http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/news/local/states/ohio/counties/summit_county/10393397.htmIs this true about 10 hours in Knox County!!?
Travis said the longest line was in Knox County, where some Kenyon College students waited 10 hours and finished voting at 4 a.m.
He has cast his ballot at Hatton Elementary School since moving to Akron's Ellet area in 1955.
``They said my name wasn't in the book. Jackie's name was there, but I wasn't,'' said Harris, who described himself as ``fighting mad.''
After much, and sometimes loud, discussion he was allowed to vote -- by provisional ballot.
Six weeks after the election, Harris' mood hasn't changed. ``I told them (poll workers) my name not being in the book was a bunch of crap,'' Harris said, noting that he still believes ``something tricky was going on.''
``A two-hour wait to vote can operate as a kind of poll tax for people who have to vote before work,'' said Edward B. Foley, an Ohio State University professor who specializes in election law.
``On the other hand, if you take your work home in a briefcase, or you have the freedom to come back to vote in the middle of the day, the lines have less effect.''
``At 5:45 a.m., people were already in line,'' McWilliams said. ``Challengers were there, too.''
She saw it as ``no accident'' that Republican challengers were deployed in Wards 3, 4, and 5 and in one precinct each in Wards 1, 7 and 9. ``Each one of those precincts and wards were largely populated by persons of color,'' she said.
In a People for the American Way public hearing in Cleveland, one of the conveners asked the audience of more than 50 to indicate, by a show of hands, who was sure that their vote had counted.