Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Time ticking on vote-by-mail ballots in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2020 06:14 PM
  • Time ticking on vote-by-mail ballots in B.C.

The more than 700,000 people who have asked for a vote-by-mail package in British Columbia's election should get their ballots into the post.

Saturday is the deadline recommended by Elections BC because the ballots must be received no later than 8 p.m. on election day, Oct. 24.

Those who don't mail in their votes in time can drop off the completed package in person at district electoral offices, voting places and some Service BC locations.

Information on the Elections BC website shows about 25 per cent of the 717,000 ballots sent out have been returned.

The mail-out ballots requested for the election during the COVID-19 pandemic are more than 100 times the number requested in 2017, and in some ridings they make up more than 25 per cent of registered voters.

Elections BC says the final count of the mail-in and absentee ballots won't start until 13 days after the election.

About two million registered voters cast ballots in the last election.

MORE National ARTICLES

Teachers in B.C. agree to new contract with provincial government

Teachers in B.C. agree to new contract with provincial government
B.C. teachers have voted to approve a new, three-year collective agreement with the provincial government. The deal with the B.C. Public School Employers' Association includes general wage increases of two per cent every year along with a mediated process on how to better support negotiations in the future.

Teachers in B.C. agree to new contract with provincial government

B.C.'s $1,000 worker benefit online today

B.C.'s $1,000 worker benefit online today
Finance Minister Carole James says thousands of people applied for British Columbia's $1,000 tax-free emergency benefit in the first minutes of the program going online today.

B.C.'s $1,000 worker benefit online today

Vancouver police are reporting a spike for April in anti-Asian hate-motivated incidents

Vancouver police are reporting a spike for April in anti-Asian hate-motivated incidents
Vancouver police are reporting an increase in anti-Asian, hate-motivated incidents in recent weeks. The department makes the announcement as it seeks public help to identify a man seen scrawling graffiti on several large windows at the Chinese Cultural Centre on April 2. 

Vancouver police are reporting a spike for April in anti-Asian hate-motivated incidents

C.D. Howe's Business Cycle Council says Canada has entered a recession

C.D. Howe's Business Cycle Council says Canada has entered a recession
Canada has officially entered a recession due to the economic devastation caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the C.D. Howe Institute's Business Cycle Council declared Friday.

C.D. Howe's Business Cycle Council says Canada has entered a recession

Tiff Macklem new Bank of Canada governor

Tiff Macklem new Bank of Canada governor
Tiff Macklem, a former second-in-command at the Bank of Canada, is returning to the central bank to take over the top job at a moment that he says cries out for bold, unprecedented responses to the economic crisis fuelled by COVID-19. 

Tiff Macklem new Bank of Canada governor

Trudeau announces ban on 1,500 types of 'military-style' guns

Trudeau announces ban on 1,500 types of 'military-style' guns
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government is banning a range of assault-style guns, with an order that takes effect immediately. The cabinet order he described in a Friday-morning announcement doesn't forbid owning any of 1,500 "military-style" weapons and their variants but it does forbid them to be used and halts the trade in them

Trudeau announces ban on 1,500 types of 'military-style' guns