(Approved by OSVTAC on March 14, 2019.)
Last posted: June 9, 2019
-
Introduction & Table of Contents (for multi-page version)
-
Single-page version (long, can be used for printing)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. For copyright and attribution information for this work, see [this section](copyright). The source files for the text can be found on GitHub [here](https://github.com/OSVTAC/project-recommendations).
The following are some key decisions about system requirements that need to be made at some point when designing and developing the voting system. Some pro and con tradeoffs are included.
At this point, the intent here is to just present options with some discussion, not a particular recommendation.
Assumptions:
-
Votes are cast (recorded, submitted, and stored) on paper in a human-readable form.
-
An electronic representation of ballots made either by voting machines or scanners serves only as a copy of the official paper ballot.
-
Ballots marked are on paper that meets the California regulations for printing (counterfeit resistance).
-
By 2020, CA [AB973][bill-ab-973-2017] requires support of Remote Accessible Vote By Mail ballots (AB2252) for voters with disabilities or overseas and military voters. Home computers are used to print ballots on ordinary paper, but returned via special mail envelopes.
-
Voting types to be considered:
- Vote by mail (preprinted and special accessible/overseas)
- Vote on election day at a polling location (precinct voting)
- Vote prior to election day at an early vote center
- Vote by people preferring or needing an accessible option (e.g. ballot marking device), like people with disabilities
- Vote with Provisional Ballots (enclosed in a special envelope for later qualification)
[Assumptions added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
California SB 450 ("Elections: vote by mail voting and mail ballot elections") authorizes counties to conduct elections using vote centers. The Department of Elections should develop a sense as soon as possible of the likelihood of using vote centers because that could affect the requirements and design of the system. Making this decision earlier could decrease costs since the design and development wouldn’t have to cover multiple scenarios.
While voters can be assigned to the traditional election-day precinct polling site, with the right equipment, each poll site could have the full features of a vote center, i.e. allow voters from any precinct to vote at that site.
Vote centers could be used for:
- Early voting only
- Election day voting at selected locations
- All election day polling locations
[Answer edited: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.2. Should precinct polling and vote centers use the same paper ballots as those used in vote-by-mail?
Background: If a voting machine is used to prepare ballots for printing, the paper ballots marked could use the same printing and layout as a vote-by mail ballot, or could have a simpler and shorter format listing just the contests and selected choices (called paper cast vote record (CVR) in California Election Code). The shorter format could be on smaller paper, possibly only a single sheet, vs a larger multipage scanned mail ballot. Voting machines (ballot marking devices) at a precinct or vote center could be used only for the purposes of providing an accessible option, while voters not requiring an accessible option could use a normal mail ballot, or all voters at a precinct or vote center could use voting machines with printed ballots.
Mail-Only Format Pros:
- Only one style of ballot printing is required
- No need for precinct voters to use voting machines-- voters not requiring an accessible option can use a "low-tech" solution of only a marker or pen
- Central storage and recounting has all the same ballot size/type
- Better ballot secrecy because all ballots look the same.
- Reduced requirements for printers and possible problems with printer malfunction and paper jams.
- Voting with hand-marked ballots could be done with no electric power.
Mail-Only Format Cons:
- Printing on large mail ballot paper, usually double sided, requires special, possibly nonstandard, equipment. Sheets might need to be hand-inserted individually.
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
Background: If precinct voting is based on the low-tech paper ballot marked with a pen, pads of preprinted paper ballots could be used. However, separate pads are required for each ballot type, party preference and language preference used at that precinct. A vote center might need to store ballots for all ballot types in the county, each in all languages. An alternative is to use blank ballot card stock with a printer to create any desired ballot type and language preference, known as "ballot on demand" (BOD).
Ballot on Demand Pros:
- Reduced printing cost and paper use: no need to stock extra preprinted ballots in case all voters show up.
