Financing strategies for adaptation. Presentation for CANCC
Johnson County Election Office's 2015 Capital Budget Submission for Next Generation Voting System
1. Capital Improvement Program
Capital Impact
Johnson County, Kansas
Department: Elections
Project Title: Next Generation Voting System
Approved By: Brian Newby
Directions: Please answer the following questions. Type only in the gray boxes. Attach supplemental
information if applicable. Contact your budget analyst if you need assistance.
1. Describe the project request.
This is a renewed/continued funding request for the next generation of voting equipment used in
Johnson County. The current system has been in place since 2002, replacing a system that had
been in service for 15 years. It is expect that the current equipment, also, will have been utilized
for 15 years at the time of replacement.
The Board of County Commissioners included funding for this new system in the 2011 and 2012
capital budgets. Initially, $10 million was placed in an out year, within the 5-year view, and that
number was reduced by the county manager to $5 million in the 2012 budget and eliminated in
the 2013 budget. The cost is inevitable, however, and adequate funding must be earmarked for
the day that the county has no viable option but to immediately purchase a system.
2. Explain the project need. How is this need currently being met?
Johnson County utilizes 2,407 DRE (Direct Recording Electronic) touch-screen voting machines.
In addition, Johnson County averages 3 mail-ballot elections per year. In these cases, and for the
nearly 70,000 advance-by-mail voters Johnson County processes annually, the Election Office
utilizes two ballot scanners. These voting machines and scanning results upload into a tabulation
server at the Election Office.
3. How does this project relate to the Board of County Commissioners’ Strategic Priorities for
Johnson County or departmental goals?
Elections are considered an essential service in Johnson County. Operations of elections is
vulnerable with this antiquated system.
4. Summarize and attach any preliminary studies that have been conducted.
Johnson County is at the forefront of the elections industry in terms of equipment replacement.
That’s because Johnson County was the first community in the country to use touch-screen
voting machines at polling places; Johnson County’s system was implemented approximately
three years before most communities utilized some funding from the Help America Vote Act
2. Capital Improvement Program
Capital Impact
Johnson County, Kansas
(HAVA) to implement new systems. Johnson County’s HAVA funding allowed for the purchase
of nearly 600 machines and additional 525 have been purchased with voting system equipment
reserves to bring the fleet at its current level. While some machines have been implemented later
than others, all were manufactured in 2002.
In looking at processes, Johnson County has examined and benchmarked three procurement
efforts:
a. Johnson County’s own effort to obtain the current fleet—Johnson County has the
foresight to create a book that documented the process for other communities in the
country to utilize.
b. Los Angeles County’s process to create a new system—this county is the largest in the
country and is utilizing innovator IDEO to map its requirements and procurement
process.
c. Travis County, Texas, (Austin)—Travis County is undertaking a process that would
require systems to be open source, proprietary to Travis County. At this time, no vendor
is seriously planning on bidding for such a system in Travis County.
Los Angeles County and Travis County likely will have new systems selected before Johnson
County. Implementation, however, may be at the same time—likely the 2017-18 timeframe.
Johnson County utilized a college intern to map out a procurement process that incorporates
learnings from these processes and obtain voter and stakeholder feedback when developing
requirements. The process envisions an open recruitment of vendors and vendor solutions,
ranging from a similar system to Johnson County’s today to a “Bring Your Own Voting
Machine” concept that pushes the cost of capital to the end users.
5. Provide a detailed project timeline beginning from project approval, through design,
construction, fully occupied, and fully operational.
While the process has been developed, the costs are relatively unknown. Johnson County has
obtained vendor bids to replace today’s system using equipment certified and available today.
These bids were used to initially determine the CIP funding, although the amount put into the
CIP budget was less than the $12.8 million for voting machines or $7.1 million for a paper-based
system, respectively.
It’s worth stressing, also, that by vote of the people, Johnson County moved to voting machines
in the 1960s. It is unclear whether any system can be implemented, other than voting machines,
without voter approval.
The process is included in the attached outline. This outline is part of a larger presentation
developed by the Election Office summer intern.
3. Capital Improvement Program
Capital Impact
Johnson County, Kansas
6. Describe in detail the nature of the services provided with this capital request. Check which
of the following best describes this project (see instruction/guideline page for definitions):
Replacement X Enhancement/Upgrade Growth X New Service Provision
7. What alternatives have been considered to this project, i.e. lease vs. purchasing, outsourcing,
cooperative or shared purchasing? Please elaborate.
This project will require complex financial evaluation by the RFP selection team. Once the CIP
schedule and funding is established, the team will be formed to begin this process.
In the meantime, it is prudent to consider extended utilization of existing equipment, perhaps
augmenting it with more “unused but old” machines identical to those utilized today. Vendors
have hundreds of these machines, priced at about $400 each (once $2,500 each).
Additionally, there is likely some cost payback analysis that can be conducted to determine how
much savings the county could incur if it DID NOT utilize the existing fleet. In other words,
equipment preparation and transportation expenses may be hidden additions that artificially
inflate the cost of holding on to equipment. It could be that a new system—eliminating these
expenses or at least reducing them—makes the total cost of a new system cheaper.
It’s also worth evaluating having a third party entity, owned by the county, purchasing the
equipment and leasing it to the Election Office. For non-countywide elections, this may allow
for greater cost recovery by the jurisdictions that pay for elections in these cases. Statutes do not
allow for the cost of voting machines to be allocated back but the statutes to allow for recovery
of lease expenses.
Finally, if a decision is made to further “sweat the assets” of the existing system, funding for the
new system still must be planned. Perhaps it could continue to be pushed back, but it must be
included. Historically, a common part fails among machines and, if and when this occurs with
Johnson County’s system, there will be tremendous urgency to replace the system immediately.
8. If this is a building project provide detail on the square footage and life expectancy of the
building.
N/A
4. Capital Improvement Program
Capital Impact
Johnson County, Kansas
9. Please outline what sustainability best practices were considered in the development of this
project.
The entire equipment replacement project considers the sustainability of the current fleet of
equipment. From an environmental standpoint, paper ballots with scanners is a poor solution
from a sustainability standpoint. Voted ballots cannot be recycled and, instead, must be
shredded. Financial viability will be the primary sustainability component considered for this
project.
5. Tentative Timeline
• Present to RFP: 12 months.
– Advice: 8 months
– Formulation: 4 months
• RFP to Implementation: 36 months.
– Selection: 14 months
– Implementation: 22 months
• Total: 48 months
• All the above stages are described in the ‘detailed process’ section.
3/4/2014 6
Legend
Advice: Consultation with internal and external
groups to accrue baseline research.
Formulation: Engaging the baseline research to
formulate an RFQ, Draft RFP, and an RFP.
Selection: Engaging the RFQ, Draft RFP, and RFP to
select a suitable voting system.
Implementation: The systematic process of accruing,
testing, and using the selected voting system.