12 B.C. municipal parties under investigation by Elections B.C.
VANCOUVER — A dozen municipal political parties in British Columbia are under investigation by Elections B.C. for possible financing or advertising violations.
Elections B.C. said in a news release that the potential violations relate to accepting prohibited contributions, failing to deal with such contributions, or sponsoring election advertisements without an authorization statement.
It said the parties under investigation include Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim’s ABC Vancouver and the Burnaby Citizen’s Association, both of which won council majorities.
ABC Vancouver said in a statement Thursday that it’s aware of the investigation and will co-operate with Elections B.C. “to bring this matter to a quick resolution.”
“ABC is fully committed to upholding the highest standard of integrity and has always acted out of an abundance of caution in order to ensure compliance with election law,” it said.
Contract With Langley, the party whose slate won the mayor’s office and a council majority in Langley Township, is also being investigated.
Elections B.C. said no contraventions have been confirmed and all parties have been cooperative.
It said rules governing local elections restrict contribution to citizens or permanent residents who live in B.C., ban donations from organizations and limit an individual’s contributions to $1,250 per campaign.
Violations are subject to administrative and monetary penalties.
Vancouver parties under investigation also include Vision Vancouver, the Civic NonPartisan Association, Forward Together, and Progress Vancouver.
Others parties named in the probe are the Safe Surrey Coalition, Surrey First, and United Surrey, as well as the Richmond Community Coalition and Kelowna’s Spirit Alliance.