Letters from Ellen Dannin,
Ellen Dannin is Professor of Law at Pennsylvania State University
Dickinson School of Law and the author of /Taking Back the Workers' Law
How to Fight the Assault on Labor Rights/ (Cornell University Press 2006).


Privatization Follies, Originally published in Salon here from Thinking Peace.


Below is an Op Ed that the Centre Daily Times did not print.

In Praise of Optical Scan Voting

On election day 2004, I worked as an election observer in an eastside
Detroit precinct. I saw many first time voters, including some over 40
years old. The atmosphere was calm and determined . . . and patriotic.
These were people who wanted their votes to be counted and to count.
Despite all that went wrong that day, when the votes 688 votes cast that
day were counted there were only 4 votes the optical scanner could not
read. And there was a paper record if a recount was needed.
This precinct could have been a case study in what can go wrong. It was
severely understaffed and underequipped. Only half the number of
precinct workers that had been promised appeared, and there were not
enough voting stations.
No one could be spared to stand at the door to check that voters were at
the right precinct. As a result, long lines led up to sign in and get a
ballot and then to cast that ballot. There could have been equally long
lines waiting for a voting booth.
But what saved the day was having optical scan ballots. This meant that
those who didn’t want to wait for a booth could sit on the floor to mark
their ballots. It’s not dignified, but it’s not even an option with
touch-screen voting. These voters could have cast their ballots even if
the power went out. And had a recount been needed, there was a paper
record.
Had the precinct been using touch screen voting, scarce poll workers
would have had to cover problems with that technology. And the lines
would have been even longer.
Whenever there was a question about a voter’s registration, one of the
scarce precinct workers had to go down the hall to the principal's
office to call official number after number, all of which were busy.
This left the registration tables even more understaffed and challenged
voters waiting as much as a half hour.
The precinct workers were unfailingly businesslike and upbeat throughout
a grueling day. They were at work before dawn and left just before
midnight. They only got dinner about 9 pm after the last voter left.
They ordered in pizza and got down to the work of tallying ballots and
packing up.
But this precinct was lucky, because it had an America Coming Together
(ACT) observer with a friend willing to spend the day at a computer with
a fast connection. She and I both had charged cellphones that made it
through the day. When a challenged voter was waiting for a precinct
worker to find out whether the voter was registered, the ACT observer
called her friend. Word soon spread that we could check registrations
and either assure voters they were in the right place or get them the
correct precinct.
Meanwhile, I reassured challenged voters, while their status was sorted
out, that we wanted them to vote. I explained that if they voted a
provisional ballot and this was the wrong precinct, it would probably
not be counted. I asked them to cast a ballot that would count. They all
wanted to do that. Fortunately, for most, the correct precinct was only
a couple blocks away.
As with this precinct, what many precincts need is not complicated or
expensive – a computer with a searchable up-to-date list of voters and
precincts, a fast connection to publius.com, and a cell phone with a
charger. The cost in dollars would be negligible. And the value of
supporting the access to the right to vote cannot be calculated
I drove home dead tired that night, but with deep hope – and fear – for
this country and its people.
The precinct workers did the real work, but, had it not been for the ACT
observer, our cellphones, and her friend spending the day with a fast
internet connection, I estimate there could have been 100 fewer votes
cast - and they might have thrown in the towel on democracy. This day
spent doing unglamorous work demonstrated just how critical these
"low-level" jobs at the precincts are. Yet we treat them as if they
don’t matter, and we risk sending the message that the right to vote
does not matter.