Long lines, a few glitches mark start of early voting in South Florida

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BY MICHAEL VASQUEZ, CHARLES RABIN, BREANNE GILPATRICK AND ADAM H. BEASLEY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

The 2008 election officially began at dawn Monday with long lines, singing
union members and a handful of hiccups.

>From Coral Gables to Aventura, South Beach to Fort Lauderdale, some polling
places had the feel of Election Day.

The line stretched to 100 at the Southwest Regional Library in Pembroke
Pines -- with some voters lining up two hours early for what they called the
most important election in a generation. In North Miami, the lines stretched
around the block at the polling place at Northeast Second Avenue and 132nd
Street.

In reality, it was just the first of 14 early voting dates scheduled before
the general election on Nov. 4, but that didn't stop hundreds from lining up
around Miami-Dade County, even before the polls opened at 7 a.m.

The queues, and some technical problems, made voting a slow slog, with
people waiting in line anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour.

''I expected it to be much faster,'' West Kendall resident Esperanza Acosta
said. ``Election Day is going to be a big mess if people don't vote early.''

Lines at Miami Beach City Hall Monday morning were the picture of
unhappiness. News traveled fast among the 20 or so voters waiting at 7 a.m.
that technical problems were slowing down voting. Some of the computers used
to check in voters weren't working, though there were no problems with the
optical scan machines used to count ballots.

''This is a typical Florida election,'' grumbled voter Mike Frank, wearing a
black-and-white ''Barack is my homeboy'' T-shirt.

About 40 minutes later, a poll worker told reporters everything was ''fine''
but referred further comment to the elections department. Miami Beach voter
Danny Reynolds, who arrived at 7 a.m. on the dot, was still in line and
piping mad.

''I think it's ridiculous,'' Reynolds said. ``They've had plenty of time to
prepare for this, and they should have worked on those machines and made
sure they were working yesterday.''

Elections department spokeswoman Christina White said two of the location's
four check-in computers ''were down for maybe a total of 10 minutes'' when
the polls opened.

''We're looking into why,'' she said.

Later, voting at Miami City Hall meant a walk to the back of the building,
standing outside in line with about 100 people, then a wait of well over an
hour.

A large blue umbrella covered about a dozen people on the top of the steps.
Poll workers handed out water bottles, and chairs were offered to older
folks waiting in the heat.

Still, the mood was upbeat.

Early in the day a bus covered with McCain signs and carrying voters drove
along a delivery entrance to the voting line, but was turned back as voters
disembarked.

Realtor, Grove Isle resident and Obama supporter Hank Klein waited in the
crowd before noon.

''I expected a line, but I didn't expect it to be this long,'' said Klein,
impressed with the courtesy of the poll workers.

Not to be outdone, 69-year-old Nancy Delgado was voting for McCain. The
Cuba-born American just couldn't overcome Obama's plan to ``spread the
wealth.''

''I come from a country that suffers so much,'' said Delgado. ``Spread the
wealth. That's coming from my country. I heard that when I was 19.''

Sheila Delemos took time out from work to vote and was upset over the length
of time it took, and the McCain bus that had visited earlier.

She said it took her almost two hours to cast her ballot.

''I wanted to vote. I wasn't going to be deterred,'' she said.

In most places, the slowdown was due to a steady turnout.

Voters stood in line for about an hour Monday morning at the 75th and
Collins branch library on Miami Beach to vote, thanks to a glitch that for
the first two hours or so had only one machine reading ballots.

By 10 a.m., two machines were working for a steady stream of early voters
who stretched out the door numbering about 50 at a time.

One voter confided to another that he had dropped his wife at Publix and
hoped to vote before it was time to pick her up. Poll workers handed out
bottled water with trademark Miami-Dade ''I Voted Today!'' stickers.

At the Coral Gables library, Lance Cpl. Joseph Steele stood in a line of 125
people at 11 a.m., when the estimated wait time was 45 minutes.

Monday was the Marine's last chance to vote at a booth -- he returns from
his two-week leave Tuesday. Steele said he wasn't sure if he was still
registered until Monday morning, when it was confirmed by county officials.
It was good news to Steele, who can now vote for his candidate of choice:
Sen. John McCain.

''For me, he's the only one that has military experience. I believe that
he's the best candidate for the defense of our country. We need someone who
has experience,'' he said.

David and Susan Hays of Coral Gables also were in the crowd.

''I would wait 10 hours to vote for Obama,'' Susan said. ``I want to get it
done with so I can work on his campaign.''

Carol Brooks, also from Coral Gables, said: ``People who are voting for
Obama realize this is a pivotal moment in American history.''

