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The shining beacon of hope for NH elections: We know how to run democratic elections! So why aren't we for the other 86% voters?The State of NH has the best resource available for running democratic elections, but it only happens for a very small percent of our vote counts. Sheila Parks describes our expertise in transparent, fully observable, hand counting in the article below. We have nothing to fear in getting rid of the illegal vote counting machines in NH. We just need to do it. SOURCE: OpEdNews SORT AND STACK ELECTIONS IN NEW HAMPSHIRE By Sheila Parks
INTRODUCTION
During the period of observation of the HCPB elections in Rockport and Hudson, MA and Acton, ME between May 2, 2006 and November 7, 2006, I did not observe an HCPB method called sort and stack, which is used in New Hampshire (NH). I wanted to observe some sort and stack elections in order to have more complete knowledge of the methods used for HCPB. I called the NH Secretary of State’s Election Division to find out which municipalities in NH use the sort and stack protocol. The woman I spoke with in the Election Division suggested that I call the individual municipalities to find out which ones use sort and stack to hand-count ballots. NEW HAMPSHIRE MUNICIPALITIES THAT USE SORT AND STACK The website of the NH Secretary of State, Election Division, lists the names of all the cities and towns in NH as well as the names of the city and town clerks.(4) The website also gives the names of all the municipalities that use Accuvote optical scan machines for voting.(5) From these two lists, I derived the names of the cities and towns that do not use Accuvote optical scan machines and therefore use HCPB. There were 236 municipalities on the Secretary of State’s list of city and town clerks. Accuvote electronic voting machines were used by 108 municipalities. That left 128 municipalities that use HCPB. That number was not completely up-to-date, as three places had changed or were going to change over to electronic voting machines.(6) That left 125 municipalities that do not use electronic voting machines but rather HCPB. I spoke with 123 of these municipalities.(7) I did not reach Ellsworth, whose population in 2000 was 87 or Windsor, whose population in 2005 was 237. Since these were very small municipalities, it did not seem to me to be crucial for this paper which HCPB methodology they used. In most cases, I spoke directly with the Town Clerk. In a few cases I spoke with an assistant to the Town Clerk and in some, to the Town Moderator of the municipality. The moderators run the elections in NH. I said that I was an HCPB advocate, doing research on HCPB protocols. The questions I asked each city or town were: How many registered voters are there in your municipality and what method of HCPB do you use. I then asked them to explain the method to me.(8) The people I spoke with were helpful, friendly and forthcoming. From my conversations, I learned that of the 123 municipalities in NH with which I spoke that use HCPB, 114 use the read and tally protocol (called the ballot-by-ballot method in the Manual of the NH Secretary of State), while only nine use the sort and stack protocol, although not entirely. The following is a list of the nine NH municipalities using the sort and stack method. The first four use sort and stack in some circumstances, and read and tally in other circumstances. The last five municipalities use sort and stack exclusively. 1) Andover: Number of registered voters - 1615. Uses sort and stack and also read and tally, depending on how many candidates are on the ballot. Does not have a specific rule for when read and tally or sort and stack is used, except that if there are only two candidates, the sort and stack method is used. 2) Greenfield: Number of registered voters - 1000+. In an uncontested town election, sort and stack is used.(9) Generally read and tally is used. 3) Greenville: Number of registered voters - 1200. Uses sort and stack only if there is one yes/no question on the ballot. If in a zoning election, e.g., there were 6-7 questions that were yes/no, would do read and tally. Uses read and tally if there are two or more contestants, including presidential races. 4) Hinsdale: Number of registered voters - 2405. Uses sort and stack and read and tally. Counters decide which method they use. 5) Langdon: Number of registered voters - 447. 6) Marlborough: Number of registered voters - 1522. 7) Orford: Number of registered voters - 800 or 900. 8) Plainfield: Number of registered voters - 1605.
9) Walpole: Number of registered voters - 2626.
