August 27, 2018

Ball State Program Teaching Security To Election Officials

Original story from   Indiana Public Radio

Article origination Indiana Public Radio
Stephanie Wiechmann/IPR News

Stephanie Wiechmann/IPR News

Ball State University is working with the Secretary of State’s office to train Hoosier election officials in election security procedures. The program’s directors say the new certificate program is tailored exclusively for Indiana election needs.

There’s a long list of things the Secretary of State’s office says Hoosier election officials are supposed to know well.  Some, like election systems and election laws are obvious.  Others, like “physical space management” and “public relations,” are not.

But Jay Bagga, a co-director with the Certificate Program in Election Administration, Technology and Security at Ball State University, says everything is connected.

“When I go out to vote, I see the front end.  I see the voting system and I see the poll workers.  That’s only the tip of the iceberg.  There’s so much that goes on on the back end in the preparation of these elections.  The public only sees a part of that.”

Read More – Improving Election Security: State, Local Governments Take Steps

The program will soon train its first 21 students from 14 Indiana counties.  According to program guidelines, all must be county clerks, election officials, or those who want to do those jobs in the future.

For those last category of students, co-director Bryan Byers says learning extensively about an election’s physical and cybersecurity requirements could open up new doors.

“Today’s election official really needs to be an information technology specialist, unlike in the days without electronic equipment.”

Sixteen of the 21 participants are receiving a scholarship from the Secretary of State’s office for the $2,550 certificate.  The program will take in a new crop of students every six months.

Support independent journalism today. You rely on WFYI to stay informed, and we depend on you to make our work possible. Donate to power our nonprofit reporting today. Give now.

 

Related News

Indiana's child care issues cost the state $4 billion last year, Chamber report says
How will Donald Trump handle U.S. climate policy during his second term?
Court: IDHS likely discriminated against people with disabilities. ACLU warns issue is widespread