- Easier to accommodate multiple languages
- Allows any poll site to be a vote-center. Eliminates the problem of people at the wrong poll site casting provisional ballots with an incorrect ballot type.
Ballot on Demand Cons:
- On site printers can fail and probably require AC power, stopping voting.
- Printing on large mail ballot paper, usually double sided requires special, possibly nonstandard, equipment.
[Question & answer edited: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.4. Should voting at a precinct or vote center be primarily based on paper ballots hand-marked with a pen, or voting machine with a printer?
Background: After voters check in at a precinct, they could be given a paper ballot (similar or the same as a mail ballot) and pen to mark it. Alternatively, they could be given a blank ballot sheet and sent to a voting machine (e.g. computer/tablet) where choices can be entered and reviewed. To access the correct ballot type, voters may be given a token containing the ballot type or else the blank ballot sheet could have a ballot type code preprinted. When voters complete their selections, the paper is inserted into a printer, then they check the final printed ballot prior to casting into a ballot box.
Machines used by all non-mail voters Pros:
- Paper+Electronic CVR has the highest security/integrity. Digital signatures can be printed on ballots to authenticate paper.
- Time to vote can be less than marking.
- Mistakes can be undone without needing another ballot to mark.
- Eliminates errors like overvotes and ambiguous marks requiring adjudication.
- Ranked Choice contests can have rankings for all candidates, vs a limit on paper ballots, eliminating exhausted ballots (except from undervotes), while paper ballots typically have limits.
- Eliminates ambiguous marks that would otherwise require adjudication.
- Machines could read a QR code from a vote at home app to print a ballot immediately.
- A separate non-mail ballot format from voting machines would be the same for ordinary voters and those with special needs.
- It will be easier to ensure that all voters have the same level and quality of experience if all voters use the same process.
- Extra machines provide redundancy vs a single accessible machine.
- Vote centers could handle all ballot types without the need for a ballot on demand system.
- Election-day machines could only allow authorized write-ins to be recorded, simplifying write-in voting and enabling end of day totals that include write-ins.
- A full precinct scanner is not required-- just a simple bar code scanner to track paper cast by entering into a ballot box. (The bar code is matched against the electronic CVR.)
- Voting machines have the same effect as precinct scanners with stored electronic CVRs and end of day totals available.
Machines used by all non-mail voters Cons:
- Requires more equipment and more software, with increased cost, complexity, attack surface, and the possibility of something going wrong. May require backup power.
- More possible problems with paper jams and printer malfunction.
- It is difficult for voters to accurately verify their machine-printed ballot, especially when there are many contests on the ballot. For example, in the November 2016 election, there were 52 contests. A 2018 paper suggests voters struggle with much smaller ballots than that.
- Voters need to be occupying a machine while voting, unless a vote-at-home app is used.
- Mail ballot processing is still a separate sizable operation.
[Question & answer edited: March 14, 2019 meeting.]
8.5. If voters use machines to mark ballots, should the machine store CVRs of the marked selections?
Background: When a machine is used by voters to select choices that are then printed on a voter verified ballot, the machine could save the printed choices as a Cast Vote Record. CVRs could then be used as an audit record or for unofficial election night results. (Actually the machine might store vote records with uncertain cast status, so they would need to be linked to a scan of an ID for a ballot when cast and inserted into the ballot box.)
The recommendation is for the voter-verified paper ballot to be the official record counted. However, machine-stored CVRs could be used as official data if validated by a 100% scan of the cast paper record, or else a reliable audit of the paper record.
Voting machine stored CVRs Pros:
- Provides a separate audit record created on election day
- Digital signatures can prove data was created by that machine on election day
- Preliminary results can be obtained without needing to scan ballots
- Combining electronic and paper records is more secure, because they authenticate each other
Voting machine stored CVRs Cons:
- Need ballot ID scan to distinguish a cast CVR from discarded CVR
- Need to collect data from each machine, possible extra hardware
- Extra high-sensitivity software might be needed
- More digital security required; not storing CVRs would mean not having to digitally secure them
[Question added: May 9, 2018 meeting.]
