I read your story "Slip-sliding away in Columbus"
(
http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2004/850).
I live in Tarrant County, TX, near Fort Worth. Our county used optical scan
ballots. Most precincts had only 1 working machine, some may have had zero.
However, since the ballots were all paper and could be tabulated at a central
location if necessary, it didn't matter - all that mattered was how fast the
election judge could check you in. Most places could easily handle a few
hundred voters per hour, and lines of longer than 10 minutes were rare outside
of peak voting times. Also, we have thousands of voting precincts for a county
of less than 2 million people.
I heard horror stories of long lines around the country, but none as bad as
yours. I can only hope that the people of the state of Ohio will say "ENOUGH"
and demand shorter lines in the future, and ante up the money it takes to have
more polling locations.