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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2010 By John F. Bailey. November 3, 2010 UPDATED 10:57 A.M. E.D.T.:
Westchester County’s new optical scanning voting machines failed big time in the two most important races to White Plains on Election Day.
Sources say that results of the Castelli-Roach race and Oppeneheimer-Cohen race will not be known for 1 to 2 weeks and that the Board of Elections does not have an immediate handle on what districts have not reported.

37TH SENATE DISTRICT AND 89TH ASSEMBLY DISTRICT VOTE COUNTS COULD NOT BE COMPLETED TUESDAY EVENING DUE TO WIDESPREAD PROBLEMS WITH THE OPTICAL SCANNERS READING BALLOTS, SO A HAND COUNT HAS BEEN ORDERED FOR THE REMAINING 19 Election Districts in THE 89TH ASSEMBLY DISTRICT.
At 1:30 Wednesday morning, Robert Castelli, incumbent Assemblyman in the 89th District told WPCNR that machines from 19 Election Districts in the 89th District had been impounded due to malfunction of the scanners. He said ballots within those machines would have to be hand-counted, starting, he thought tomorrow to determine the eventual winner in his race with White Plains Common Councilman, Tom Roach.
As of 1:30 A.M. when returns stopped coming in, Mr. Castelli led Mr. Roach by 318 votes, 16,752 to 16,434 in an amazing race with four lead-changes over three hours.
Mr. Castelli had taken command of the race between midnight and 1 A.M. as he had told a WPCNR contact at his headquarters at the Crowne Plaza he thought he would, because his strength in Harrison started to come through. Then with 19 Election Districts to be reported, and Mr. Castelli pulling away, the counting stopped.
Castelli said the machines from what he understands are very sensitive to how the paper ballots are marked and circles filled-in. It was his understanding that many ballots had not been counted by the machines. “The machines, some in Harrison, some in White Plains, and some up in my neck of the woods, have all been impounded.” Asked if he had any idea why the counts had taken so long to come in, when the machine presents an electronic readout, Castelli said he did not.
Castelli also told WPCNR that the 37th State Senate District featuring an equally amazing race between incumbent Suzi Oppenheimer and Republican Challenger Robert Cohen had also had counts suspended for the same reason, but with many more election districts still out.
Ms. Oppenheimer after trailing through the first three hours by as much as 1,000 votes caught up with Cohen and surpassed his totals with 54 Election Districts remaining. Oppenheimer as of 1:30 A.M. leads Mr. Cohen, by just 180 votes, 33,272 to 33,092. Castelli told WPCNR that many of the districts in the 37th Senate Race matched the districts in question in the 89th district where machines malfunctioned in registering the ballots. Mr. Castelli said he has had no explanation from the Board of Elections or any officials as to why the counts were so slow in coming in.
By WPCNR recollection, only half the districts in the Castelli race were totaled by 11:30 P.M., compared to complete counts that were in by midnight when mechanical lever voting machines were used.
Castelli said he was in a “virtual dead heat” with Mr. Roach with the 19 districts left to be hand-counted beginning he thought sometime today. Castelli also said there were “hundreds” of absentee ballots.
The 33,186 votes in the 89th Assembly Race is, WPCNR believes is a record for votes cast in this district, and certainly the highest amount in the decade WPCNR has been covering this district. The 37th Senate District race so far with 54 districts left to count has seen 66,364 votes cast.
In other races, Amy Paulin appears to have won the 88th Assembly District easily, but her election dricts are not complete, either.
Andrew Cuomo won the Governorship, and Senator Charles Schumer won election to another term in the Senate, and Kirsten Gillebrand won to serve the remaining two years of Hillary Clinton’s Senate Term. Nita Lowey and Eliot Engel won reelection to the House of Representatives.