Background: Machines that record voter selections and print a ballot can easily add a bar code (e.g. 2D QR code) that could contain a digital signature of the electronic representation of the printed choices, possibly with the electronic CVR. A digital signature would function as a check for accurate interpretation of a scanned ballot, and also could validate the printout as being created on a particular machine on election day (or early voting period). The signature prevents anyone from replacing the paper ballot with a substitute, provided appropriate digital signature protocols are implemented.
The electronic CVR could be printed as a bar code as well, either as a separate check or to assist the optical scan interpretation.
[Note, a digital signature could be printed as text, e.g. base64 letters and numbers, but a pile of numbers is no more human readable than a bar code.]
Ballots with digital signature bar codes Pros:
- Prevents tampering of paper ballots, either alterations or substitution
- Proves this paper was printed by a particular machine on particular day(s)
Ballots with digital signature bar codes Cons:
- Some people dislike (do not trust) printing that is not human readable and verifiable
[Question added: May 9, 2018 meeting.]
Background: Each electronic voting station could be configured with a printer to create the ballots to be cast. Alternatively, there could be many voting stations (e.g. just a tablet computer), then a separate printing station would be used to print completed ballots. With separate printing stations, a token is required to be scanned to identify the ballot completed at a voting station.
Voters using a home computer or phone to record personal ballot choices could bring a QR code printed or saved in a smartphone and go directly to the printing station. A token might be required to verify the ballot type.
Note: a token could simply be a bar code with ballot type and unique random number printed on the outside of a privacy folder. The number has no association with a voter-- just a way to associate the ballot entered at a voting station with the ballot to be printed. Another form of token in use is an RFID chip.
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.8. If voters at precincts use hand-marked ballots, should ballots be scanned centrally or at the precinct/vote center?
Precinct ballot scanner Pros:
- Overvotes/Undervotes and invalid or ambiguous marks can be reported by the scanner prior to submitting
- Precinct vote counts are available immediately at the end of the day
- Reduces the need for central scanning equipment
Precinct ballot scanner Cons:
- More equipment is required than central-only scanners
- If the scanner and ballot collection is integrated (the scanner feeds into a ballot collection bin), custom equipment may be required.
- Not required if all ballots are printed by a voting machine
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.9. If a precinct scanner is used, does the scanner need to be integrated with a ballot collection bin?
Background: Custom-built precinct ballot scanners sold by election vendors usually include a ballot collection bin within same box containing the scanner. The scanner feeds the ballot into the collection box, or else reverses the paper feed in case of an error detected. Scanners may need multiple collection bins in case of ambiguous marks or write-in votes. An integrated device likely means custom hardware vs COTS equipment.
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.10. If a precinct scanner (or central scanner) is used, does it need to include an imprinter to record a ballot/scan ID?
Background: To match a specific paper ballot in a ballot box with a scanned CVR, either the order of insertion must be maintained, or a unique identifier associated with the scan needs to be added to the ballot. Alternatively, ordered ballots could be rescanned centrally during a recount or audit and matched as a batch with the original scan.
Scanner Imprinter Pros:
- This would permit more sophisticated auditing approaches that involve selecting individual ballots at random, which could reduce time and costs (e.g. risk-limiting audits). Without this feature, auditing needs to be done in larger “batches,” or ballots need to be kept in careful order to allow accessing individual ballots.
Scanner Imprinter Cons:
-
It is not clear if COTS scanners support the feature of printing while scanning. Available imprinters are expensive and might reduce scan speed.
-
The scanner hardware would become more complicated since there would be another “moving part” that can break, and may require consumables, e.g. printer ink or ribbon changes.
[Question & answer edited: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.11. If a voting machine is used to print all precinct ballots and possibly save CVRs, does the ballot collection box need to have an integrated scanner?
