Gov. Crist extends early voting hours statewide

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BY KIRSTIN MAGUIRE, AMY SHERMAN AND ADAM H. BEASLEY [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Gov. Charlie Crist on Tuesday extended early voting hours across the state
to 12 hours a day.

The executive order comes after record early voting turnout has contributed
to long lines at polling sites.

Current Florida law allows for early voting to be conducted eight hours a
day each weekday and for a total of eight hours during the weekends. With
Crist's order, early voting sites will be open the rest of this week from 7
a.m. to 7 p.m. They will be open a total of 12 hours on Saturday and Sunday,
the last day of early voting.

''It's not a political decision,'' Crist said moments after signing the
order, which declares a state of emergency in Florida. ``It's a people
decision.''

Crist said he made the decision after seeing numerous news reports about
long lines and after he had a conversation with state House Democratic
leader Dan Gelber of Miami Beach. Crist's appointed secretary of state, Kurt
Browning, had rejected the idea of extending the early voting hours earlier
this week.

The announcement comes amid record early-voting turnout.

Monday marked the largest single-day turnout in Miami-Dade and Broward
counties so far, and throngs of voters continued to flock to South Florida
polls Tuesday.

More than 43,000 people cast their votes in the two counties on Monday,
roughly 5,000 more than on any other previous day.

In Miami-Dade, Monday's tally was 24,683. In Broward, 18,673. Both shattered
previous single-day highs for 2008.

In all, nearly 1.2 people statewide had voted as of 5 a.m. Monday -- roughly
10 percent of the state's registered voters.

The state didn't track daily early voting numbers in 2004. But Miami-Dade
and Broward elections officials say they expect the early voting turnout to
surpass that of the last presidential election.

The polls in Miami-Dade opened at 11 a.m. Tuesday with an all-too-familiar
story: lines that wrapped around buildings, and even blocks.

Last week, both counties started posting estimated wait times at each of the
37 early voting spots, but Tuesday, those projections proved overly
optimistic. Curious how long it took to vote at Model City Library Tuesday
morning?

According to Miami-Dade's Elections website, it was only 90 minutes.

But ask the people actually in line, and the reality is it was roughly twice
that long.

Nyla Ferguson, 52, showed up at the polling place, 2211 NW 54th St., at 9:30
a.m. Two hours later, she still hadn't made it to the booth.

Ferguson was pretty relaxed about the time spent -- ''I'll sit until 1 or 2
p.m. if I have to,'' she said -- but others have found discrepancy between
the wait times posted on Miami-Dade and Broward's elections websites
frustrating, to say the least.

The longest wait in the county: West Kendall Regional Library, at a tidy
four hours.

Coral Gables Library, Miami Beach City Hall and the Stephen P. Clark Center
all had voters in and out in an hour, according to the Miami-Dade Elections
website. At least at the Clark Center, the county's estimate was spot on,
even though the line stretched roughly 1 ½ blocks.

Lizbeth Muller, 42, of Miami Shores, didn't check wait times online before
voting, but she did drive by a few locations before choosing Lemon City. At
the North Miami Library, Muller said, she saw a line three blocks long.

The county estimated the wait at Lemon City was two hours; Muller waited
longer. Broward's best bet for early voting Tuesday morning: the Northwest
Regional Library in Coral Springs, where the wait was an estimated 45
minutes.

The longest lines? Again in heavily black areas, most notably Fort
Lauderdale's African-American Research Library. As of 10 a.m., voters were
told the wait was roughly three hours to cast a ballot.

By early afternoon, Miramar City Hall's estimated time was even longer.

At the African-American Research Library, cars slowly snaked their way
through the crowded parking lots Tuesday morning.

''I'll come back later,'' said one driver, who headed toward the exit before
parking about 11 a.m.

''I don't promise you it will be better later,'' said a woman directing
traffic.

''Are you kidding?'' the driver said.

For voters who did stick around, they waited their turn to cast ballots in a
packed auditorium. Other voters took advantage of the cool weather and
waited outside.

Gene Baldwin, a Fort Lauderdale voter, said he wasn't sure how he would pass
the time waiting for his turn.

''I didn't bring any peanut butter and jelly -- I was totally unprepared,''
he said. ``I will walk around and wait for No. 415.''

By noon, the wait was about two hours, according to the elections office.
But some voters said they got through the line in less than an hour.

Broward is posting wait-time information online at
www.broward.org/earlyvoting.

Miami-Dade wait times are posted at http://www.miamidade.gov/

elections//wait-times.asp

Miami Herald staff writers Evan S. Benn, Marc Caputo and Jordan Levin
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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