GEMS has
functionality to customize this, although it is not frequently used. It
would not be difficult to change this for Illinois. If this is really just
a preference of theirs, rather than some kind of state requirement, it would be
better to keep the GEMS terminology consistent. If Illinois insists on the
change, does anyone object to changing "Total Votes" to "Votes Cast" in the post
election reports?
These are options in
the "Show" box of the summary report dialog.
We don't do this,
but its not hard to add, and is not a bad idea. It will be in the next
major GEMS release.
These are options in the "Show" box of the SOVC dialog.
We always show
the candidate total -- kind of the point of an SOVC
report.
GEMS can
report blank races, but not blank ballots. The AccuVote does not upload
this information to GEMS, so we can't add it without AccuVote firmware
changes. The change would also require an incompatible upload
protocol. In short, a big deal, without much utility I can see.
Perhaps they will accept the blank races?
GEMS calls this
"registered write-ins". You can create reg write-ins in the race/candidate
dialog after set-for-election. They show up on reports just like any other
candidate.
SOVC has the
ability to turn on or off percentages, but not by field. We could add the
ability to do it by field, but I question whether this added complexity is worth
the utility. What is the reasoning behind this request? The only
real advantage I can see in turning them off is to save paper. Is it
really so bad that they get the percent overvotes?
I think this
is the same as 2h?
Sorting (or
not sorting) write-ins is an option under the AccuVote setup dialog. We
could make a custom AccuBasic report that did not show the write-in totals (ie,
the number of write-in ovals filled), but is there really any harm in giving
them this information? They are free to hand count the write-ins at the
polls anyway.
I would think
that they would want to sort their write-ins though. Sure, they will have
to go through the main bin to pick out write-ins that did not have their ovals
filled, but at least they won't have to pick out he ballots from voters who were
bright enough to fill in the oval.
Ken
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