Background: Using a voting machine with voter-verified ballot does not constitute casting a ballot-- the act of submitting the ballot after verification is the cast ballot. Voters might choose to discard a ballot and revote, so a simple bar-code scanner is useful to match the electronic CVR with paper ballots submitted (i.e. exclude discarded ballots). Discarded ballots could be scanned instead, but a voter could still walk off with a ballot, or a ballot might not print correctly.
(The LA County VSAP integrates the voting machine, printer, and ballot collection bin. The printer has a bar code scanner to read the ballot type on blank ballot paper and to re-read the ballot ID (to match with a CVR) as it enters the integrated ballot box.)
Whether or not an electronic CVR exists within the voting machine, it may still be useful to have a full scanner at the precinct, so all CVRs are derived from the scanned paper read by the voter, and scanned images are available immediately at the end of election day. However, without a full precinct scanner, vote totals would still be available at the end of the day, and a central scanner could be used after the election for a 100% audit of paper ballots (paper CVRs).
If only machine-printed ballots are collected (no undervote/overvote/ambiguous mark detection is required), then a simple plain COTS scanner could be used to feed the ballot paper in the collection bin, only recording the ballot images.
Additional ballot box scanner Pros:
-
CVRs are derived from the paper verified by voters, not an indirect stored CVR (one criticism of "Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail" is that the human-read paper record is typically not 100% checked)
-
Scanned ballot images can be recorded during the election and available immediately afterwards.
-
Voting machines and scanners could use independent equipment and software, increasing security.
-
Precinct scanners for casting voting-machine printed ballots could also be used to scan vote-by-mail (hand-marked) ballots.
-
A precinct scanner could be used with text-to-speech to read back a ballot for the visually impaired.
Additional ballot box scanner Cons:
-
Additional equipment is required which is in theory, unnecessary.
-
A full scanner capable of error detection on hand-marked ballots might require custom hardware (not COTS) for integration with a collection bin. A simplified scanner that only can feed into the ballot box could be COTS.
[Question & answer edited: April 12, 2018 meeting.]
8.12. Is voting equipment required to run off a battery (without outside AC power) for a set outage duration or all day?
No outside power Pros:
- Eliminates extension cords and possible special power requirements.
- Voting can continue in a power outage.
- Some equipment (tablets and laptops) has a built in battery that can work during a power outage.
No outside power Cons:
- Limits the type of equipment used
- Might require special external batteries and power conversion
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
Background: There are many options for COTS and custom printers, including several options for printing technology. Each option has different tradeoffs in power requirements, consumables (ink, toner, etc.), an types of paper supported.
There is not necessarily a requirement that the printing technology be the same across all locations. For example, a vote center might use a laser printer for printing ballots on demand whereas a voting machine at a precinct might use a thermal printer running off a battery.
Options Include:
-
Laser Printer (single/double sided)
Pros:
- High quality, durable printing
- Toner lasts for a large number of pages
- Fast printing
Cons:
- Requires AC power (limited life on backup power)
- Tracking/replacing toner cartridges is required
-
Ink Jet (single/double sided)
Pros:
- Low power
- Available as portable battery powered COTS
Cons:
- Ink cartridges drain quickly and dry out between elections
- Ink can smear before drying
- Head cleaning might be required
-
Direct Thermal (on special paper)
Pros:
- Low power
- No consumables that need monitoring and reloading
Cons:
- Requires special paper
- Limited life - disappearing ink
- Temperature sensitive
- Lower resolution
-
Thermal Transfer (uses a ribbon) Pros:
- Low power
- High quality printing
Cons:
- Ribbon usage needs to be tracked and replaced
- Not normally used for letter size printers
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting; edited April 12, 2018 meeting.]
Background: Vote-by-mail ballots are typically printed on wide paper stock (sometimes 11"x17") folded to fit within a mailing envelope. Precinct voting with a scanner does not need to be folded, and could be a different size than mailed ballot.
