Texas 2011 - 82nd Regular

Texas House Bill HB1419 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version

Download
.pdf .doc .html
                            82R6932 DRH-D
 By: Hughes H.B. No. 1419


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the use of direct recording electronic voting machines.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Chapter 129, Election Code, is amended by adding
 Sections 129.003 and 129.004 to read as follows:
 Sec. 129.003.  PAPER AUDIT TRAIL REQUIRED. (a) Except as
 provided by Subsection (e), a voting system that consists of direct
 recording electronic voting machines may not be used in an election
 unless the system:
 (1)  has:
 (A)  been certified or otherwise approved by means
 of qualification testing by a nationally recognized test
 laboratory; and
 (B)  met or exceeded the minimum requirements
 contained in "Voting System Standards Volumes I and II" or a
 successor voluntary standards document developed and adopted by the
 Federal Election Commission, the Election Assistance Commission,
 or the National Institute of Standards and Technology; and
 (2)  creates a contemporaneous auditable paper record
 copy of each electronic ballot that allows a voter to confirm the
 choices the voter made through both a visual and a nonvisual method,
 such as through an audio component, before the voter casts the
 ballot.
 (b)  A voter must be allowed to privately and independently
 view the paper record copy required under Subsection (a)(2) without
 being allowed to handle the copy. Once the voter has confirmed that
 the paper record copy corresponds to the vote the voter has
 indicated electronically, the vote may be recorded electronically
 and the paper record copy must be deposited in a secure storage
 container. If the voter finds that the paper record copy does not
 correspond to the voter's choices indicated electronically, the
 system must:
 (1)  invalidate or otherwise spoil the paper record
 copy;
 (2)  allow the voter to review the choices the voter
 made electronically; and
 (3)  generate a new paper record copy for the voter to
 review as provided by this subsection.
 (c)  The paper record copy must:
 (1)  indicate the voter's choice on each office or
 measure for which the voter cast a vote and indicate the offices and
 measures for which the voter did not cast a vote;
 (2)  be printed in the same language that the voter used
 to cast the voter's electronic vote; and
 (3)  be designed to be read electronically.
 (d)  Except for a recount under Title 13, the electronic vote
 is the official record of the ballot. For a recount of ballots cast
 on a system involving direct recording electronic voting machines,
 the paper record copy is the official record of the vote cast.
 (e)  A system involving direct recording electronic voting
 machines that was acquired before January 1, 2012, may be used in an
 election without meeting the requirements of this section only if:
 (1)  a voter has the option of casting a paper ballot
 instead of using the machine;
 (2)  a permanent record of each ballot is created at the
 time the ballot is cast or during the local canvass of the votes;
 (3)  the system is subject to parallel monitoring; and
 (4)  at least 46 days before the date the system is to
 be used for voting, the authority responsible for holding the
 election submits a technical security plan for the system to the
 secretary of state.
 (f)  The record created under Subsection (e)(2) may be in a
 paper format or be an electronically recorded image.
 Sec. 129.004.  REQUIREMENTS FOR SYSTEM USING DIRECT
 RECORDING ELECTRONIC VOTING MACHINES.  (a) On request of the
 secretary of state, the authority adopting a system that uses
 direct recording electronic voting machines must provide:
 (1)  the source code for any software and firmware used
 as part of the system;
 (2)  all documents relating to the federal
 qualification process; and
 (3)  complete documentation of all hardware, software,
 and firmware components, including detailed change logs, and
 documentation regarding the development process.
 (b)  Not later than the 90th day before the date a system
 using direct recording electronic voting machines will be used in
 an election, the authority responsible for holding the election
 shall submit to the secretary of state a physical security plan for
 the system.
 (c)  Not later than the 46th day before the date a system
 using direct recording electronic voting machines will be used in
 an election, the authority responsible for holding the election
 shall submit to the secretary of state:
 (1)  all changes or modifications to the system that
 might impair the accuracy and efficiency of the system, unless the
 secretary of state specifically provides otherwise;
 (2)  a training plan for election officers at each
 polling place; and
 (3)  a communication plan explaining the manner in
 which election officers at each polling place will communicate on
 election day.
 (d)  A component of a system that uses direct recording
 electronic voting machines may not:
 (1)  transmit or receive official election results
 through an exterior communication network;
 (2)  permit wireless communication to be transmitted or
 received; or
 (3)  be connected to the Internet.
 (e)  A provisional vote may not be cast on a direct recording
 electronic voting machine.
 (f)  A disability access device must be connected to a direct
 recording electronic voting machine before the machine is used for
 voting.
 (g)  At each polling place at which a direct recording
 electronic voting machine is used for voting, postings must
 indicate the penalties for tampering with the machines in each
 language used at that polling place for the ballot.
 SECTION 2.  This Act takes effect July 1, 2012.