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Some hiccups reported with new N.Y. voting machines

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By Sara Kugler Frazier

Associated Press

Published: Tuesday, Nov. 2 2010 5:56 p.m. MDT

Summary

New York's new automated voting machines were put to the test for the first time in a general election Tuesday, and despite scattered reports of problems, voting appeared to go more smoothly than during the chaotic September primary.

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NEW YORK — New York's new automated voting machines were put to the test for the first time in a general election Tuesday, and despite scattered reports of problems, voting appeared to go more smoothly than during the chaotic September primary.

The nonpartisan Election Protection Coalition, which was monitoring operations through a combination of poll watchers and a hot line, said it had received some reports of problems including broken voting machines, but not as many as last time.

"It's not as much of a disaster as the primary was, so that's good," said Marjorie Lindblom, a partner at the law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP, which hosts the hot line for the group.

In Westchester County, one of the three ballot-scanning machines at the Mount Kisco church where the Democratic candidate for governor, Andrew Cuomo, voted Tuesday morning was out of service.

"You're phasing in a new system. I'm sure there will be hiccups as we go," Cuomo said after being told of the problem, which didn't hamper his ability to vote. "We'll keep our fingers crossed that there are no real disruptions."

The new machines, which resemble ATMs, are replacing an 80-year-old lever system to comply with new federal requirements. They optically scan paper ballots that voters mark with pen.

New York City's public advocate, Bill de Blasio, also reported fewer complaints on Tuesday than the Sept. 14 primary, when thousands of poll workers had not been properly trained and dozens of poll sites opened late.

"While there are still some hiccups in the process," de Blasio said, "my office is seeing less confusion and delays at the polls this time around."

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who called the rollout of the machines in September a "royal screwup," said Tuesday was an improvement.

The process, he said after voting on the Upper East Side, "in all fairness, was different, smooth."

New York City officials said the city's 311 hot line had received more than 4,100 election-related calls, with 360 calls classified as complaints about the new ballot and the new machines.

After the rocky start with September's primary, the New York City Board of Elections fired its executive director last week, and ran the general election with interim leaders.

Associated Press writers David B. Caruso in New York City and Jim Fitzgerald in Mount Kisco, N.Y., contributed to this report.

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Featured Comments

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CougarKeith
Roy, UT

I lived in NY and the "Lever System" Machines worked really good! I don't know why the Feds demanded a change to that? I knew of a company in Jamestown NY who made those machines, now they are all out of jobs probably because of the "New" systems More..

  • 8:26 a.m. Nov. 3, 2010
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