Severe weather is knocking out power to some polling stations

Severe weather is knocking out power to some polling stations

Some voters were having to carry umbrellas and wear rain boots to the polls Tuesday as severe storms hit the Interstate 95 corridor along the East Coast on Election Day.

Areas from the Carolinas north through Washington, D.C. and southern New Jersey were expected to be affected.

In North Carolina, ballots in some precincts couldn’t be fed through tabulators, apparently due to high humidity, said the North Carolina Bipartisan State Board of Elections and Ethics Enforcement

In those cases, ballots were stored in secure “emergency bins” and would be tabulated as soon as possible, the board said.

“All ballots will be counted,” the board said in a statement. “The State Board office has advised county election officials to work with their precinct officials to ensure voting areas are kept as cool and dry as possible.”

“Wake County they have already replaced some of the tabulators and the new tabulators are working,” said North Carolina State Board of Elections spokesman Patrick Gannon.

The board is looking at extending the voting hours in certain locations, he added.

Severe storms first struck overnight in Tennessee, where one person died from a tornado in Christiana.

The twister’s winds reached up to 135 mph.

The weather also left some polling stations in Tennessee without power, the state’s elections coordinator, Mark Goins, told ABC News. Most polling places have generators and batteries to continue running their election operations, but at least one polling station without power in Knox County was forced to use emergency paper ballots, Goins said.

He said he does not expect the loss of power to cause a significant delay of election results.

Over 1 million Tennesseans had voted early before this round of storms hit the state.

In other parts of the country, rain was forecast to change to snow in the Upper Midwest and around the Great Lakes, with some snow accumulation possible from North Dakota to the Twin Cities.

Snow is also expected in the northern Rockies, with half a foot possible.

Warmer weather is expected in the southernmost parts of the country, from Los Angeles across to southern Florida.

ABC News’ Stephanie Wash and Emily Shapiro contributed to this report.

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