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Will the storm mean delays in voting?

Five battleground states - New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia - are now recovering from Sandy. Below you will find information on how the storm has impacted the ability of those states to hold their elections next Tuesday, as well as the impact on in-person early voting in the states that allow it.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

No in person early voting. CBS News estimates 10 percent of votes will be cast before Election Day.

Deputy Secretary of State David Scanlan tells CBS News that emergency management services expect power to be restored by Friday - so he is not worried about Election Day. Most of the polling places have backup generators in the event that power is not restored, and the state will work with polling places to get backup power to those polling places that do not. All ballots in the state are paper ballots, but about half of polling places use optical scanners. If the power is out, counting would have to be done by hand.

NORTH CAROLINA

In person early voting. CBS News estimates 50 percent of votes will be cast before Election Day.

Some of the early voting sites that were scheduled for operation on Saturday and Sunday were closed as a result of the storm, according to Johnnie McLean, the deputy director of the board of elections, and others had their hours shortened. (Some were also closed early yesterday because of flooding.) Officials are now monitoring the situation in the western part of the state, but there is now only one site that has reported plans to close early today due to ice on the roads.

As for Election Day preparations, the storm has put a little bit of a slowdown on the process. Officials were still in the process of training poll workers for next Tuesday's election. Some sessions that were scheduled for yesterday or today had to be canceled and were rescheduled for Thursday or Friday of this week.

Damaged polling places will be examined on a case-by-case basis, and county boards have emergency plans that have been adopted. If a polling place is deemed to not be safe, then the executive director of the state Board of Elections has emergency Election Day authority to allow the temporary transfer of voters from one polling location to another.

OHIO

In person early voting. CBS News estimates 30 percent of votes will be cast before Election Day.

There was one county, Erie, without power this morning, but it has since been restored. Early voting places have not been affected.

PENNSYLVANIA

No in person early voting. CBS News estimates 5 percent of votes will be cast before Election Day.

They don't have early voting in Pennsylvania, but the governor has ordered an extension of the deadline for counties to receive absentee ballot applications. The deadline was supposed to be today, but some county boards of elections were closed yesterday and today. The deadline has been extended for each day an office was closed.

Ron Ruman, director of communications for Pennsylvania's Secretary of State, said officials had a briefing with utility and emergency managers this morning and the crews are now working to restore power. Utilities will focus on restoring power to polling places after they take care of vital locations such hospitals. Officials are optimistic that by Election Day no polling places will be affected.

If there are polling places that are damaged or without power, the county board of elections will have a contingency plan that may involve moving the location. Ruman says there are roughly 9,300 precincts in Pennsylvania and it's not uncommon for two to four to have to move. Polling places that are moved will likely have signs and perhaps poll workers at the old location directing voters to the proper place.

VIRGINIA

In person absentee ballot voting only. CBS News estimates 12% of votes will be cast before Election Day.

Virginia has in-person absentee voting, though you have to have one of 19 approved reasons for voting absentee. Of 134 localities, 9 were not operating for the majority of today. Of 134 localities, nine were not operating for the majority of today. Of the nine affected, two are in the southwest (which was hit by snow), one is on the eastern shore, and six are in Northern Virginia, the president's stronghold. Nikki Sheridan of the state board of elections says officials are hoping all locations will be back online tomorrow. And since many of the polling places are schools, they are a top priority anyway.

The Secretary of State has asked those localities affected by the storm to extend absentee voting hours over the course of the remaining voting period, which ends on Nov. 3rd. Today was also the deadline for requesting an absentee ballot and in localities that were closed to the public, the deadline has been extended to 5pm on the next day with normal operations.

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