Next, the ballot would be passed through a verifier machine, to be sure that it can be electronically read. If it cannot, it must be shredded, and a new ballot must be printed, to avoid a spoiled ballot.
Egads, no. The last thing you want in a polling place is a shredder. You want a big envelope with big black letters saying SPOILED BALLOTS, and an election judge should supervise the voter as they put their spoiled ballot into it; then the voter is given a new one.
At least that's how it worked last night, when I was an election judge in Hennepin County, MN.
In reply to Re^2: Larry Wall for President! (or at least voting systems in Perl...)
by trammell
in thread Larry Wall for President! (or at least voting systems in Perl...)
by radiantmatrix
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