A last-minute vacation to Arkansas almost derailed Charity Tuma's opportunity to cast a ballot. She'll be out of town on Election Day.
But a notice on Facebook led her to Minneapolis City Hall on Saturday morning, where she was one of 220 local voters casting their votes early via in-person absentee ballots.
"I was glad to see that," she said. "I was feeling bad that I wasn't going to be able to vote."
State law requires all county elections offices to be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. the Saturday before Election Day, giving people the opportunity to cast absentee ballots in person. Some cities also participate, including Minneapolis, which offered residents a chance to vote at City Hall until 5 p.m.
Any Minneapolis voters who said he or she wouldn't be able to make it to the polls was welcome to walk in, fill out some paper work, and cast their votes.
"This is the best option for someone who finds out, 'I can't be there [on Tuesday],'" said Casey Carl, Minneapolis city clerk.
The first voters on Saturday showed up two hours before the advertised start of voting, but Carl said the city was ready after a big early turnout in 2008. That year, more than 1,000 people filed through the rotunda to cast the early votes.
"At 8 o'clock, [we heard] knock, knock, knock. Can I vote?" Carl said. "They were here, ready to go."