Politics & Government
A Power Outage And Minor Ballot Fumbles Reported On Somewhat Busy Election Day, Nebraska Officials Say
In Omaha, about 25 voters were handed only the first page of a two-page ballot.

November 8, 2022
OMAHA — Voting on Tuesday began with a bang in Nebraska when a piece of machinery hit a tree outside a voting site in Otoe County. But natural light let people keep voting until power was restored about an hour and a half later, state election officials said.
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Few counties were reporting more than the typical problems of poll workers struggling to find equipment that sometimes gets moved to a different closet or shelf, officials said. The worst trouble reported in Omaha came around the start of voting at a precinct in the Benson area.
About 25 voters there were handed only the first page of a two-page ballot, Douglas County Election Commissioner Brian Kruse confirmed. Kruse said election officials had reached each of those voters by mid-afternoon to make sure they could return to finish the other page.
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“We worked to make it right,” Kruse said.
Kruse, along with Sarpy County Election Commissioner Emily Ethington and Lancaster County Election Commissioner Dave Shively, said things were going pretty smoothly otherwise. Douglas and Lancaster officials said voting numbers appeared to be higher than for a typical off-year election.
“They’re kind of busy,” Shively said of his poll workers. “But we haven’t had any real issues.”
A mistake on ballots in Phelps County caused a brief scare because a lower-level race listed the wrong name, state election officials said. But the race was uncontested, so it can be fixed. Officials said they will be able to make sure the person who made the ballot gets credit.
Nebraskans are returning the bulk of early voting ballots that were requested, officials said. By 2 p.m., 88% had been returned, which bodes well for the secretary of state’s prediction of seeing more than 90% returned overall. Counties in the state with all-mail voting had already returned about 66% of their ballots.
Early ballots in Nebraska have to be received by county election officials by the time polls close on Election Day.
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