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Live updates as rains drench St. Louis area; MetroBus cancels some routes on Election Day

C.Wright29 min ago

Rains drench St. Louis region, flooding some roads

After rain through Monday, and storms overnight, several roads in the area were flooded Tuesday morning.

MetroBus had to cancel service on several routes:

  • No. 8 Shaw Cherokee
  • No. 9 Oakville
  • No. 11 Chippewa
  • No. 21 Watson Road
  • No. 30 Arsenal
  • No. 31 Chouteau
  • No 49 Lindbergh
  • No. 56 Kirkwood-Webster
  • No. 57 Manchester
  • No. 70 Grand
  • No. 73 Carondelet
  • No. 98 Ballas-North Hanley
  • The 70 Grand route is MetroBus' biggest route, serving about 80,000 riders a month.

    The ride service Lyft is offering a 50% discount, up to $10, on rides to the polls. The code VOTE24 must be used.

    Uber is also offering a 50% discount on rides to the polls, again capped at $10.

    The A. Philip Randolph Institute is offering free rides to the polls in St. Louis and St. Louis County; call 314-562-0411 to request a ride.

    Before polls open, voters huddle in rain

    As a steady rain fell an hour before the polls opened, 30 people were in line outside Grant's View Branch library in St. Louis County. The earliest ones huddled beneath an overhang to stay dry.

    Poll hours, candidates and issues on the Election Day ballot

    Election officials expect the overall turnout for Tuesday's presidential vote to hit 73% across Missouri — and possibly higher in some parts of the St. Louis area. The polls in Missouri and Illinois will be open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.

    The estimates include those who already have cast absentee ballots, including thousands who streamed into polling places Monday on the last day of the state's early voting period that began two weeks ago.

    In addition to choosing a new president, voters are deciding the winner of a big-spending U.S. Senate race between Josh Hawley and Lucas Kunce, picking a new governor (Mike Kehoe vs. Crystal Quade) and filling four other statewide posts.

    There also are six statewide ballot issues, with the most campaign spending on measures to allow abortion , legalize sports betting and establish a new casino in the Lake of the Ozarks area . Another measure calls for increasing the state minimum wage .

    Various U.S. House and state legislative races also are on the ballot.

    Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft's office said the expected 73% statewide turnout would exceed the percentages for the last two presidential elections. About 70% of Missouri's registered voters took part in 2020 and nearly 67% in 2016.

    In St. Louis County, Missouri's most populous county, election officials were predicting a total of 75% to 79%.

    Rick Stream, one of the county's two election directors, said that would come close to the all-time high percentage for the county of 79.3% four years ago.

    St. Charles County's election director, Kurt Bahr, on Monday predicted a total turnout of 75%, close to the November 2020 turnout of 76%.

    As for early voting, which was begun by the Missouri Legislature in 2022, Stream said more than 12,100 people already had cast ballots on Monday by 1 p.m. That brought the county total for this election to more than 212,000, he said.

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