NEW: RI Voting Issues Draw Outrage from Voters, Defense from Secretary of State Gorbea

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

NEW: RI Voting Issues Draw Outrage from Voters, Defense from Secretary of State Gorbea

Varieur Elementary School in Pawtucket experienced problems Tuesday; a second voting machine was deployed in the afternoon.
Voters and candidates in Rhode Island are expressing outrage at long wait times and issues with new voting machines on Tuesday -- and Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea has defended the rollout of the new equipment. 

"I'm at the Coventry polling place Club Jogues and there's a significant back up because there is only one processing machine and they seriously underestimated the voter turn out," said Vin Marzullo, who is running as an independent for State Representative in District 26. "People are handing the ballots to other individuals and leaving the premises. There is no voter security."

"Secretary of State screwed up big time.  One machine per poll is a joke - a serious under capacity issue," said Marzullo. "Voters should be upset. Some feel disenfranchised. Giving an executed ballot to another person so you don't have to wait in line to feed the machine should never happen."

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On Tuesday afternoon, Gorbea announced that the state Board of Elections was deploying four additional machines to high volume ares (see below). 

"I went to Temple Beth-El at 11:45, and walked out because I was told there was a two hour wait," said Providence resident Kira Greene. "I asked a poll worker, who told me the machine was broken.  I can go back later -- but what about the people who can't?"

Common Cause Raises Questions

GoLocal asked John Marion of Common Cause what he thought of the voting issues  on Tuesday.

"There are a number of precincts that had significant delays because of the implementation of the new machines, which are significantly slower at processing [ballots]," said Marion. 

"I think there are questions of capacity, especially at particularly high turnout locations in Providence where we saw issues in April, such as Summit [Commons]," said Marion. "That wasn't rectified, and we spoke repeatedly to the Board of Canvassers in April  -- so I'm not happy about that."

Sec. of State Nellie Gorbea defended the rollout of the new equipment on Tuesday -- but drew sharp criticism from at least one candidate.
"I think what happened at [Temple] Beth El was not addressed quickly enough - they got info about the [lack of privacy] sleeves hours before they were able to provide sleeves, so that's not about new machines," said Marion. "That's the place I heard the most issues. I heard at Summit they went through lines asking for people for their sleeves, asking are you OK just holding your ballot."

"I'm concerned that the places that saw significant waits so far,  that people walked away. When someone walks away and doesn't vote we don't want people disenfranchised because of lines or machines," said Marion. "There are roughly 420 polling places -- I know of a half a dozen that had issues."

"What I don't want is people who haven't voted yet seeing reports of long lines and staying away," said Marion.  "We're hoping those people can return to the polls...if you get there at 7:59, you can vote."

Sending out More Machines 

The Rhode Island Board of Elections sent out additional ballot machines to four locations in the state on Tuesday afternoon. In Providence, Summit and Temple Beth-El were getting additional machines to the single one that each had, as was Varieur Elementary School in Pawtucket, and the Jamestown Recreation Center.

The move comes after reports that voters were told to leave ballots in the machine "lock box" to be counted at a later time, due to the wait time and problems. 

"So this is a Board of Elections who determines these protocols," Gorbea told GoLocalProv. com on Tuesday afternoon. "Every machine has a lock box within its compartment -- its like a mailbox slot, so if there's a jam with the technology, there's a secure location.  Any ballot placed into lock boxes are taken out by bipartisan pair of poll workers."

"So historically it has been one [machine] per polling location -- I've reached out to every board of canvassers, and overall the systems are working fine," said Gorbea. "There are some locations experience delays, and those ones are with the two-sheet ballots. The new machines scan and encrypt ballot images into memory -- it's an industry standard. A few seconds in a high-turnout election....it means higher wait times. The one pagers don't seem to be an issue."

Polls are open until 8 p.m. 

"I would verify with Board of Elections, but it is my understanding that  anyone in line as of 8 PM will be admitted in," said Gorbea. "People shouldn't be discouraged from voting in this very important election," she added. 


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