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Election Management System.

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 10 July 2008

Thursday, 10 July 2008

Questions (919, 920)

Paul Kehoe

Question:

918 Deputy Paul Kehoe asked the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government the cost to date of the consultancy design, manufacture, transport, security, storage and training in each local authority area since the inception of electronic voting machines. [28821/08]

View answer

Written answers

The total expenditure on the development and roll-out of the electronic voting system to date in respect of all constituencies is some €51.3m, the bulk of which has been incurred in purchasing the voting machines and ancillary equipment. In addition, based on figures received in my Department from Returning Officers, the total annual costs for storage of the electronic voting equipment (including the cost of insurance, service charges, rates, heating, etc.) for 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007, were some €658,000, €696,000, €706,000 and €489,000 respectively. Based on recent provisional information from Returning Officers, a total of some €139,000 has been expended to date in 2008 in respect of storage of the electronic voting equipment. Full annual cost data are provided to my Department at the end of each year, and a more definitive figure for 2008 will be available in due course.

In 2007, over 60% of the electronic voting machines (4,762 in total) were moved to a central storage facility located at Gormanston Army Camp. Costs incurred to date in respect of the movement and storage of this equipment are some €328,000. These are largely one-off costs related to the preparation of the facility, transportation of the machines and the acquisition of storage containers. The available capacity at this location has now been fully utilised. A full breakdown of all of these costs is set out in Table 1.

Table 1. Electronic Voting and Counting Project — Expenditure to Date

Expenditure item

Cost

(€m)

Voting machines

43.941

Ancillary equipment (Ballot Modules, Programme Reading Units, PCs, trolleys, tables, etc.)

2.330

Awareness and Education campaigns

2.566

Voting Machine development, election software development/training etc.

0.828

Consultancy/testing

0.731

Miscellaneous (staff training, freight)

0.924

Total

€51.320m

Local Storage Costs

2004

0.658

2005

0.696

2006

0.706

2007

0.489

2008 (provisional figure to date)

0.139

Central Storage Costs

0.328

Total

€54.336

Responsibility for the security and safe storage of manual voting electoral materials (such as ballot boxes, stamping instruments, and stationery) has been a matter for the Returning Officers, who are statutorily responsible for conducting the polls. Accordingly, similar responsibility was assigned to them in relation to the storage of the electronic voting machines and equipment. Information on local storage and related costs is therefore provided on the basis of constituency, rather than local authority area. Based on the figures received in my Department from Returning Officers, the total annual costs for storage of the electronic voting equipment (including the cost of insurance, service charges, rates, heating, etc.), for each constituency, are set out in the Table 2.

Table 2: Annual Storage Costs 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007

County/City

Annual Storage Costs (incl. VAT)

Annual Storage Costs (incl. VAT)

Annual Storage Costs (incl. VAT)

Annual Storage Costs (incl. VAT)

2004

2005

2006

2007

Carlow-Kilkenny

28,506.00

29,595.00

30,166.00

24,653.65

Cavan-Monaghan

25,828.00

25,828.00

27,075.32

21,608.32

Clare

10,800.00

3,600.00

3,600.00

3,600.00

Cork City

27,207.50

42,499.50

53,942.33

48,561.85

Cork County

37,609.30

37,609.30

35,124.00

35,913.29

Donegal

9,293.00

15,714.00

16,685.80

13,987.80

Dublin City

65,000.00

72,350.00

71,265.00

6,954.00

Dublin County

62,938.66

62,938.66

49,034.86

Nil

Galway

5,253.00

5,253.00

Nil

5,000

Kerry

26,125.00

26,125.00

22,624.96

28,003.00

Kildare

27,125.86

27,125.86

31,984.21

29,364.82

Laois-Offaly

28,178.00

28,178.00

27,647.60

27,647.60

Limerick

57,675.86

57,675.86

64,465.30

28,423.10

Longford

2,995.16

15,095.16

18,439.88

20,003.28

Roscommon

10,374.98

10,374.98

9,816.00

10,664.82

Louth

298.00

298.00

593.47

595.06

Mayo

34,930.00

34,930.00

37,426.00

38,608.00

Meath

20,366

20,366.00

21,976.51

26,354.72

Sligo

Nil

Nil

Nil

Nil

Leitrim

Nil

3,000.00

3,150.00

3,200.00

Tipperary (N&S)

42,700.00

42,700.00

31,200.00

39,196.00

Waterford

52,888.48

52,888.48

57,699.17

35,989.67

Westmeath

22,805.34

22,805.34

21,772.62

21,440.30

Wexford

16,875.00

16,876.00

19,064.76

18,934.46

Wicklow

42,455.80

42,455.80

54,241.29

Nil

Total

658,228.94

696,281.94

705,995.08

488,703.74

Paul Kehoe

Question:

919 Deputy Paul Kehoe asked the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government his views on terminating the electronic voting machine project and transferring funding to meet the needs of persons currently awaiting modification to their houses under the essential repair and disabled persons scheme. [28822/08]

View answer

I am at present considering the next steps to be taken in relation to the electronic voting project. In this, I am taking into account the work of the Commission on Electronic Voting, which has examined the system, relevant experiences and developments internationally, the need to maintain public confidence in the electoral process, as well as the provisions in the Programme for Government relating to electoral reform generally.

In any event, most of the costs associated with the electronic voting and counting project, including local storage and related costs, are met by the Department of Finance through the Central Fund, and therefore could not be transferred for alternative use as set out in the question.

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