The sun hadn't fully risen in the sky when Blanche Norwood, 57, made her way
to a voting booth in the lobby of Miami-Dade County Hall.

Only 13 others had voted ahead of Norwood, who works at Treasure Isle
Nursing Center in North Bay Village.

''It's very important to me to get my ballot cast,'' said Norwood, an avid
Obama supporter who questioned where her ballot was being taken after she
entered it into the machine. ``They said they're locking it in a bin and at
the end of the day they get a police escort to the elections department.''

Norwood said she was told by a poll worker that she couldn't vote wearing an
Obama T-shirt. She said she was told she'd either have to take it off or
turn it inside out. But that was quickly cleared up by site clerk Javier
Gonzalez, who said voters are permitted to wear what they wish.

By 7:30 a.m., the line at County Hall was about two dozen deep. Eight at a
time were permitted to pick up their ballots, which took about a minute
each. Then voters were off to the 39 voting booths and the 12 scanners.
There were also five Ivotronic machines for folks with disabilities.

Out front of County Hall a small group was milling around holding signs for
and against many of the ballot questions. For the most part, though, it was
business as usual at County Hall.

The Service Employees International Union had representatives helping a few
people to the polls, and WMBM-1490 AM set up shop about 100 feet from the
polls, awaiting Bishop Victor Curry, who was set to do a radio show.

Kim Diehl, 33, a communications worker with SEIU, had just voted.

''We voted early because we want to be the first in line at this historic
occasion,'' she said.

Congressional candidate Raul Martinez made a carefully orchestrated entrance
at County Hall shortly before 9 a.m., surrounded by about a dozen singing
SEIU members.

The group had just finished having breakfast at the University of Miami,
then hopped on a train to County Hall and descended the escalator to the
front entrance.

Martinez, smiling and waiving to friends, said it's important to vote early.

''We're asking everyone to vote as early as they can so they can have a
smooth vote,'' said Martinez, who voted for Barack Obama. ``This is what's
important. The ballot is very large.''

The parking lot was full at the Aventura Government Center at 6:45 a.m.,
with the line 20 to 30 deep before the doors even opened.

Laura Mills of Aventura power-walked to the polls and was among the first to
cast her vote.

''We expect to see a bigger rush than ever of people voting,'' Mills said.
``We want to make sure our vote counts and get out here and do it quick.''

At the West Kendall Regional Library, about 30 early voters lined up before
7 a.m.

Thirty minutes later only a handful had finished voting.

One voter walked into the library -- and came right back out. The line was
too long, so he would come back later.

Though anecdotal, these cases were early indications that the enthusiasm for
this historic presidential election is as high as expected.

In all, there are 20 early polling places in Miami-Dade; Broward, with 17
early voting locations, begins casting ballots at 10 a.m.

In Broward, more than 70 people were in line by the time the polls opened at
the Fort Lauderdale branch library on Sunrise Boulevard.

A few people toward the front of the line read paperback books and
newspapers while they waited. Others studied their sample ballots and talked
about the new voting machines and who they planned to vote for. One woman
near the front of the line played a Big Bird video on her iPhone to
entertain her son as she waited to vote.

By arriving at 8:30 a.m., John McLaughlin of Fort Lauderdale earned the
right to be the first person to cast a ballot at the Fort Lauderdale branch.
He arrived at the polls early after running into trouble with his absentee
ballot.

But he said it wasn't so bad because ''they gave me a chair.'' It also gave
McLaughlin a chance to read the newspaper.

Once the polls opened at 10 a.m., it took him about 20 minutes to get
through the ballot.

''It went very well, very smoothly,'' he said.

Paul Rizzo, 62, and Adriane Martinez McIntyre, 53, arrived at 8:50 a.m. --
more than an hour before the polls opened -- earning them a spot roughly 10
people from the front of the line.

''We wanted to make sure Obama gets in,'' explained Martinez McIntyre of
Lauderdale Lakes.

Frank Piccolo of Fort Lauderdale arrived about 9:45 a.m. and found about 50
people in line ahead of him.

''I came this morning thinking there wasn't going to be anyone here, but
this is great,'' Piccolo, 50, said of the turnout.

''I hope it's like this all over the country,'' said Jon Christiansen of
Fort Lauderdale as he stood in line next to Piccolo.

About an hour after the polls opened, the line to vote at the Fort
Lauderdale branch library stretched out the door, doubling back on itself to
fit more voters inside the lobby.

''We've never had this kind of crowd on the first day,'' said Mary Cooney,
spokeswoman for the Broward Supervisor of Elections.

