British Columbia

Despite thousands of mail-in ballots, Elections BC says final count on schedule

Elections BC says it expects the final count in last month's election to take at least three days to complete when it begins on Friday.

Elections BC says it received 662,000 absentee or mail-in ballots from across the province

a piece of mail that says return envelope is being placed in a mailbox
The final result of British Columbia's provincial election won't be known for about three days after Friday when Elections B.C. begins to count about 662,000 mail-in ballots by hand. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Elections BC says it expects the final count in last month's election to take at least three days to complete when it begins on Friday.

A statement from Elections BC says it has received about 662,000 certification envelopes containing absentee or mail-in ballots from across the province.

Those envelopes have now been sorted by electoral district and sent for screening, where some that don't meet certification standards may be set aside before the final count begins.

Certification envelopes will only be opened during the final count and officials say that's when envelopes that are empty or contain more than one ballot will be rejected.

Elections BC says that means the total number of eligible mail-in and absentee ballots cast in the provincial election will be known once the final count ends.

The results on election night gave the NDP 53 seats, the B.C. Liberals 27 and the Greens three — leaving four ridings as undecided.

Andrew Wilkinson announced he was stepping down as leader of the B.C. Liberal Party two days after the Oct. 24 election.