Searching my BCV mailbox for "super precinct", I find no messages with
this term, so I thought I'd bring up the topic. As mentioned in this
article, some see super precincts as a way of saving money. Note,
though, the statement about live network connections to prevent
multiple votes by one person. (Doing a Google search for "super
precinct", remarkably few searches turned up, and none in Google
News.)
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<http://www.sptimes.com/2003/09/05/Pasco/County_may_switch_to_.shtml>
County may switch to 'super precincts'
The system, which would replace neighborhood precincts, could save
money and require fewer poll workers.
By BRIDGET HALL GRUMET, Times Staff Writer
© St. Petersburg Times
published September 5, 2003
NEW PORT RICHEY - Supervisor of Elections Kurt Browning is toying with
the idea of creating "super precincts" for the 2006 elections,
replacing 151 specially assigned polling places with 20 or 30 sites
where any voter could cast a ballot.
Browning outlined the idea at a County Commission budget workshop
Thursday during which he described his ongoing efforts to curb costs
and increase efficiency.
"You cut down on the number of poll workers you need. You cut down on
the amount of equipment you need," Browning told commissioners at the
West Pasco Government Center.
The idea would require some technical safeguards. To ensure that no
one votes more than once at different sites, each super precinct would
need a live connection to a master computer network, Browning said.
But perhaps the biggest challenge, he said, would be selling the idea
to voters used to their own neighborhood precincts. Voters might have
to drive a little farther to cast their ballots at a super precinct,
Browning said, but most people drive even farther to do their shopping
and other errands.
"It's going to take a change of mind-set," he said.
Browning started exploring the idea after Congress passed the Help
America Vote Act in 2002. Among other things, the law requires all
precincts to be handicapped-accessible, which would mean renovations
for some Pasco County precincts in church and community club
buildings, he said.
In the meantime, other state and federal election reforms are
requiring more training for poll workers, Browning said. Workers once
needed three hours of instruction; now some require up to 15 hours of
training, including classes on conflict resolution and disability
awareness, he said.
The super precinct concept seems to solve both problems, he said, by
limiting the number of sites that might need renovations and the
number of poll workers needed to staff them.
Commissioners were supportive of the idea Thursday, although Browning
has not yet developed the specifics or come up with a cost estimate.
Commissioner Ted Schrader had one suggestion, though: Make sure the
super precincts sit on the county's bus routes.