-Caveat Lector-

http://www.timesstar.com/Stories/0,1413,125%7E10859%7E2038407,00.html

County calls out Diebold execs

Registrar warns Texas company that it failed to perform under its contract
for voting equipment

By Ian Hoffman, STAFF WRITER

The oldest West Coast customer of Diebold Election Systems is calling
company executives on the carpet today, citing "disappointment and
dissatisfaction" with Diebold voting equipment.

Alameda County, the first and, until recently, largest user of Diebold
touchscreen voting machines in California, warned the McKinney, Texas, firm
this week that it is "not adequately performing its obligations."

Voting industry observers say the warning marks perhaps the first time that
a U.S. county has lodged a formal contract complaint with a manufacturer of
electronic voting systems.

After his phone inquiries to Diebold went unanswered, Alameda County
Registrar of Voters Bradley J. Clark wrote a letter Monday invoking the
performance clause of the county's $12.7 million contract.

He demanded Diebold deliver within 10 days a written plan to correct
multiple problems, foremost of which was forcing the county to use poorly
tested, uncertified voter-card encoders that broke down in 200 polling
places March 2.

Diebold executives agreed to a meeting today. The company did not respond to
inquiries Tuesday.

Alameda County Counsel Richard Winnie shied from talk of legal action.
"We're going to take this step by step," he said. "We're very serious about
making sure we don't have problems like this in the future."

Clark's letter revealed a greater array of problems with Diebold equipment
and ballot-printing services than the county previously has acknowledged.

The most serious and well-known -- the large-scale failure of electronic
devices used to produce ballot-access cards for voters -- delayed Super
Tuesday voting at 200 polling places in Alameda County and more than 560 in
San Diego County. When paper ballots ran out, hundreds of voters were turned
away.

Diebold officials have blamed the encoder failures on drained batteries. Yet
poll workers have told the Oakland Tribune and Clark's office that they kept
the encoders fully charged only to see them fail for varying periods of time
on the morning of the election.

For the first time, Clark's letter suggests Alameda County also had
unspecified "programming problems" in the Democratic and American
Independent Party presidential primaries. The registrar did not respond
immediately to inquiries Tuesday about those problems.

Clark also made note of "absentee ballot problems," a reference to a glitch
in the Oct. 7 recall election that mysteriously awarded thousands of
absentee votes for Democratic Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante to Southern
California Socialist John Burton. A Diebold technician changed the votes
based on examination of the paper ballots and scanned ballot images.

"I am sure that it was fixed because of the hand counts that we did," Clark
said in a recent e-mail, "but I was not satisfied with the answers as to why
it happened."

Diebold's explanations have ranged from a corrupted candidate database to a
bad vote-counting server.

Contrary to its agreement with Alameda County, Diebold also has failed to
supply certified software and hardware. State elections officials found
uncertified voting software running last fall in Alameda and all other
counties that Diebold serves.

But it was the failure of the voter-card encoders that underscored Diebold's
lapses in getting its systems tested, nationally qualified and
state-certified. Diebold submitted its encoders too late, and with the
primary days away, counties such as Alameda and San Diego had few other
options but to use them despite the lack of testing for reliability and
durability.

"We look forward to a candid and complete discussion of our concerns," Clark
wrote. He demanded that company executives provide written assurances "of
Diebold's ability and honest commitment to this contract and to a prompt and
comprehensive solution to the many problems we have experienced."

Voting industry experts say contract disputes with voting system vendors are
exceedingly rare.

Elections officials and vendors largely have maintained a united front
against critics of electronic voting, calling claims of poor security
overblown. Together, vendors and elections officials have cautioned that
those criticisms risk undermining the trust of voters.

But more recently, state and local elections officials have begun to
question whether the industry's top players -- Election Systems & Software
and Diebold Election Systems -- also are imperiling that trust by deploying
untested, uncertified voting software and hardware in the 2004 elections.

Two weeks ago, the Indiana Election Commission lambasted industry leader
Election Systems & Software for installing unapproved software in four
counties' electronic voting machines. The panel required Omaha-based ES&S to
post a $10 million bond in case four Indiana counties were sued for using
the software in the May primary.

Gradually, said voting systems consultant Kimball Brace, U.S. counties are
holding vendors to their commitments.

But industry experts and e-voting critics could not recall any other U.S.
county notifying a vendor in writing of failure to perform under its
contract.

"That's quite a substantial letter," said David Jefferson, a computer
scientist at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory and a member of a state task
force on touchscreen voting.

That's the way it should be, Jefferson said. This is a contractor
relationship and contractors are expected to perform, even if their machines
were not at the center of the democratic process.

Contact Ian Hoffman at

[EMAIL PROTECTED] .

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