OK, OK, so guestblogger & retired CT state Elections Officer Joe Loy’s crafty headline Lured yez in by deceitfully implying Politics when it’s really about the much more important matter of Election Procedures. :) So Sue me. (Nono, not you, Phoenix Hotshot LawBoy; against You I have Sovereign Immunity. :)
LA state law sets the NOLA (and also Orleans Parish) municipal Primary elections for Feb. 4, 2006, with the General elections to follow on March 4. City offices up include Mayor and City Council.
As paraphrased in the 2nd article linked below, a spokewoman for Alliteratively-named LASOS Al Ater says that ‘There are 299,298 registered voters in [sic] the city of New Orleans’. / Well. 299,298 Names of same on its Voting List, she means, I’m sure. :) [Always assuming said list, in whatever Digital and/or Hardcopy form, has survived the Floods.] Where the actual warmbody Voters are At ~ and more to the point, where they Will be & in what Numbers on Primary day little more than 4 months from now ~ is another matter entirely.
Which brings us to the current Kerfuffle. :)
On Monday SearchCIO.com rather breathlessly reported that NOLA Chief Information Officer [I presume that’s what “CIO” means; I know it ain’t the Congress of Industrial Organizations :] Greg Meffert had the situation Singlehandedly well in Hand, gearing up ~ All by Himself, apparently ~ for the breakthrough revolutionary historymaking Internet Primary Election on February 4.
NEW ORLEANS CIO: KATRINA SPURS INTERNET ELECTION
By Ellen O’Brien and Charlie Russo, News Writers09.26.2005 | SearchCIO.com
The city of New Orleans is preparing for a February mayoral election with an ambitious plan to provide Internet-based voting to its residents, now displaced and dispersed throughout the U.S., according to the city’s chief technology officer.
Greg Meffert, the New Orleans CIO recognized in recent years for designing an award-winning, interactive Web site and a citywide surveillance system rivaled only outside the U.S., said today that one of his priorities is to provide a secure Internet voting system. Meffert said the IT plan calls for kiosks similar to those used by e-ticketed passengers at airports.
“If I told you, ‘Hey, we’re going to do Internet voting for real, in a real election, and you’re going to vote and use kiosks,’ you’d think I was smoking something,” said Meffert in a telephone interview with SearchCIO.com today. “But I have to do that now“…
Just as Hurricane Katrina will necessitate rebuilding the historic city, it has forced the New Orleans technology team to rewrite their technology timetable and remake themselves as providers of essential city services…
…There is an opportunity in New Orleans now, Meffert said, to do “true government reorganization initiatives” through IT projects.
Meffert plans to model the New Orleans Internet voting system on the controversial model the Department of Defense had proposed using for overseas military. The Pentagon scrapped the idea in February of last year after critics questioned the ability of the system to detect fraud and protect against malicious computer attacks.
It’s not traditional hackers that worry people like Bruce Schneier, CTO of Counterpane Internet Security Inc…”It’s not the kids who write viruses,” Schneier said. “I’m worried about people who want to steal elections. It’s not hackers. It’s actual criminals. I think it would be a huge mistake,” for New Orleans to attempt Internet voting now, Schneier said.
Meffert said the Internet voting proposal has already been approved by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin and the city’s registrar of voters…
Asked whether the project was already under way, Meffert said: “Yeah, because it’s necessary. It’s not a gee-whiz plaything… It’s a real issue of how we get democracy to continue here.”
Well. :) Surely nobody really thinks Greg is Smoking Something but it now develops that LASOS thinks Better he should cool his Pipe before he goes One toke over the line, here… :)
LOUISIANA TO STUDY PLAN FOR INTERNET VOTING POST-KATRINA09.29.2005 | SearchCIO.com
…With one set of elections already postponed and the next vote scheduled for Feb. 4, including the mayoral election, New Orleans CIO Greg Meffert earlier this week proposed online kiosk voting as a way to make ballots available to city residents dispersed by Katrina.
