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Burlington County unveils new voting machines in advance of June 4 primary election

Special to The Sun
Voting with the new machines is done with the machine’s touch screen and there are multiple opportunities to review and change selections on screen before printing a paper ballot. After printing the ballot, voters can again check to verify their selections before casting their ballot by inserting it into a machine tabulator that scans and tabulates their selections.

Burlington County voters will cast ballots safely and securely with a new fleet of voting machines that will be deployed during the upcoming New Jersey Primary Election on Tuesday, June 4.

The Burlington County Commissioners, Burlington County Superintendent of Elections and Burlington County Board of Elections announced the acquisition of the new fleet, describing the improved technology as simple to use, secure and more reliable than the county’s old fleet of switch-based machines used by voters for the previous 25 years.

The new machines – consisting of electronic ballot marking devices and tabulators — are the same as ones acquired by Burlington County in 2021 for early voting. The upcoming June 4 primary will be the first time the new machines will be used at all polling locations on Election Day.

The Superintendent of Elections Office is the custodian of the machines. A total of 513 ballot markers and 239 machine tabulators were acquired by the county and are ready to be deployed to all polling locations on Election Day. Those machines are in addition to the devices the county purchased previously and deployed for early voting.

The county’s purchase was approved by the Burlington County Commissioners at the request of the Superintendent of Elections and was supported by the bipartisan Burlington County Board of Elections.

New devices use different voting procedures

The ballot marking devices use a large digital touchscreen that displays each ballot. The text can be enlarged and voters can toggle between all available languages. The machines have battery backup in the event of power loss, and they are accessible to residents with disabilities.

Voting is done with the machine’s touch screen and there are multiple opportunities to review and change selections on screen before printing a paper ballot. After printing the ballot, voters can again check to verify their selections before casting their ballot by inserting it into a machine tabulator that scans and tabulates their selections.

To assist voters, the Burlington County Superintendent of Elections Office plans to conduct extensive outreach about the new machines to let voters familiarize themselves with the equipment before Election Day.

Poll workers are being trained on the use of the new machines so they can assist voters on Election Day.

Other voting options

Voters continue to have the option of voting early with a machine at any of seven early voting sites in Burlington County during the designated early voting period before the primary. Early voting will begin on Wednesday, May 29 and end on Sunday, June 2.

Voters may also request a vote-by-mail ballot that may be submitted via the mail, secure drop box or by hand delivering it to the Burlington County Election Board.

Any registered voter can request a vote-by-mail application online at the Burlington County Clerk’s Office at https://www.co.burlington.nj.us/996/Vote-by-Mail-Information. Undeclared voters will need to declare for either the Republican or Democrat parties to receive a ballot.

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