With a larger paper size, more columns could be used, larger fonts, and fewer sheets. With a smaller paper size (8.5"x11" or 8.5"x14"), standard printers and scanners could be used. LA County published a usability study of mail ballot design including 2 paper sizes (8.5x11" and 10.5x17").
If voting machines are used to print a paper cast vote record, then only the selections made are shown, so a single sheet could be used.
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
Accessible voting could be accomplished with:
- Voting machines (BMD) at all precincts (or vote centers) and early voting stations
- Voting machines at selected precincts or vote centers with transportation provided (Question: is this really permitted?)
- Vote by mail using home computer and printer
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.16. Should "remote accessible vote-by-mail" (RAVBM) printing used by voters with disabilities to vote by mail using home computers also be used for accessible precinct voting?
Background: California Election code specifies that remote accessible vote by mail capability should be provided by 2020 for people with disabilities and military and overseas voters. Software to prepare these RAVBM ballots could in principle be used at a precinct poll site or early vote center. Some states have used a similar system (e.g. Prime-III) for disability access voting at precincts.
RAVBM used in precincts Pros:
-
Simplifies the software-- a single accessible voting software system is required both for accessible vote-by-mail and precinct voting. Likewise scanner software for reading RAVBM ballot paper would be reused for precinct voting.
-
An RAVBM system must be usable with home COTS hardware, so only COTS hardware would be needed to implement accessible precinct voting.
RAVBM used in precincts Cons:
-
The hardware and software used by RAVBM would probably not be considered as secure as smaller and more specialized software running on a secure microcomputer.
-
RAVBM ballots might require a paper size different from other precinct ballots. (Although Prime-III as modified by NH could print on hand-marked ballot paper.)
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting; edited April 12, 2018 meeting.]
8.17. Does ballot collection order or CVR recordings need to be randomized to protect voter privacy (be disassociated by order of appearance at a precinct)?
Background: To protect voter privacy, either the time and order of appearance of a voter must not be recorded, or else the order of scanned or submitted ballots must be randomized. Otherwise voter order and ballot order could be correlated and secrecy compromized. If ballot box order must be randomized, then poll workers might need to shuffle ballots.
Scanned ballots imprinted with an ID could have sequential number assigned, could simplify pulling ballots with a specific ID, e.g. for a ballot requiring adjudication, or in an audit. Otherwise, a randomly assigned unique ID could be imprinted, and stored electronic cast vote records could have order randomized.
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
8.18. Should scanned ballot images or compiled CVRs be an open public record, possibly electronically accessible?
In the interest of making the election process transparent, the electronic records of scanned ballots and/or CVRs could be made public (vs sealed paper ballot storage containers). Is open ballot data possible within the legal requirements of privacy and not being able to identify and prove a vote? Would open ballot data be part of end-end verifiability or mutually exclusive to it?
Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) might require a public set of cast vote records (CVR) to fully disclose voter choices and validate the elimination rounds.
South Carolina publishes CVRs as part of its election audit process. This data has been republished in alternate formats by interested members of the public, and been used by political scientists to research voting patterns.
[Question added: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting; edited: March 14, 2019 meeting.]
[TODO: Introduction - why we want it ...]
It should be determined how much additional work would need to be done to make the voting process end-to-end verifiable, and whether and which designs are more compatible (e.g. among approaches listed above, hand-marked vs machine-printed ballots). Also, is this something that could be incorporated later on in the process, or does it need to be incorporated from the beginning?
Is it possible to have end-end verifiability without also being able to prove how one voted?
[TODO: List current research on E2E voting.]
[Question & answer edited: Feb. 8, 2018 meeting.]
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. For copyright and attribution information for this work, see [this section](copyright). The source files for the text can be found on GitHub [here](https://github.com/OSVTAC/project-recommendations).