Some voters looked at the line and left, deciding to try a different voting
site -- or a different day.

Cooney reminded a couple of them that it's not too late to request an
absentee ballot. Requests can be made until the Wednesday before the
election.

Cooney said 115,000 absentee ballots have been requested so far. Voters can
request absentee ballots through Oct. 29. Those ballots will be mailed no
later than Oct. 31. They must be returned to the Supervisor of Elections no
later than the close of voting on Nov. 4. They can be returned at any branch
office until Nov. 3, but on Nov. 4 only the main office in Fort Lauderdale
is open.

Along with the lines, a couple of Broward voting sites had glitches with the
polling sites' ''Ballot on Demand'' system, which is used during early
voting to print ballots for each individual voter, Cooney said.

The equipment allows the Supervisor of Elections Office to print ballots as
needed for the individual precincts as voters arrive, rather than storing
ballots for all of Broward's precincts at each site.

But at a couple of voting sites the equipment malfunctioned when the
computer system used to look up each ballot stopped communicating with the
machine used to print the ballots.

In Pompano Beach, the problem was resolved before polls opened and did not
affect voting, Cooney said. And in Deerfield Beach, voting was slowed -- but
not stopped -- when one machine went down.

Coney said the ''Ballot on Demand'' machines might also have caused a voting
delay in Hallandale Beach, where voting started a little after 10:30.

Rosemary Sabino, a registered Democrat, planned to vote early in the
presidential election on Monday morning, so she made her way to the
Hollywood public library about 10:30 a.m., only to find a long line of other
voters.

Guessing it would take her two hours to vote for her candidate, Obama,
Sabino decided she would return home and come back another time.

''I was shocked at how long the line was at the library,'' she said. ``It's
amazing. The line must have been at least two blocks long.''

Determined to vote, Sabino said she plans to return at 2 p.m. or on Tuesday.

''I'm hoping what happened this morning is an anomaly,'' she said.

Begun in 2002, early voting in Florida is now an oft-used convenience --
along with a make-or-break time for many political campaigns. Yet that does
not mean voters won't encounter lines, with a recent Pew Charitable Trust
report suggesting the switch to optical-scan ballots may slow down early
voting.

Election officials see early voting -- along with mail-in absentee ballots
-- as a crucial way of reducing Election Day waits.

This is especially true this year, with hundreds of thousands of newly
registered voters across South Florida. The booming voter rolls helped
Broward County crack the million-voter threshold this election season.
Broward now boasts 1,008,656 registered voters, with Democrats showing the
biggest recent gains -- and holding well more than a 2-1 overall lead over
Republicans.

A little before noon, supporters of Barack Obama and John McCain stood
outside the Broward County Main Library, holding signs and waving at passing
cars. The curbs were lined with smaller campaign signs for candidates
further down the ballot. Democratic Broward Sheriff's candidate Scott Israel
greeted voters and handed out fliers.

Inside, about 90 people waited to vote, standing in a line that snaked
through the lobby from one end of the building to the other.

Hollywood residents Rose Apirian, Susan Gordon and Mireille Jeanopolous came
early for the Hillary Clinton rally and decided to jump in line to vote at
about 10:30 a.m. By 11:45, they were nearing the front of the line.

''While we were waiting for the event we decided to come inside to vote,''
Gordon said.

Miami-Dade, too, has seen a substantial jump in new voters. Since the
beginning of this year, the voter rolls have added nearly 160,000 names, for
a total of 1,243,315 voters. Overall, Democrats hold a 554,001-382,286
advantage over Republicans, with independent and minor-party voters
accounting for the rest.

At Miami-Dade elections headquarters in Doral, voters struggled to find
parking -- with many forced to park on side streets blocks from the
precinct. At any given point, there were at least 20 people waiting in line
to vote, as poll workers shuffled voters in and out.

''The last presidential election I waited until the last minute and had to
wait two hours in line,'' said voter Laura Velez, 23. ``I would rather wait
in line for five or 10 minutes than have to go through that again.''

Velez, who initially supported Hillary Clinton's bid to be the Democratic
presidential nominee, said she was debating whether or not to vote, but
decided she had to.

''I wasn't going to vote, but I don't think any of us can afford not to,''
Velez said. ``Our taxes are too high, the economy is in shambles. One way or
another, we have to vote to voice that we want some sort of change.''

Miami Herald staff writers Robert Samuels, Laura Figueroa, Anders
Gyllenhaal, Phil Latzman, Carol Rosenberg, Sergio Bustos, Yudy Pineiro, Jay
Weaver and Jose Pagliery contributed to this report.

-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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