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sjm-lbm | 1 month ago

This was common in Texas, but becomes challenging when one polling place serves voters that might have different elections to vote for - say, at a polling place on the line between two school districts or something like that. You can't just print one sheet of paper, and it to everyone, and call it a day. Toss in a few different jurisdictions that don't directly overlay each other, and the number of combinations become nontrivial.

(the machines used in Texas vary by county, in my county we use Hart InterCivic machines that are touchscreen but produce a paper trail - honestly I think it works well)

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velcrovan|1 month ago

That just sounds like you don’t have enough polling places.

sjm-lbm|1 month ago

To be fair, that is true. Texas is around the 5th most difficult state to vote in per the Cost of Voting Index.