Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Final Cost Of 2015 Alberta Election Almost $19m: Chief Electoral Officer

Darpan News Desk, 12 Apr, 2016 12:26 PM
    EDMONTON — Alberta's chief electoral officer says the final cost of the 2015 provincial election was almost $19 million.
    Glen Resler, in a report tabled Monday, said that's a 28 per cent increase from the 2012 campaign.
     
    He said costs went up due in part to Alberta's 10 per cent population increase and because then-premier Jim Prentice decided to drop the writ a year early.
     
    "We had the challenge of recruiting, hiring, and training returning officers and election clerks on short notice as a result of the snap election call," wrote Resler.
     
    "Several staff were brought in from outside the (province) in order to deliver the election."
     
    Resler said they also had to pay premium prices to rent spaces and lock down voting locations because schools and community halls were already booked.
     
    Alberta has legislation mandating elections in the spring every four years, but Prentice bypassed the law in 2015, saying his new economic plan demanded a mandate.
     
    Resler urged Premier Rachel Notley's government to update the election laws to allow the electoral office to adapt better to the information age.
     
    He said the wording of the law as it stands "restricts the introduction of technology and product innovation."
     
    He said one of two biggest complaints to his office from voters concerned unwanted calls from political parties.
     
    The second biggest complaint, he said, came from rural residents who were unable to call up voting location information online.
     
    Last May 5, voters overwhelmingly rejected Prentice and his Progressive Conservatives, voting in Notley and the NDP to end a PC dynasty that lasted almost 44 years.
     
    Notley has said she will honour the election law, which means the next vote will be held sometime in the spring of 2019.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Speed, Drinking Involved In Dubai Ferrari Crash That Killed Toronto Boxer, His Cousin And 2 Others

    Speed, Drinking Involved In Dubai Ferrari Crash That Killed Toronto Boxer, His Cousin And 2 Others
    A prosecutor in Dubai says high speed and drinking were involved in a Ferrari crash that killed a Toronto boxer, his cousin, a survivor of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing and her university roommate.

    Speed, Drinking Involved In Dubai Ferrari Crash That Killed Toronto Boxer, His Cousin And 2 Others

    Yet Another Death In Immigration Custody Sparks Anger Among Rights Groups

    Yet Another Death In Immigration Custody Sparks Anger Among Rights Groups
    Canada Border Services Agency refused to provide any details as to the identity of the prisoner or the circumstances of the death.

    Yet Another Death In Immigration Custody Sparks Anger Among Rights Groups

    How Canadian Classrooms Are Being Transformed By A Revolution On Two Wheels

    How Canadian Classrooms Are Being Transformed By A Revolution On Two Wheels
    Frustrated at her inability to draw a sofa, five-year-old Mylee Lumsden began to cry.

    How Canadian Classrooms Are Being Transformed By A Revolution On Two Wheels

    Ex-media baron Conrad Black puts his Toronto mansion up for auction

    The 23,000-square-foot mansion in the tony Bridle Path neighbourhood was listed on March 8 with an estimated value of $21.8 million.

    Ex-media baron Conrad Black puts his Toronto mansion up for auction

    Big Changes Could Be Coming To The Canada-U.S. Border, PM Set To Announce

    Big Changes Could Be Coming To The Canada-U.S. Border, PM Set To Announce
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will use his visit to Washington to announce support for a plan that could revolutionize the way travellers cross the border — affecting multiple modes of transportation, sources say.

    Big Changes Could Be Coming To The Canada-U.S. Border, PM Set To Announce

    Rattling Cages: Canadian Egg Farmers Resist Push To Cage-Free Housing

    Rattling Cages: Canadian Egg Farmers Resist Push To Cage-Free Housing
    Some 17,000 hens and one rooster at Roger Pelissero's egg farm in West Lincoln, Ont., live in cages that may be the envy of most other hens in Canada.

    Rattling Cages: Canadian Egg Farmers Resist Push To Cage-Free Housing