Bhubaneswar: If you think the job is done with your name appearing in the draft electoral roll prepared after the Special Intensive Revision (SIR), then think again. More than 58 lakh voters whose names feature in the draft list of 3.13 crore electors will have to submit documents to rectify “logical discrepancies” before they can make it to the final voter list.Booth-level officers (BLOs) have started informing affected voters. Some corrections can be made by submitting documents to BLOs, while others will require hearings before assistant electoral registration officers (AEROs) at the block level.The list of logical discrepancies includes cases where a parent is shown as younger than the child, an implausible age gap existing between parents and children, a husband recorded as female or a wife as male, the same voter appearing in two locations, family relationships not matching across linked records, and other errors that the linkage software is unable to reconcile.For instance, a voter was listed as Lala Bihari Behera in the 2002 electoral roll but appears as Lalbihari Behera in the current database. He has been asked to furnish documents establishing that both records belong to the same individual.Jagdish Kumar Sahoo said his discrepancy resulted from adding the middle name ‘Kumar’ a few years ago when he linked his Aadhaar with the voter card and chose to use the name as it appears in Aadhaar records.“When poll officials enrolled me in 2002, they did not include my middle name and wrote as Jagdish Sahoo. Now, I have to attend a hearing to prove my identity,” he said.A BLO, requesting anonymity, said more than 100 of the roughly 600 voters in her booth have been flagged for such discrepancies. “When I inform people, many say their names already appear in the draft list and are unwilling to listen when told that they still need document verification,” the BLO said.In several cases, incorrect data entered during previous revisions has resulted in unrealistic age gaps between parents and children, triggering verification by the software.Confirming that nearly 58 lakh voters have been flagged, Chief Electoral Officer R S Gopalan said most discrepancies are minor and can be easily verified and corrected to ensure an error-free electoral roll. “I assure voters that they will not be unnecessarily harassed. The revision exercise will be completed with minimum inconvenience. Many of the discrepancies can be corrected online or at the booth level by the BLOs within the Aug 4 deadline,” Gopalan said.