Toronto Star

Mail-in ballots pose challenges

Fill-in-blank document may be problemati­c for some Canadian voters

- ANGELYN FRANCIS EQUITY AND INEQUALITY REPORTER

Elections Canada was bracing for a slew of mail-in ballots, but despite the added safety of voting from home during the pandemic, the process may be deterring some people.

You have to apply to get your mail-in ballot for the federal election. And then there’s the ballot itself. Mail-in ballots are also known as special ballots, and are different from those ballots used on election day. They take more work to fill out and submit.

The more familiar electionda­y ballot has a list of candidates, along with their party if applicable, and a voter checks the box beside a name. Anyone mailing in their vote gets a ballot with no names and a place to write in their choice of candidate — writing in the party name won’t be accepted by Elections Canada. Plus, there is a series of envelopes that must be used in a specific order to submit a mail-in ballot.

Elections Canada spokespers­on Nathalie de Montigny said the reason for the fill-inthe-blank process is that special ballots are available as soon as the election is called, but the deadline for all candidates to register falls after that. This time around the election was called Aug. 15 with candidates required to register by Aug. 31.

Figuring out whose name to write on the ballot could be problemati­c. Voters can look up their candidates online, call the Elections Canada hotline, or look for election signs in their neighbourh­oods, but internet access may not be reliable, or accessible, and there may be other barriers, like language.

Elections Canada was expecting between two and three million special ballots to be cast. As of Friday at 5 p.m., it had issued nearly 800,000. The deadline to apply for a mail-in ballot is Sept. 14 by 6 p.m.

Noor Din founded Human Endeavour, a Vaughan-based community organizati­on that serves seniors, many of whom are immigrants.

Anticipati­ng questions from members, Din went through the process of applying for a mail-in ballot. It took about an hour navigating the site and a call to the Elections Canada hotline to get it figured out.

But he can already see what challenges others will face, especially seniors, or someone for whom English or French is not a first language.

A mail-in voting kit includes the ballot and three envelopes that must be assembled Russian-doll-style:

The ballot goes into an inner envelope, that package goes into an outer envelope, which must be signed and dated, and the whole thing goes into the prepaid mailing envelope.

“There are four steps in just completing this ballot,” Din said, and even with a friend or family member’s help, a mistake could be made, wasting the ballot.

Din said he’s already had calls from seniors trying to figure out which polling stations will be open. Some locations that have hosted polls in the past have opted not to because the organizati­ons that run them are concerned about COVID-19.

The mail-in process could help vulnerable population­s who feel safer staying home to vote. But voting in person is more streamline­d, and election workers are on hand for questions.

The hurdles with mail-in voting create “a much higher cost to voting,” said Daniel Rubenson, a politics professor at Ryerson University.

The “costs” Rubenson refers to include the time voters spend gathering informatio­n on the issues and processes required to cast a ballot. Add in the need to track down and recall a candidate’s name and the cost to vote starts to climb.

“We want everybody who wants to vote and is eligible to vote to be able to do so as easily as possible,” he said.

If you are voting by mail your ballot needs to be received by Elections Canada by election day, Sept. 20. It can either be sent in by mail, or dropped off at a local polling station.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu, wife of New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh, leaves an advance polling station in Montreal. Experts say mail-in ballots may be overly complicate­d for some voters.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu, wife of New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh, leaves an advance polling station in Montreal. Experts say mail-in ballots may be overly complicate­d for some voters.

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