Cincinnati
Enquirer
Husted:
Feds should pay for new
voting machines
By Barry M. Horstman
Dec 10, 2012
WASHINGTON
— Ohio Secretary of
State Jon Husted said Monday there is one major thing the federal
government
could do to help improve elections in Ohio: give the state the tens of
millions
of dollars it needs to upgrade or replace its aging voting machines.
“Our
machines are old – they’re
wearing out,” Husted told a conference on the 2012 election sponsored
by the
Pew Center on the States. “We can’t run an ... election system on the
cheap.”
Like
most states, Ohio in the
mid-2000s relied on the $3 billion in federal money from the Help
America Vote
Act of 2002 to help buy voting machines still in use. Experts say the
electronic voting systems have an effective life of six to 10 years,
meaning
that many are near the time when they either need to be replaced or
will start
becoming expensive and difficult to maintain.
The
law “got us addicted to these
machines, and now they’re getting old,” Husted said.
But
secretaries of states from
across the nation, election experts, voting rights advocates and others
attending the two-day conference agree that federal budget realities of
2012
make it highly unlikely that Washington will again offer the kind of
extensive
financial aid.
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the rest of the article at the
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