Photo by Joe Flood.

Photo by Joe Flood.

Jealous of all your friends in New Jersey, New Mexico, Montana, California, and the Dakotas as they head to the polls? Well, there’s a voting booth for that!

Early voting is well underway in Washington D.C. for the June 14 primary. As of yesterday, a total of 7,484 residents have cast their votes (not counting special ballots) since early voting began on May 31 and expanded citywide on Saturday, according to the D.C. Board of Elections website. A total of 63,436 total voted in the D.C. primary in 2012, according to the Federal Elections Commission.

People can go to any of the nine early polling centers (on Primary Day, there’ll be 143 places to cast your vote). D.C. BOE provides updates about wait times for each of them. Margarita Mikhaylova, BOE spokesperson, says she’s yet to see a line at any of the centers for early voting.

D.C. has same-day voter registration and change of address, so long as you provide proof of residence.

But let’s say you’d rather not head out of your house just yet. Well, congrats, because D.C. allows people to vote absentee without stating a reason. Today is the deadline to request an absentee ballot from the Board of Elections (unless you’re military or living overseas, in which case you’ve got until June 11).

What exactly appears on your ballot depends on your party affiliation (the deadline has lapsed to change that) and which ward you’re in, as only Wards 2, 4, 7, and 8 are voting for councilmembers. While the Republican primary for president already happened, GOPers can still vote for national committeeman and ward chairperson. Dems get to vote for their presidential candidate, though the Associated Press has already called Hillary Clinton the presumptive nominee.

There has already been one snafu. Washington City Paper reports that teens stole a fire extinguisher from Ward 8’s polling center over the weekend, though Mikhaylova says it has not affected voting totals.