PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
June 5, 2008
For more information, contact Kevin Tyne at (602) 542-0681
Sec. Brewer Raises Serious Doubts About Pima County Election Proposals
Expresses Concern over New Proposals as Being Non-Uniform or Unworkable for
Whole
PHOENIX -- Secretary of State Jan Brewer today sent a terse
response letter to Pima County addressing her serious concerns about the county's
recent election procedure report which was released this past April. She noted
that over the past six years, her administration has established a rigorous
end-to-end election process with procedures that are among the tightest and
most secure in the nation.
“Although some of your recommendations make sense, most are problematic, unnecessary,
and/or unjustifiable, and nearly all establish a protocol for Pima County that
is vastly different and unworkable for every other county,” admonished Secretary
Brewer, “It is simply bad policy for one county to push its agenda (which appears
to be largely driven by local politics and not on reasoned analysis) on every
other county.”
In her 11 page response letter to Pima County , Secretary of State Brewer
also listed several major security vulnerabilities, including Pima's unilateral
decision to discontinue the modem transmission of election results from polling
places on election night. Secretary Brewer noted this specific practice provides
no independent method for memorializing the results from a given precinct.
“Not only will discontinuing the modem transmission of results substantially
delay the reporting of unofficial results on election night, it actually introduces
a major security vulnerability into the election process,” stated Secretary
Brewer, “Your supposed ‘security procedure' apparently does not even consider
that something could happen to the machines and ballots in route to the election
headquarters, in which case the results at that precinct would be lost forever.” Added
Brewer, “Certainly the odds of some event happening during the transportation
of the ballots are low, but they are no doubt far greater than the remote possibility
of some hacker intercepting the results, which again would be quickly caught
during the post-election audit.”
Secretary Brewer also took issue with Pima County 's proposal to discontinue
the use of its accessible voting devices for disabled voters noting that this
proposal “violate[s] federal and state law and would unnecessarily disenfranchise
Pima County voters with disabilities.” Brewer further admonished Pima County
for failing to use the federal funds available to the county to assist voters
with disabilities and specifically noted a recent complaint from a disability
group regarding Pima County 's failure to accommodate voters with disabilities. “I
am disappointed that Pima County has not requested the maximum amount available
to it and that $63,688.89 of the money that it has received has not been spent,” Brewer
said.
Finally, Secretary Brewer was critical of Pima County officials for releasing
all past election databases to the Pima County Democratic Party after they
spent money and time fighting in court for over a year against the release.
Secretary Brewer noted, “I am at a loss as to why Pima County would argue in
court against the release of election databases and then turn around and immediately
release more databases than ordered by the court… It is no surprise that the
court reversed itself in the post-judgment proceedings and ordered the release
of this information given the actions by the Board.”
The Secretary of State emphasized in her response to Pima County over two
dozen specific security, educational and accountability requirements already
implemented during her administration.
Said Brewer, “[T]he bulk of your recommendations seem to minimize the significance
of our existing security protocol and imply that serious problems exist when
nothing could be further from the truth.”
“I must reemphasize the point I made in my earlier letter to you about the
importance of following the existing physical security protocol for election
equipment in your county to prevent any unauthorized person from having access
to electronic voting equipment and ballots. The procedures in Arizona go above
and beyond what is necessary to secure an election and it is for this reason
that we have never had an election security breach in our State.”
View the response letter here.
-30-
|