Maryland Attorney General Opinion 98 OAG 152

CourtMaryland Attorney General Reports
DecidedDecember 18, 2013
Docket98 OAG 152
StatusPublished

This text of Maryland Attorney General Opinion 98 OAG 152 (Maryland Attorney General Opinion 98 OAG 152) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Maryland Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Attorney General Opinion 98 OAG 152, (Md. 2013).

Opinion

152] [98 Op. Att’y

ELECTION LAW

VOTING SYSTEMS – STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION – REQUIREMENT THAT VOTING SYSTEMS NOT CREATE A “SEGREGATED BALLOT” FOR VOTERS WITH DISABILITIES

December 18, 2013

Linda H. Lamone Administrator, State Board of Elections

On behalf of the State Board of Elections (“SBE” or “the State Board”), you have requested our opinion regarding the meaning of the term “segregated ballot” as it appears in the statutory requirements governing the certification of voting systems for use in Maryland. Those requirements specify that a voting system, to be certified, must meet certain State and federal standards and “provide access to voters with disabilities that is equivalent to access afforded voters without disabilities without creating a segregated ballot for voters with disabilities.” Md. Code Ann., Election Law (“EL”) § 9- 102(f)(1). The requirements set forth in § 9-102 also specify that the voting system must be based on the preparation of a voter-verifiable paper ballot. Because many voters with disabilities are unable to prepare a hand-marked paper ballot, however, the voting systems will need to include a computerized ballot-marking device that allows the voter to make selections through other non-written means and then print a paper copy of the ballot. The State Board of Elections (“SBE”) has begun the process of selecting a new optical scan voting system for use in Maryland beginning with the 2016 Presidential Election. The first step in that process is the certification of those voting systems that are compliant with Maryland’s standards. It is within this context that you ask what constitutes a “segregated ballot” under State law. Specifically, you ask:

1. Does segregation occur by virtue of the fact that the ballot created by the ballot marking device is different and distinguishable from the hand marked ballots? Or, does segregation only occur if ballots are cast, counted, and stored in a physically separate and distinct manner? 2. Does the determination of whether a segregated ballot has been created depend in Gen. 152] 153

part on how the system is intended to be deployed and utilized? For example, assume the ballot marking device could be deployed in a manner such that it is an optional voting method for all voters, as opposed to only an accessible voting solution for voters with disabilities. Would such a deployment and utilization affect the analysis of what constitutes a segregated ballot? In our opinion, the General Assembly, by using the term “segregated ballot,” intended to ensure that the ballots cast by voters with disabilities could not be identified as such during the process of casting, counting, and, if necessary, re-counting the paper ballots cast in an election. As we see it, the State Board has three options for certifying voting systems that can be used without creating a segregated ballot for voters with disabilities. First, SBE may require all voters to use a voting system that is accessible to voters with disabilities. This option would not segregate ballots in any way, but the cost and inefficiency of such a system—which the statute requires SBE to consider—might weigh against it. Second, SBE may certify an accessible voting system that generates a ballot that is formally identical to those ballots cast by non-disabled voters so long as all ballots are cast, counted, and stored together. Finally, after considering the legislative history and the definitions and usage of the term “segregated,” we conclude that the statute permits SBE to certify an accessible voting system that generates a non-identical ballot, so long as voting procedures are implemented to ensure that non-disabled voters use the accessible system as well and do so in sufficient numbers to prevent the resulting ballots from being identified as having been cast by voters with disabilities. I Background As the twentieth century came to a close, Maryland’s voting infrastructure comprised a wide variety of voting systems, with each county responsible for choosing which type of system to employ. See 97 Opinions of the Attorney General 32, 36 n.7 (2012) (describing how, by 2000, Maryland counties employed four different types of voting systems: punch-card, mechanical lever, optical scan, and direct-recording electronic touchscreen). The experience of the 1994 gubernatorial election, with its narrow margin and vote count problems, highlighted the “myriad of administrative problems” associated with Maryland’s patchwork 154] [98 Op. Att’y

quilt of voting systems. Schade v. Maryland State Bd. of Elections, 401 Md. 1, 8 (2004). The potential significance of those problems was magnified by the 2000 presidential election and the national attention it focused on the “unfortunate number” of ambiguous ballots produced by punch-card balloting machines. Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98, 104 (2000); see also 97 Opinions of the Attorney General at 34-37. In 2001, the General Assembly responded with legislation to modernize the conduct of elections in Maryland. The legislation mandated a uniform, statewide, voting system for State and federal elections and charged a single agency—the State Board—with overseeing the operation of that system. Under this new system, SBE, “in consultation with the local boards [of elections],” was given the authority to “select and certify a voting system for voting in polling places and a voting system for absentee voting.” 2001 Md. Laws, ch. 564; EL § 9-101(b). The State Board, following the directive in the 2001 legislation, then certified, selected, and procured a “direct recording electronic” or “DRE” unit, which provides for the voting and tabulation of votes directly by a computerized touchscreen system without the need for paper ballots.1 See generally Schade, 401 Md. at 7-9; 97 Opinions of the Attorney General at 36-37. The new DRE system certified by SBE represented an advance over the previously-used paper ballot systems in many respects. The computerized systems eliminated the need to interpret ambiguous handwritten ballots, allowed for easier and more efficient re-counts, and in some ways made the voting process more user-friendly. Schade, 401 Md. at 8-9. Most relevant to our purposes, the touchscreen system included features that enabled many voters with disabilities to cast their ballots without assistance, id. at 9, and in a manner that made their ballots indistinguishable from non-disabled voters. As the Court of Appeals observed in Schade, the touchscreen system represented the “first time [that] blind voters were able to vote independently and secretly” on the same basis as non-disabled voters. Id. at 21.

1 Absentee and provisional ballots—which are completed on paper— were tabulated through the use of an optical-scan system. See, e.g., State Board of Elections, Overview of Maryland’s Voting System, http://www.elections.state.md.us/voting_system/index.html (last visited Dec. 9, 2013). Gen. 152] 155

Although the touchscreen system represented a step forward in many respects, some observers believed that it came at the cost of election integrity because the system did not leave a “paper trail” that would allow for independent verification of the accuracy of the vote tabulation. Because the voter’s selections on the touchscreen were recorded by computer and computer alone, the paper ballot image that the system was able to generate merely verified the computer’s selections, not the voter’s. Id. at 18 n.22. Concerns about electronic security and the potential for vote manipulation prompted opponents of the new DRE system to file suit to block its use in the 2004 presidential election.

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Maryland Attorney General Opinion 98 OAG 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-attorney-general-opinion-98-oag-152-mdag-2013.