Toronto Star

Non-citizens shocked to get reminders to vote

Registrati­on notices add ‘insult to injury’ for those caught in spousal sponsorshi­p backlog

- NICHOLAS KEUNG IMMIGRATIO­N REPORTER

Josue David Balarezo Flores would have been thrilled to receive Elections Canada’s voter registrati­on notice — if the Ecuadorian migrant were already a permanent resident, let alone a citizen.

The Toronto resident is among a number of spouses being sponsored for permanent resident status who were sur- prised — and sometimes humiliated — to get a letter bearing the Canadian government logo earlier this month, reminding them to register to vote.

“It’s crazy. We thought the law had changed and we were allowed to vote,” said the computer engineer, who married a Canadian and came here in 2013. His applicatio­n to become a permanent resident has been in the queue for 17 long months.

“It is just so funny that we are not even permanent residents yet, and here we have a letter from the government telling us their records show we have not registered to vote.”

“This is a harsh reminder of the rights and privileges we don’t yet have. It’s like we’re being mocked by the very country we’re trying to call home.” TROY DEARBORN WHO MARRIED A BRITISH CITIZEN IN 2013 AND APPLIED TO SPONSOR HER 14 MONTHS AGO

Troy Dearborn, of St. Pierre Jolys, Man., said his wife, Alice Campbell, a British citizen, also got the letter to would-be voters.

“Receiving this voter registrati­on is like adding insult to injury. We’ve been waiting so long for some sort of acknowledg­ement from our government, and instead of receiving the permanent residency we are so desperatel­y waiting for, we receive this voter registrati­on,” said Dearborn, who married Campbell in 2013 and applied to sponsor her14 months ago.

“This is a harsh reminder of the rights and privileges we don’t yet have. It’s like we’re being mocked by the very country we’re trying to call home.”

Balarezo Flores and Campbell are among thousands of people married to Canadians who are caught up in Ottawa’s backlog in processing incountry spousal sponsorshi­ps. Many foreign spouses already living here will have to wait more than two years for permanent status.

Now, they are also among 670,000 potential electors who were sent the federal government notice between Feb. 27 and March 6, intended to help Elections Canada update the voter rolls before the anticipate­d federal election in October.

According to elections officials, the mail-outs are not a mistake but part of an ongoing effort since 2000 to update the electorate data.

“As part of our preparatio­n for an election, we mail notices to people who aren’t registered to vote in federal elections but who may be qual- ified,” said Elections Canada spokespers­on Diane Benson.

“The purpose of the notice is to confirm that they are qualified to vote and, if they are qualified, to ask them to register.”

Benson said the notice was sent to individual­s who consented to the transfer of their informatio­n to Elections Canada on their federal income tax return — many sponsored individual­s are on their Canadian spouse’s tax return — and to potential electors identified from provincial driver’s licence data.

On the paper notice, recipients are asked to tick a box to confirm that they are citizens and return the notice in a pre-paid envelope. If they are not citizens, their names will subsequent­ly be removed from the list of potential electors, said Benson.

Elections Canada would not reveal what checks and balances it has in the system to ensure that people who respond to the voter registrati­on notice are being truthful.

“People who register or update their registrati­on must affirm that the informatio­n they provide is current and correct . . . It’s illegal to make false statements about voter registrati­on informatio­n, and those convicted face penalties,” Benson said.

“Voting fraud — rare in Canada — is a punishable offence under the Canada Elections Act. The Commission­er of Canada Elections investigat­es all reported cases of non-Canadians who vote in federal elections.”

 ??  ?? Troy Dearborn, whose British wife Alice Campbell got an Elections Canada registrati­on notice, says they feel mocked by a government that has been slow to process her applicatio­n for permanent residence.
Troy Dearborn, whose British wife Alice Campbell got an Elections Canada registrati­on notice, says they feel mocked by a government that has been slow to process her applicatio­n for permanent residence.

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