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Elections B.C. keeps eye on Canada Post dispute, no change in Nov. 30 deadline

The potential impact of rotating postal strikes on British Columbia’s electoral reform referendum is being watched closely but so far there are no plans to extend the Nov. 30 deadline, Elections B.C. said Monday. Without an extension, Elections B.C.

The potential impact of rotating postal strikes on British Columbia’s electoral reform referendum is being watched closely but so far there are no plans to extend the Nov. 30 deadline, Elections B.C. said Monday.

Without an extension, Elections B.C. must receive ballots by 4:30 p.m. on Nov. 30.

Rebecca Penz of Elections B.C., the non-partisan election agency, said it has yet to determine that the ongoing labour situation at Canada Post will cause voters to miss the deadline.

She said Elections B.C. is monitoring ballot returns and keeping tabs on developments at Canada Post.

“It’s just not clear enough yet,” she said. “If and when we understand the impact we will be extending the deadline but we just don’t know if there’s going to be an impact at deadline time. That decision is still up in the air.”

Elections B.C. said Monday that about 21 per cent of the eligible ballots had been returned so far.

Penz said in 2011, Elections B.C. had to extend the mail-in deadline by two weeks for the provincewide referendum on the harmonized sales tax, but that was after a national lockout at Canada Post.

Officials at B.C.’s Vote No side called for an extension last week, citing the ongoing labour dispute and ballot returns that were below 20 per cent.

“Voters are obviously not mesmerized by this and the returns have borne that out,” said Vote No spokesman Bill Tieleman. “It’s incumbent upon us and our opponents and Elections B.C. to do everything we can to encourage people to vote in as large a number as possible.”

Tieleman said an extension of one or two weeks would ensure all ballots are counted and not caught in any potential backlogs.

Vote PR B.C. spokeswoman Maria Dobrinskaya said in a statement the Yes side is encouraged by the increasing numbers of returned ballots, and trusts Elections B.C. is monitoring the postal dispute and will make the appropriate decision regarding an extension. — The Canadian Press