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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR López
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/11/06
HB
SHORT TITLE Voting Machines for Certain Counties
SB 660
ANALYST Medina
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
$4,000.0 Non-Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Companion to HB 430 and SB 395
Duplicate of HB 530, except that HB 530 is clearer in the contingency language of the appropria-
tion and the fund to which the revenue from the Secretary of State’s sales of voting systems shall
be deposited. HB 530 requires deposit in the electronic voting machine revolving fund.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Secretary of State (SOS)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 660 appropriates $4,000.0 from the general fund to the Secretary of State for the pur-
pose of purchasing voting machines from counties that purchased voting machines to meet new
voting system standards. The appropriation is contingent upon legislation being enacted requir-
ing the replacement of those voting machines. The bill requires the Secretary of State to then sell
the voting systems purchased from the counties and deposit the revenue in the general fund.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $4,000.0 contained in this bill is a non-recurring expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2007 shall
revert to the general fund.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 660 – Page
2
The analysis from the Secretary of State does not include an itemization of the appropriation
contained in this bill. The closest that the State Budget Division and LFC analyses can come to
deriving the $4,000.0 appropriation is the amount for which the counties have borrowed from the
State Board of Finance for the initial purchase of voting machines that would be compliant with
federal Help America Vote Act (HAVA) standards and with state election reform mandates
(Laws 2005, Chapter 270). As of January 30, 2006, eighteen counties had outstanding voting
machine loan balances with the State Board of Finance totaling $3,791.6. These counties pur-
chased the following types of voting systems in order to comply with federal and state election
mandates: AVC Edge Touchscreen, Optical Insight and AVC Advantage from Sequoia Voting
Systems, and ADA iVotronic Touchscreen and Optech III P-Eagle systems from Election Sys-
tems & Software.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
There is no indication from the Secretary of State as to how many voting machines would need
to be purchased from the counties. According to LFC and DFA analysis, there are approximately
1,400 precincts throughout the state and federal HAVA mandates require that at least one
HAVA-compliant voting machine be made available at a single polling place. Precincts are often
consolidated into groups to form a polling place for HAVA purposes. Nevertheless, it remains
unclear how many voting machines would need to be purchased or what the fair market price
would be for these machines. Just as unclear as to whom the machines would then be sold by the
Secretary of State is where the machines would be stored for the period between the purchase
from the counties and the sale to prospective buyers.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The Department of Finance and Administration states that the administrative implications of this
bill would be considerable. The Secretary of State would require staff to travel to the different
counties to inspect the voting machines to determine a fair purchase price, as well as staff famil-
iar with procurement procedures and the vouchering process that would ensure proper payment
to the counties. Just as unclear as to whom the machines would then be sold by the Secretary of
State is where the machines would be stored for the period between the purchase from the coun-
ties and the sale to prospective buyers.
COMPANIONSHIP
This bill is a companion to House Bill 430 and Senate Bill 295 which both amend the Election
Code to require that all voting systems used in elections covered by the Election Code have use a
paper ballot on which the voter physically or electronically marks the voter’s choices on the bal-
lot itself rather than require simply that elections have a voter-verifiable and auditable paper trail.
Those bills include a caveat that voting systems owned or voting systems used by a county on
March 1, 2006 that do not use a paper ballot may be used until the sufficient federal, state or lo-
cal funds are available to replace the voting system and an adequate supply of voting systems is
available or December 31, 2007.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 660 – Page
3
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The bill does not include language tying it to contingency language related to the enactment of
either House Bill 430 or Senate Bill 295.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to the Department of Finance and Administration, there may not be sufficient time or
resources for the Secretary of State to divert attention to the process of purchasing machines
from the counties.
The Secretary of State has stated that regardless of any legislative action taken during this legis-
lative session, the counties’ voting systems would be HAVA compliant in time for the 2006 gen-
eral election. The Secretary of State is in the process of spending $9,000.0 in federal HAVA
funds to purchase machines for the counties.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Without House Bill 430/Senate Bill 295 and this bill, Senate Bill 660, the state Election Code
would continue to provide for the requirement that voting systems maintain a voter verifiable and
auditable paper trail.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
How do House Bill 430/Senate Bill 295, which require paper ballots statewide, and this bill,
which appropriates general fund dollars for the purchase of voting machines from the counties,
affect the state’s ability to remain compliant with federal HAVA election mandates.
Is there adequate time to focus on the purchase of new voting machines which are HAVA and
Chapter 270 compliant.
DXM/mt