Voter turnout 60 percent in Clark

Published 4:59 pm Tuesday, November 3, 2020

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In some parts of the country, election officials were expecting long lines at the polls on Election Day, but in Clark County, turnout was light early in the day. But late afternoon, however, the numbers picked up.

The county ended up with a 60 percent turnout by 6 p.m. when the polls closed.

At the Strode Station Elementary School polling place, Shelby Gill said only about 350 people had voted by around 12:30 p.m.

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The noon hour is usually one of the busiest times of day because workers vote on their lunch breaks.

“It’s been very slow. I was expecting a lot more than this,” Gill said.

“This morning, we were rolling,” Doris Kennedy, another worker at the same location, said. There had been about seven voters lined up outside the schoolhouse doors at 6 a.m. when the polls opened, but it had slowed down by midday.

“It’s been a little less than we expected,” Sharon Williams, a poll worker at Robert D. Campbell Junior High School, said a short time later.

But she said she thinks that was because so many had voted early, either on the machines at the Clark County Clerk’s Office or by mail-in ballot, something the secretary of state and governor agreed to allow all voters to do this year because of the novel coronavirus.

A little after 2 p.m., however, it was starting to get busy at the Clark County Courthouse. By 6 p.m., 746 had voted there.

Early voting, before Election Day, was heavy in Clark County. A week before the election, 5,670 people had voted absentee at the courthouse, and the county clerk had gotten back 4,515 mail-in absentees of the 5,878 mailed out.

County Clerk Michelle Turner said that on Monday, 951 people voted at the courthouse over a period of seven hours.

“They were lined up on the street, going to the jail,” she said.

The race most voters seemed most interested in was the presidential contest between Republican President Donald Trump and Democratic Vice President Joe Biden.

However, also on the ballot were races for the U.S. House and Senate, state House, city commission and school board, as well as two constitutional amendment questions.

About Randy Patrick

Randy Patrick is a reporter for Bluegrass Newsmedia, which includes The Jessamine Journal. He may be reached at 859-759-0015 or by email at randy.patrick@bluegrassnewsmedia.com.

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