The News & Advance
Email Facebook Twitter Mobile RSS
|
 
NewsNews

Local registrars await large turnout

Local registrars await large turnout

Clifton Potter (right) picks up his materials for his polling station at the Lynchburg registrar’s office on Monday afternoon. Potter will be working at Linkhorn Middle School, the same place he has worked for 38 years. He said he volunteers ever year because it is his civic duty and a family tradition.


»  Comments | Post a Comment

An Election Day like none before it dawns today in Central Virginia, with large numbers of newly registered voters energized to participate in a historic turnout.

Rain could fall this afternoon, the National Weather Service said. Nothing else seemed likely Monday to dissuade voters from casting their ballots in record numbers.

Bedford County Registrar Barbara Gunter said she was expecting a 90 percent voter turnout. Already, 7 percent of the county’s 46,000 registrants have voted absentee, she said.

Those 3,300 votes won’t be counted until tonight, when they’re put into the returns along with today’s results.

The office’s phone rang non-stop Monday with people wanting to verify their registration status, Gunter said.

Excitement was also brewing in Lynchburg, where voter registration is up 14 percent because of the Barack Obama campaign’s voter-registration drive and Liberty University’s signup of 4,200 new voters.

Only four other places in Virginia exceeded Lynchburg’s percentage of new voters. They were: Williamsburg, with a 19.5 percent increase, followed by Petersburg, Richmond and Harrisonburg.

Lynchburg police officers will be on the lookout for traffic problems around polling precincts, said Capt. Wayne Duff of the police department.

“Because there is a lot of talk about record numbers of voters and lots of turnout, we are preparing to provide traffic control assistance,” Duff said.

Officers on patrol today have been given the locations of the polling precincts to monitor for cars that may be spilling out into the street and cause traffic jams.

“We will not have an officer assigned to work the polls,” Duff said. “We don’t anticipate a problem with voting occurring. We will concentrate on being visible and on traffic safety.”

Duff encouraged voters to be mindful of safety by looking for stopped cars in the road, people who may be crossing the street or other dangers.

- Staff writer Carrie J. Sidener contributed to this report.

Terms and Conditions

Advertisement

 
 

Advertisement

Reader Comments

*Facebook Account Required to Comment. If you are not already logged into Facebook, please click the comment button to do so.

Deal of the Day

Advertisement

Be the first to know!

Be the first to know!

Get breaking news e-mail alerts.

Advertisement

 

More Ways to Connect

 
 

Top Stories

ViewedNews
  • 1.Suicide reported at Rivermont bridge
  • 2.Appomattox man dies at Amherst County paper mill
  • 3.Details released in motorcycle accident on Timberlake Road
  • 4.Man killed in paper mill accident in Gladstone
  • 5.Liberty University to resubmit James River dock request
  • 6.Forest retail center planned for U.S. 221 complex
  • 7.Driver charged after car flips in U.S. 460 median in Lynchburg
  • 8.Bedford County Schools finalize budget, cut 10 positions
  • 9.Sun Belt shuts door on Liberty's bid to join conference
  • 10.Update: Lost hikers identified

Advertisement

Media General
KewlBoxBoxerJam: Games & Puzzles
Games, Puzzles & Trivia
Blockdot: Advergaming and Branded Media
Advergaming and Branded Media

MyYahoo!