

#IMAGECAST JEANES MANUAL#
It can also accommodate sip-n-puff or paddle switches for voters with manual dexterity impairments. The “game controller” style ATI module has buttons that permit voters with visual, dexterity, or cognitive impairments to mark choices through the ATI. ICP can also support an Audio Tactile Interface (ATI) that is tethered to the scanning device for either DRE-style ballots (which are stored electronically), or with an attached printer, to generate marked paper ballots that can be scanned. The ICP can also be configured to return ballots with too few choices, or entirely blank ballots.Īdditional Options: Accessible DRE or Paper Ballot Marking SessionsĪlthough the ImageCast precinct is typically deployed as a ballot scanning device only, in a small number of jurisdictions, ICP is also deployed with additional features for voters with disabilities.


For example, if the voter has marked too many choices in a race, the display lets the voter know this and offers the option to return the ballot for correction, or to cast the ballot. The device simultaneously scans the front and back of a paper ballot, interprets voter marks, and communicates any issues that require the voter’s attention back to the voter through an LCD display. Ballots can be inserted into the ImageCast Precinct in multiple orientations: face up, face down, header first, or footer first. Dominion Voting Systems ImageCast Precinct (ICP) is a ballot scanning device used to support polling locations with voters who hand-mark paper ballots (typically distributed at the polling place check-in station) and who then hand-feed the paper ballots into the scanner, in order to cast the ballot.