Most of the hand-counters came in to count when the polls closed and had not been there all day. There is a polling place in North Walpole, and these ballots are brought to Walpole to be counted, together with the rest of the ballots from Walpole. In the primary election, there were 11 teams of two people counting the ballots. In the Town Meeting election, there were 13 teams of two counters counting the ballots. Each team of counters sat at a separate table. There were no official observers watching the counters at any of the tables. The Town Moderator paired the counters. He described the process as follows: “We pair the counters by a ‘veteran’ and a new person if needed. We do not consider party affiliation. Many are undeclared. People cannot count if they are on the ballot.” (11) After all the ballots were taken from the ballot boxes, they were counted into batches of 25. These batches of 25 ballots were put crisscross to make a pile of 100 ballots. The ballots were then distributed to the tables. For the Town Meeting election, there were different color coded ballots, and some of the ballots were more complicated than others. The more complicated the ballot, the less ballots for a table. The less complicated the ballot, the more ballots for a table. The Town Moderator distributed the ballots accordingly. Each counter at the table took half of the total ballots at that table. Sort and stack is done silently. The ballots are sorted into stacks by the counters, according to the candidate or question/warrant article (yes/no) being voted for. There are also stacks for undervotes, overvotes and write-ins. This is the first time that a pair of eyes sees the vote (and makes sure it goes into the right stack). Then the votes are counted, both by hand and by the eyes of the counter at the same time as counting. That is, not only does the counter manually count the stack of ballots, but also the counter looks at each name (or yes/no of a question) as she or he counts. This is the second time a pair of eyes sees the vote. After the votes are counted and the number recorded, the counters switch stacks and the votes are counted again both by eyes and by hand. This is the third time a pair of eyes sees the vote.(12) The counters did not look at the number of total votes for each candidate or question that the other counter had recorded. When both counters were finished counting the votes for a candidate or question, they then compared the totals they had written for each candidate or question. If there was a discrepancy, both people counted again. The two counters did not observe each other counting; each counter counted her/his own stack at the same time that the other counter did. The counters counted so fast, as they went from ballot to ballot, that I could not see the names or yes/no on the ballots as they counted. In the primary election, I observed only tables counting the Democratic votes; I did not observe any tables counting the Republican votes. Also, various tables did the process a little differently.(13) There were two ways the ballots were sorted and stacked and then counted: 1) The ballots were sorted and stacked for the seven Democratic candidates out of 22 who received votes so that there were seven stacks on the table at the same time, one for each of the seven candidates who received votes. There were also stacks for undervotes, overvotes and write-ins. Then each stack was counted, as described above.
2) The ballots were sorted and stacked separately for each of the seven
Democratic primary candidates who received votes from the 22 running
and for undervotes, overvotes and write-ins - that is, the ballots were
sorted and stacked and then counted seven different times, once for each
candidate who received votes. As ballots were sorted, a stack was made
for each candidate. Then each stack was counted. After each sort
and stack and count, the ballots were put together again and then sorted,
stacked and counted for another candidate.
