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Cuyahoga's electronic system falters even in low-key poll  (OH)
Joe Guillen    Cleveland Plain Dealer    07 November 2007

Late-night computer glitches had Cuyahoga County wobbling to the end of Tuesday's election.

The vote was the kind of low-turnout, ballot-lite poll perfect to test Cuyahoga's electronic system one that's guaranteed to be among the most-watched during next year's presidential election.

But a 20-minute shutdown slowed counting around 9:30 p.m. Then a half-hour crash around 10:40 p.m. stalled tabulations again. At that point, the board changed its procedures and backed up its vote totals every 45 minutes.

By 11:30 p.m., about 43 percent of precincts were counted.

Cuyahoga County Elections Director Jane Platten said she didn't know why earlier simulations of the machines hadn't detected the glitch, which was the same for each shutdown. The simulations are no substitute for the real thing, she said.

Even after the first shutdown, Platten said the county's performance was a good sign for the 2008 elections. "If today was next year, I'd be very happy," she said before the second crash. "Because the issues that were presented to us today we were able to handle quickly, and they were resolvable in an efficient manner."

Turnout was less than 15 percent of actual voters, as only a smattering of candidates and issues were on most local ballots. While things started smoothly at most polls, it was hard to judge how Cuyahoga managed the day.

About 20 percent of polling places hadn't sent their results downtown three hours after polls closed because they were still completing a deliberate protocol that included packing up electronic equipment and sending the electronic cards that collected votes on to the board's Cleveland headquarters.

All 583 polling locations opened on time at 6:30 a.m. However, poll workers and technicians didn't show up at some locations, forcing voters to use paper ballots while the touch-screen machines were set up.

Poll-worker problems occurred mostly in cities that hadn't had any elections since last November, including Cleveland and Brooklyn, Platten said. She predicted those cities would struggle, while others with municipal elections earlier this year would manage better.

Platten said Tuesday night she wasn't sure how many workers failed to show or how many polling places had setup problems.

Tuesday's election was important to show the Board of Elections could pull off an election without significant hang-ups. The county's first election with electronic voting equipment in May 2006 was labeled a debacle after results were delayed almost a week. The election last November had a more positive outcome, but each election carries uncertainties.

There were others problems Tuesday. A handful of voters called The Plain Dealer to say they never received absentee ballots they had applied for last month. "I'm 84 years old, and I've never not been able to vote before today," said Caroline Berkman of Beachwood, who hadn't received her absentee ballot.

Voters in one Bay Village ward showed up at their expected polling place Lawrence School on Wallings Road only to find school in session and no note about where to cast their ballots, witnesses said.

Platten said she didn't have an immediate answer about specific cases.

There were surreal moments as well on Tuesday. Two election workers were mugged on their lunch hour as they left a downtown Cleveland KFC; a power outage in Shaker Heights had poll workers scrambling for flashlights (voting machines stayed on via battery power); and a voter performed CPR on an elderly Parma voter who collapsed at a polling place.



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