<p>Mine was no line at all.</p>
<p>45-50 minutes for me here in Ohio. Longest I’ve ever waited in previous elections was about 10 minutes. There are reports of very long lines all over the state.</p>
<p>Mine was just a couple of people, but I am in a relatively suburban area.</p>
<p>No line at all. I was the 37th voter at 8:30 in the morning.</p>
<p>At our polling place in the Philly suburbs there was no line to speak of at 11 am, but one of the poll workers said it had been very busy when the polls first opened.</p>
<p>Got to the polls at 6:35; polls opened at 7. I was the 28th person in line, but I was the 20th to complete my ballot.
Left the polling place at about 7:25 - the line was LONG when I left!</p>
<p>20 mins</p>
<p>Sent from my YP-G1 using CC</p>
<p>suburban, non-swing state.</p>
<p>I arrived a little after 11:00 a.m. and the line was out the door. It took me a little over two hours to get to vote. I usually walk in and out this time of day. I am not in a swing state.</p>
<p>No line at all, but I live in a rural area and have never seen a line to vote.</p>
<p>Five people ahead of me. Precinct had five machines. Went smoothly and quickly.</p>
<p>My county is experimenting this election with allowing anyone to vote at any polling place, not just the one assigned to your precinct. My polling place is a small church tucked into a quiet, out of the way neighborhood, and I figured we’d lose voters to precincts on major thoroughfares or at schools. I was correct. Easy in, easy out, though they said it was crowded when the polls first opened with a long line.</p>
<p>45 minutes. Arrived at my Florida voting place at 8:30, left building at about 9:15. It was pouring rain, about 250 voters were inside under roof in snake lines with about 25 voting machines. There were ladies with toddlers in strollers, old people with walkers and canes, blacks, whites, Hispanics, Haitians, etc…real cosmopolitan make up. Drove by same voting station lunch time and the line of voters was out into parking lot.</p>
<p>I went in about 10:45 and waited about 20 minutes. The polling folks mentioned that there had been about 600 people already. I live in a small town with less than 15,000 people, many of whom are retirees.</p>
<p>My state is not a swing state.</p>
<p>Small town, no line.</p>
<p>No line when I voted at 9:30, but there was plenty of activity. 2 or 3 voting machines, hard to find parking. My machine had accumulated 150 votes by then.</p>
<p>Not at all a swing state, suburban area.</p>
<p>one person in front of me. inner surburban town, non-swing state.</p>
<p>CNN was showing some lines in FL for 3 hr 45 min.</p>
<p>I’m going tonight. Hopefully it won’t be a 3 hour commute again.</p>
<p>No wait. But there are a lot of booths…daughter was finishing voting when I walked into the polling place. It was 10 a.m. We aren’t a swing state but lots of propositions that are very important to our state.</p>
<p>I live in a suburb of Cincinnati/Hamilton county…election ground zero.</p>
<p>I was shocked that there was no wait whatsoever…although a huge number of voting booths, almost all were occupied. H voted earlier in the morning…no wait for him either.</p>