Ohio offers paper ballots for touch-screen voters
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner ordered the counties with the touch-screen voting systems to have enough for a quarter residents who voted in 2004 to opt for the printed ballots. She issued a similar order during the primary, calling for enough paper ballots for 10 percent of voters.
“On Nov. 4, 2008, the eyes of the nation will once again be on
The paper-ballot option, in addition to addressing security concerns of some voters, is expected to help if voting machines fail or voters find long lines, Brunner said.
She ordered the 53 counties that have touch-screen electronic voting machines to have available enough paper ballots for up to 25 percent of a precinct’s 2004 turnout. The federal government is expected to pay for the paper-ballot option.
Poll workers will have the option of asking if a voter wants a paper ballot but won’t be required to ask. In addition, Brunner said her office would make available posters to be displayed at polling places indicating the availability of paper ballots.
Paper ballots, in which voters fill in an oval to make a selection, must be counted in a centralized elections board location, not at the polling place, Brunner said.
In suburban
Another 20 paper ballots were cast in
Print this story
Report an inappropriate comment
In order to comment, you must agree to our user agreement and discussion guidelines.
Need help? Email Us.




