Senate to Upgrade Voting Systems By JANELLE CARTER WASHINGTON (AP) - Senators agreed Friday to pass legislation next month to upgrade the nation's voting systems in the wake of the disputed 2000 presidential election results in Florida.
The agreement calls for lawmakers to debate the bill for two hours and vote on it when they return from a two-week Easter recess. ``We're not done yet,'' cautioned Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut, the measure's Democratic sponsor. ``But this ... brings us closer.'' Still to be resolved are differences between the Senate bill, which calls for a much bigger federal role in administering elections, and a House version that would help states buy voting machines but also maintain state and local control over them. An exact date for the Senate debate is still to be determined by Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D. The bill, negotiated by Dodd and Republican Sens. Christopher Bond of Missouri and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, stalled earlier this month when Democrats objected to a provision requiring first-time voters who register by mail in Oregon and Washington state to prove their identities with photo IDs, utility bills or some other document. As a compromise, sponsors agreed to change the bill to allow voters from those areas to write their driver's license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number on forms when they initially register to vote. If they do, no further documentation is needed for mail-in voting. ``That addresses one of the concerns I had, that there were more hurdles being put up to vote by mail,'' said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. Democrats had initially tried to strip the bill of the identification requirements, complaining that would disproportionately affect the poor. They later agreed to a compromise that says the identification provisions won't kick in until 2004. The bills are S. 565, H.R. 3295.
