ryan Macias, a former technology specialist with the federal Election Assistance Commission who is now an election security consultant to the Department of Homeland Security, laid out a pair of unsettling scenarios. “Picture it being National Voter Registration Day, Sept. 22, and your entire voter registration database is locked up,” he said. “Picture [on Nov. 3] that you’re getting to 8 p.m., close of polls, and you see a message that says: ‘Your system is locked up and you have no results for this election unless you pay us a ransom.'”

Study finds election officials vulnerable to cyberattacks

Quote: The Hill "“The disparate approaches to cybersecurity by state, local and county officials is such that should a cybersecurity incident occur in one small town, whether in a ‘battleground state’ or not, even if statistically insignificant, could cause troubling ripple effects that erode confidence in results across the entire country,” the researchers wrote in the report. “

Election Security Forum -- 7/28, 7:00 pm

Something we don't like to think about, but we must

From our friends at SmartElections.US:

You are passionate about what's happening in the world around you. You want be powerful and create change. You research the issues, contribute to the dialogue, participate in your community – and most importantly – you vote. Not only do you vote – you reach out and make sure others are voting as well.

But: is your vote being counted? And is it being counted for the candidate and the issues that you support? That is much harder to know. We need to become informed.

A month later, this New York City primary is still a train wreck and a warning to us all

Washington Post: "According to data from the BOE first published by the Intercept, up to 1 in 5 mail-in ballots were declared invalid before even being opened, based on mistakes with their exterior envelopes. The majority of mistakes are due to missing or late postmarks, and missing signatures. Preliminary numbers from the BOE show an invalidation rate of 19 percent in both Manhattan and Queens and 28 percent in Brooklyn, just in this district. That rate, if applied to all of Brooklyn, would equate to 34,000 ballots thrown out, in a borough with the city’s largest population of black residents.

"By comparison, in Wisconsin and Georgia, two primaries considered to be chaotic, the mail-in ballot rejection rate was 1.8 and 3 percent, respectively…
"All the action in their contest is focused on the count, and it is something out of a dystopian thriller about office tedium….The pace is equivalent to watching a sloth eat bark….
"The governor’s executive order called for the ballots to have business-class postage-paid return envelopes. In a normal year, voters provide their own stamp, which is considered first-class mail and always postmarked. ,,, It is not standard,.. to postmark the type of business-class mail used in New York’s primary election."

Testimony to the Weschester County Board of Legislators July 13 Jarret Berg, VoteEarlyNY

Some key points:

"Thank you for hosting this important Joint Meeting to discuss election administration in Westchester and for organizing the Election Information Gathering Task Force to receive feedback from the community about their voting experience in recent elections. I want to recognize your leadership in that regard. The voter access policies, siting, and resourcing decisions that impact our fundamental civil rights are too often shrouded in secrecy and generally lack accountability under New York’s still-antiquated Election Law.

...the countywide access and timely public designation and publicity of the plan, WBOE was drastically out of compliance in Fall 2019 and Spring 2020.8 Because WBOE has not yet indicated it will change course, we must lay out and defend these laws here.

… it would be disingenuous in the extreme and irresponsible for us to collectively shrug at these circumstances and attribute the vast and pervasive array of administrative irregularities,lack of transparency, statutory non-compliance, training issues, and questionable resourcing that have plagued Westchester elections for as long as we can remember, and particularly those issues that preexisted the Pandemic.

...at each turn it appears some counties have no inclination or ability to abide by New York State Board of Elections reporting deadlines and that when local boards miss filing deadlines little investigatory,enforcement, or corrective action is taken, including with respect to chronic patterns of noncompliance,nor is action taken to assure the public that these violations won’t be repeated. For this reason alone, state and local lawmakers and the Attorney General should take an active role.”

Testimony of VoteEarlyNY
presented to the
Westchester Board of Legislators Joint Meeting of the
Committees on Budget & Appropriations, Law & Major Contracts and Public Works
July 13, 2020

Contact:Jarret Berg, Esq., Co-Founder, VoteEarlyNY
Jarret.berg@VoteEarlyNY.org

Meeting with Election Commissioners on Voting Improvements Wednesday, July 29 at 10 a.m.