Jennifer Marusak, spokeswoman for the office of Louisiana Secretary of State Al Ater, said the task force being formed by her office will consider all options for conducting the February elections. But she said the office remains skeptical of any form of online voting, including Internet kiosks.
“Orleans can’t go on their own and decide they want to do Internet voting,” Marusak said yesterday. “The mayor and the parish have no say-so in how, when and where this election is conducted. We are asking for their input on the task force for reaching these displaced voters.”
The questionable security of such a system and the short period of time in which to plan for it mean online voting kiosks are unlikely, Marusak said.
“The technology is just not proven, not secure enough yet to stop you from voting in Houston and turning around and voting in Dallas and then voting in Lake Charles,” Marusak said…
Whatever the merits of Meffert’s plan, New Orleans officials cannot decide whether to move forward with it on their own. New Orleans’ voting procedures are governed by Louisiana state law, Marusak said, which means changes to New Orleans voting laws require approval by the Louisiana Legislature and the federal Department of Justice…
Louisiana state law requires elections to be held if at all physically possible, she said. In other words, an election must take place unless a mandatory evacuation is in effect.
Strategies being considered to proceed with February’s elections include reaching out to voters to encourage mail-in absentee ballots and setting up voting booths in places where large numbers of evacuated New Orleans residents are now living, such as the Houston Astrodome…
The February ballot will include precinct-specific races, so each person’s ballot must be precinct-specific, Marusak said…
I don’t wanna Say anything :> but I think maybe Somebody grabbed the Ball and Ran with it before it had been Hiked. :) Read the Whole Things.
|
Categories: Hurricane Katrina, Elections & Politics (U.S.)
|
September 30th, 2005 at 9:10:10 pm
A first, yet !
Is it more cynical than usual of me to speculate that the Sanctity of the Vote mayhap be less important to Ms Marusak than some level of fiefdom and control ?
Or do normal New Orleans elections actually require some form of voter ID, unlike, perhaps, King County in Washington ?
September 30th, 2005 at 9:47:41 pm
“Is it more cynical than usual of me…?”
Not a bit, Laird Alasdair. :)
I believe they also I.D. the Sheep on the Isle of Skye for Voting purposes (among Others :), right? :>
September 30th, 2005 at 9:47:41 pm
Could it be that Nagin wants to use internet voting because his constituency is scattered all across the country and he’s afraid he’ll lose a “normal” election?
Nah…Couldn’t be…
September 30th, 2005 at 10:09:03 pm
61north, it COULD be but I doubt it. I Infer that it’s the Techie boss, the CIO, who Hatched the plan Himself, being all Full of Beans over the tremedous Katrina-spawned Opportunities for his I.T. Dept. :)
However, I wouldn’t be flabbergasted to learn that whilst the Mayor was concocting his Hurryup Quick Repopulation Right-of-Return program :), the relative Imminence of February 4 might have crossed his mind. / Just as a Passing thought, of course. :)
October 1st, 2005 at 4:58:04 am
Could it be that Nagin wants to use internet voting because his constituency is scattered all across the country and he’s afraid he’ll lose a “normal” election?
What constitutes a “normal” election when your city has been destroyed and half of its residents are likely to never return?
October 1st, 2005 at 5:21:47 pm
Give us a law and we will break it.
Good night! What is wrong with my fellow Louisianians!
I moved out of Louisiana for one reason or another. That does not give me the right to vote in an election over there!
UGH!
October 1st, 2005 at 5:39:25 pm
“I moved out of Louisiana for one reason or another.”
The way We heard it, Cajun Basque Boy, hot asphalt plus chickenfeathers & a Rail were involved. :)
Hee hee…but No No, Charles, j/k. After the Calamity you have in fact personally performed truly heroic humanitarian service to your fellow Louisianians ~ with whom I believe there is Nothing Wrong that could not be Cured by emulation of your outstanding example of character & commitment.