HOUSE BILL REPORT
HB 2532



         As Reported by House Committee On:       
State Government Operations & Accountability

Title: An act relating to election audits.

Brief Description: Providing for election audits.

Sponsors: Representative Nixon.

Brief History:

State Government Operations & Accountability: 1/25/06, 2/1/06 [DPS].

Brief Summary of Substitute Bill
  • Requires the county auditor to conduct an audit of the votes counted by all optical scan counting device used in that county prior to certification of any election or machine recount.


HOUSE COMMITTEE ON STATE GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS & ACCOUNTABILITY

Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 5 members: Representatives Haigh, Chair; Nixon, Ranking Minority Member; Clements, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Miloscia and Schindler.

Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 4 members: Representatives Green, Vice Chair; Hunt, McDermott and Sump.

Staff: Kathryn Leathers (786-7114).

Background:

Washington Voting System Certification Requirements

The Secretary of State (Secretary) is responsible for the inspection, evaluation, and testing of voting systems in the state. Voting systems, voting devices, and vote tallying systems must be certified and approved by the Secretary before they can be used or sold in the state. Both optical scan and direct recording electronic (DRE) voting systems are used in Washington.

To be certified in Washington, a voting device must:

A vote tallying system must:

Any system certified for use in Washington must also meet the Federal Elections Commission Standards. The Secretary may, at the expense of the vendor, contract with independent testing authorities or laboratories or appropriate experts for examination of the voting system or a component of the system if the documentation provided by the vendor is not satisfactory.

Once a system has been certified for use by the Secretary, a county must perform acceptance tests of the equipment prior to it being used for an election. Acceptance testing must include processing a substantial number of test ballots of various types, including split precincts, rotated races, multiple candidates, precinct committee officer local races, cumulative reports, precinct reports, canvass reports, and any other tests as determined by the county elections authority.

Additional safeguards were passed by the Legislature in 2005 to require a voter-verified paper trail for each voter.

National Voting System Standards

The Help America Vote Act (HAVA) required the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) to issue Voluntary Voting System Guidelines that would update and augment the 2002 Voting System Standards (Standards) to reflect advances in voting technology, to incorporate requirements of the HAVA, and to address the proliferation of electronic voting systems. The HAVA also required the EAC to develop a national program for accrediting voting system testing laboratories and to oversee the certification of voting systems. This has been done in the past by the National Association of State Election Directors.

The Standards for vote accuracy require that all systems must:

In addition, DRE systems must be able to record and retain redundant copies of the original ballot image.

Data accuracy is defined in terms of ballot position error rate. Each location on a paper ballot card or electronic ballot image where a vote may be entered represents a ballot position.
This rate applies to the voting functions and supporting equipment that capture, record, store, consolidate and report the specific selections, and absence of selections, made by the voter for each ballot position.

In 1994, the national testing program was initiated. Overseen by the National Association of State Election Directors' (NASED) Voting System Board, the program requires vendors to submit hardware, firmware, and software to an Independent Test authority (ITA) for evaluation against the Standards as follows:

Washington Pre-Election Audits
At least three days prior to any primary, general, or special election, the Secretary is required to perform a logic and accuracy test on each vote tallying system to verify that the system will correctly count the vote. The test is conducted by processing a group of ballots marked with a predetermined number of votes for each candidate or for or against each measure. Any discrepancies in the vote count must be resolved before the equipment is certified for use in an election.


Summary of Substitute Bill:

In counties that use optical scan counting devices, the county auditor must conduct an audit of the votes counted by the optical scan counting devices used in the county before certification of any election or machine recount.

The audits must be conducted using the following process:

If there is a difference between the machine count and the manual count, the results of the manual count will be the official count for the election for the affected races or issues. The auditor must document and explain the reason for any difference between the machine and the manual recount. If the difference cannot be explained by any reason other than a machine counting error, any party, candidate, or person representing either side of a ballot measure may request a complete recount of votes for that particular office or issue.

Results of the audit must be posted on the auditor's website.

Substitute Bill Compared to Original Bill:

The selection of precincts, races, and issues to be audited must be conducted at the close of voting on election day and must be conducted in public. In selecting races or issues to be audited, the county auditor must select from a combination of races or issues, and may not select only races or only issues. The county auditor must direct that ballots be identified and sorted by precinct to facilitate the audit process, and for any potential recounts, during the initial machine recount.


Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Preliminary fiscal note available.

Effective Date of Substitute Bill: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.

Testimony For: (In support) The intent of the bill is to allow a quality control check on a small number of ballots, and, as a result, to increase voter confidence in the process. In King County, if a signature is found to not match, there are multiple levels of checks on that determination. However, if a signature is declared to match, there are no quality checks on those decisions. The intent is not to require that auditors wait to receive all ballots before the auditing begins or to state that an auditor cannot tear off the security flap.

(With concerns) Auditors are very aware that the public is concerned about signature verification. As required by law, an auditor's staff is trained on signature verification by the Washington State Patrol. The Legislature should allow the process that is in place to work. This bill may be redundancy with diminishing returns. This new process is supposed to be done before ballots are opened and before certification, and auditors have strong concerns about the additional work that this will add and the timing of the work. It seems like what is being sought is an accounting of how auditors do what they do as it relates to signature verification. This information is included in the canvassing certification report. The current system is open to the public, and party observers can observe the process at all times. In Pierce County, the bill causes particular timing problems due to the secrecy flaps on the envelopes - the bill as written appears to say you cannot open the secrecy ballot. Also, the bill appears to say that auditors have to wait for all ballots to come in. That would cause a problem. The 10-step audit required under the bill would cause particular problems for large counties due to the tremendous amount of additional work that would be required. For example, assuming 900,000 mail in ballots, approximately 45,000 of those ballots would need to be processed through the audit.

Testimony Against: None.

Persons Testifying: (In support) Representative Nixon, prime sponsor; John Gideon, Voters Unite; Linda Franz; and Jim Johann.

(With concerns) Suzanne Sinclair and Bob Terwilliger, Washington State Association of County Auditors; and Katie Blinn, Office of the Secretary of State.

Persons Signed In To Testify But Not Testifying: None.