Meeting with Election Commissioners on Voting Improvements Wednesday, July 29 at 10 a.m.

FROM THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY BOARD OF LEGISLATORS

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

The Westchester County Board of Legislators will convene a Committee of the Whole (COW) meeting on Wednesday, July 29 at 10 a.m. to hear from the Commissioners of the County's Board of Elections (BOE) about how to improve voting conditions in November in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pursuant to Governor Cuomo’s Executive Order No. 202.1, as extended, in order to protect public health and maintain necessary social distancing, the meeting will take place without in-person public access, but, as with all our public meetings, the proceedings will be streamed live and archived on our website, www.westchesterlegislators.com.

A live link to the stream will appear on the Upcoming Events section of our online meeting calendar at https://westchestercountyny.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=1 when the meeting begins.

Who's going to derail the U.S. presidential election? The culprit may be close to home

"Fearing nightmare scenarios such as attacks on voter registration databases and state websites tallying results, U.S. officials are leading simulated training exercises to get ready for Nov. 3. The "tabletop exercises,”..., will include thousands of state and local election officials in addition to intelligence and cybersecurity officials in Washington amid concerns about threats from Russia, China and other countries.”


Are Westchester County Board of Elections commissioners participating in these simulated training exercises?
Allegra Dengler

22% of Mail-In Votes Never Get Counted

“Oh, Lord, please don’t let me be misunderstood.”

I’ve been singing that Animals’ tune for a month. I move my lips, but I’m not sure my words are understood.

It begins with a stone-cold fact: Mail-in ballots are lost by the millions—especially the ballots of low-income young and minority voters, those folks often called, “Democrats.”

The seminal MIT study, Losing Votes by Mail, warns that 22% – more than one in five ballotsnever get counted.

Response from Postal Service re: absentee ballots...thousands of ballots not counted

FROM THE INTERCEPT: "IN THE LEAD-UP to the election, Cuomo touted a change in the law that allowed absentee ballots to be dropped in the mail in New York as late as Election Day, June 23. Now those ballots are the ones least likely to be counted; a major reason the Cuomo-run Board of Elections is using to invalidate ballots is a lack of a postmark if the ballot arrived at the BoE after that date. Cuomo could fix this issue easily by issuing an executive order accepting all signed ballots that come in within a few days of the deadline….If a major Brooklyn post office was not postmarking ballots, that means voters who cast legitimate, timely ballots won’t have theirs count through no fault of their own. Return mail that is postage-paid, like a ballot, is generally not postmarked — the mark is used to make sure a stamp isn’t re-used, but since there’s no stamp, the postal service doesn’t need to mark it —"

What It’s Been Like to Vote in 2020 So Far 

Quote of the Day: "How much of a hassle it is to vote is generally a matter of design, not accident, according to Carol Anderson, the author of One Person, No Vote and a professor of African-American studies at Emory University. ‘Long lines are deliberate, because they deal with the allocation of resources,’ Professor Anderson said. She said it’s frustrating to see long lines reported in the news media as evidence of voter enthusiasm: ‘What they really show is government ineptness. And oftentimes a deliberate deployment of not enough resources in minority communities.’”

Testimony to the Westchester County Board of Legislators July 15 Julie Weiner

On Primary Election Day, Tuesday, June 23, 2020, I voted at Nepperhan Community Center in Yonkers. I was fortunate not to arrive until about 9am, when I found a line outside in the parking lot of perhaps 25-30 people, many of whom had already been waiting for a long time. It took another 45 minutes before I was admitted to the building to vote. I was told by election inspectors that it had taken hours before a Board of Elections employee had arrived to help them set up the voting machines. The machines we voted on were Dominion ICE hybrid printer-scanners. So these expensive new machines, apparently, did not save us any time on Election Day. Or perhaps the problem was inadequate training of poll workers.