Chattanooga Times Free Press

Voting steady, few issues arise in Hamilton County

- BY DAVID COBB STAFF WRITER

A record early voting turnout didn’t do much to thin the Election Day crowds at voting precincts across Hamilton County on Tuesday.

“It’s been steady,” said James Berry, an election officer at Daisy Church of God on Dayton Pike. “This morning it was very heavy.”

Berry and election officers at other precincts said voters were gathered at the doors before the polls officially opened at 8 a.m. because, in some cases, voters believed the polls opened at 7 a.m.

That’s an issue election officials are accustomed to encounteri­ng in the Chattanoog­a area. Georgia polls open at 7 a.m., and Alabama polls are in a different time zone, both of which can create confusion for residents of the tri-state area.

“There’s always that confusion, and it mainly stems from Georgia, because they share the same news,” said Scott Allen, assistant administra­tor of elections for Hamilton County.

Overall, Allen said, Tuesday went smoothly in Hamilton County.

“It wasn’t bad at all,” he said just minutes after the polls closed. “You look at Twitter and online and see pictures of lines in North Carolina and other places and you realize it could be bad. But it was really a great day here for us.”

Voting did begin with a headache for election officers at the Missionary Ridge fire hall on Sheridan Avenue.

Officials there said a voting machine malfunctio­ned in the morning, causing a delay in counting about 100 early ballots. A working machine was brought to the precinct later in the morning, and a steady crowd of voters still streamed through the facility just after 6 p.m.

Long lines were reported at a handful of precincts during peak hours, but Rachel Carleton’s voting experience went smoothly.

“It was pretty anticlimac­tic,” the 25-yearold said after casting her vote from the South Chattanoog­a Recreation Center around 5:45 p.m.

She said she planned to return home and watch the results on TV before returning to work today, where conversati­ons for many likely will center on Tuesday night’s results.

“There’ll either be a sigh of relief or a lot of ‘I can’t believe this is happening.’ And I think that’s true with whoever wins,” Carleton said. “Depending on what circles you’re in, this one is so divisive that I think that’ll be true for almost everyone.”

Tents covered in campaign signs and campaigner­s for East Ridge City Council candidates littered the entrance to two precincts located inside East Ridge City Hall, creating a tailgate-like atmosphere as voters turned into the parking lot early in the evening.

East Ridge Precinct One officer Jackie Fulks said there had been a steady crowd through the facility all day. A stream of voters still trickled through as poll-closing time neared.

“It’s been a good day,” she said. “It’s about to get real interestin­g.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAN HENRY ?? Mary Russell, left, assists residents with their applicatio­ns to vote Tuesday at the Hixson Fellowship Hall in Red Bank Cumberland Presbyteri­an Church. Russell has been helping with elections for the past 32 years.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAN HENRY Mary Russell, left, assists residents with their applicatio­ns to vote Tuesday at the Hixson Fellowship Hall in Red Bank Cumberland Presbyteri­an Church. Russell has been helping with elections for the past 32 years.

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