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Originally published Friday, October 24, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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States prepare for record voter turnout

At election offices across the country, phones are ringing off the hook.

Chicago Tribune

WASHINGTON — At election offices across the country, phones are ringing off the hook.

The Virginia State Board of Elections typically handles 1,000 phone calls each week. In the week leading up to the close of voter registration Oct. 6, the office answered more than 44,000 calls.

With just days to go, election officials are attempting to finish their preparations for what experts predict to be an overwhelming voter turnout Nov. 4. This year's primaries gave only a modest preview of the general election turnout, said Doug Chapin, director of electionline.org, a nonpartisan Web site on election reform.

"We saw several states that were just overwhelmed by voters," Chapin said. "We don't have a system that is actually prepared to handle 100 percent turnout."

States are reporting record registrations. Pennsylvania has reached a high of 8.6 million registered voters, and the Indiana voter rolls show more than 470,000 new voters since the 2006 election.

But researchers say some states are not ready.

A report released last week by Common Cause, a nonpartisan election-reform group, gave low preparation ratings to a handful of states, including battlegrounds Colorado and Virginia. The data showed flaws in a number of areas, including inadequate paper ballots to back up voting machines and insufficient vote-counting methods.

Other issues have arisen in Ohio, where the Supreme Court stepped in to resolve a disagreement over updates to the state's voter database.

Florida, despite improvements since 2000, also raises concerns, Chapin said, such as the state's exact-match standard for its voter database, which could delay registrations and increase provisional ballots. Floridians will be using their third voting system in as many elections, potentially creating more confusion.

The more than 30 states that allow early voting are already running elections.

Nearly one in four voters in states that offered early or no-excuse absentee voting cast their ballot before their primary election date, according to the Pew Center on the States. That figure is expected to rise — an idea that officials are supporting to ease lines.

And the indications from early voting also suggest record black turnout, The Associated Press reports. In North Carolina, blacks make up 31 percent of early voters so far, even though they're just 21 percent of the population.

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In neighboring Georgia, roughly 36 percent of the early voters are black, outpacing their 30 percent proportion of the state's population.

Even with early voting, turnout on Election Day is still expected to be high. In Virginia, which had a 71 percent turnout rate in 2004, officials are forecasting turnout to be around 90 percent of the state's more than 5 million voters.

Voters should expect lines, said Susan Pollard, spokeswoman for the Virginia State Board of Elections, comparing the enthusiasm to that of events for which people are willing to wait in long lines, like the release of Apple's iPhone.

"This is Election Day, and the payoff here is much, much greater," Pollard said.

The key to handling a larger turnout is recruiting and training poll workers, said David King, a Harvard University political scientist who studies election reform.

The other major focus is on equipment. The Help America Vote Act (HAVA) from 2002 allocated $3 billion in federal funds to help states upgrade their voting systems, much of which has been spent on new equipment.

About 1,200 jurisdictions changed equipment between 2004 and 2006, said Kim Brace of Election Data Services, a nonpartisan consulting firm.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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