In a talk given by NH Assistant Secretary of State Anthony Stevens at Democracy Fest in NH on June 10, 2007 titled “Hand Counting Paper Ballots,” Stevens stated that the “Secretary of State (of NH) indicates a preferred method (of hand-counting paper ballots) in (the) NH Election Procedure Manual.”(14) This Manual is presented on the website of the NH Secretary of State.(15) In the Manual, sort and stack is described as follows: “This model (sort and stack) is presented as a best practice in hand counting, based on the secretary of state’s experience with hand recounts.”(16) Thus, Gardner’s preference is based on hand recounts and not necessarily with sort and stack as the HCPB method of counting votes on election night. The NH Manual further states: “…This ballot sort and stack method is considered the faster and easier method, even though each mark is seen more times than the method using ballot reading and tally marks. Counters who have tried other methods express more pleasure with the sort and stack method because (a) it is simpler to count, and (b) counters are more confident in the results.”(17) In his talk, Stevens also said that the “Sort-and-stack method may not be used widely in New Hampshire on election night.”(18) That indeed turned out to be the case, as only nine municipalities use sort and stack in any elections. In several telephone conversations with me, Stevens was very helpful. On August 26, 2008, he noted that he prefers the sort and stack method on election night; however, he stated that he would not and could not push the sort and stack method on any municipality.(19) In NH each Town Moderator, by law, chooses the way votes are counted.(20) In our conversation, Stevens further said that he is currently reaching out to municipalities in NH to teach the sort and stack method. It will be interesting to see if Stevens is successful in teaching the sort and stack method and getting a larger number of municipalities to adopt it. The small number of municipalities using sort and stack was surprising, given the strong endorsement by the Secretary of State and Assistant Secretary of State of NH. Sort and stack worked well in Walpole, NH. Ernie Vose, the Town Moderator, was very skilled and effective in the implementation of this method. As far as I know, he is the only Town Moderator in NH who uses sort and stack in all elections, even ones in which there are multiple seat races. It is important to note that the NH Manual states that the Secretary of State’s preference for sort and stack is “based on the secretary of state’s experience with hand recounts (emphasis mine).” (21) Therefore, Gardner could be extrapolating from less complicated recounts to elections that could be more complicated. Both sort and stack elections that I observed in Walpole were done efficiently and finished in a timely manner. Vose noted that it takes a lot of time after the counting to record the data into the computers.(22) The effectiveness of the sort and stack method in Walpole makes it potentially a model that could be followed by other municipalities in NH and across the country if they so wished – at least in simple elections. This paper has described the sort and stack method of HCPB used in NH, while a previous paper described the read and tally method used in ME and MA. As noted in the present paper, the NH Secretary of State and Assistant Secretary of State prefer sort and stack, but most municipalities using HCPB use read and tally. Only nine of 123 municipalities use sort and stack, and not in all circumstances. What can be said about the two methods?(23) There are certain differences between the two. First, in the read and tally method, there is a written record of each individual vote cast, as well as the total number of votes each candidate or question received.(24) In the sort and stack method, there is only a total vote count for each candidate or initiative on the tally sheet – no written record of each vote that was counted. On the other hand, with sort and stack the ballots are always counted twice (once by each counter) and this is not necessarily so with read and tally. In the three read and tally elections I observed, only one used an HCPB protocol that hand-counted the ballots twice. Second, as noted earlier, the NH Manual states that sort and stack is faster than read and tally.(25) However, sort and stack, while fast, may sometimes be too fast in some instances. In the sort and stack elections that I observed, the counting of the stacks was done so rapidly that there was no way for me as an unofficial observer to see the name or yes/no on the ballot in each stack as it was counted. In read and tally, it is possible to see the name or yes/no on each ballot as it is counted and then recorded.(26) A third difference between the two methods, is that sort and stack is done silently, so the room is quieter than with read and tally.
Beyond these differences, there are important similarities. Both
sort and stack & read and tally were used efficiently in all the
elections I observed. Moreover, and most significantly, in the
read and tally election in Acton, ME and in both of the sort and stack
elections in Walpole, NH, the ballots were counted twice. I
strongly recommend that in all HCPB elections, the ballots be counted
twice - the second counting immediately following the first.(27) A
second counting guarantees greater accuracy and could be considered an
audit. The question remains: Why don’t we do it right the first
time – i.e., hand-count the ballots on election night. Hand-counting
the ballots twice on election night (the second counting immediately
after the first) would do away with the fraud and error rampant with
the use of electronic voting machine counting.
EPILOGUE
ENDNOTES
Authors Website: http://www.handcountedpaperballots.org Authors Bio: Sheila Parks, Ed.D.,is the Founder and Executive Director of the Center for Hand-Counted Paper Ballots, http://handcountedpaperballots.org. Parks is a researcher, writer and fundraiser who lives in Boston,MA. She is a long time feminist and peace & justice activist/organizer on many issues and has been involved in the current wave of voting rights for six years. She is an advocate for hand-counted paper ballots (HCPB) now. |
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