LOOK: Preparations under way at Cainta Elementary School where presidential candidate Ka Leody de Guzman will vote this morning.
Room 13 houses clustered precinct 13 with a total of 782 voters.
10 voters at a time are allowed to vote. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo Cainta Elementary School has 35 clustered precincts with about 700-800 voters per precinct or an estimated 24,500 to 28,000 total number of voters.
It services 4 barangays in Cainta: San Andres, Sta. Rosa, Sto. Niño and San Roque. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo Poll watchers have started arriving at the Cainta Elementary School with about 30 minutes to go until precincts open. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo WATCH: Voters in Cainta Elementary School begin looking for their names in the voters’ list as voting begins this Monday. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo WATCH: Voting officially starts at the Cainta Elementary School | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo LOOK: Long lines now outside the polling precincts in Cainta Elementary School.
Only 10 voters are allowed at any given time inside the polling precinct. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo The long lines have not deterred voters from flocking to Cainta Elementary School to vote. Some senior citizens have brought their own chairs. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo One of the reasons for the long lines in Cainta Elementary School is the broken i-button of one of the vote counting machines, which is used to feed the ballots. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
@mikenavallo Most voters refused to vote without a working VCM while some have opted to do so, leaving their ballots in a box. | via @mikenavallo #Halalan2022
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