Elections NB uses Facebook ads to spur people to run in byelections
Ads appear in 23 communities where agency will hold elections next month
Elections NB is using geo-targeted ads on Facebook in the hopes of garnering more nominations for upcoming municipal byelections.
The ads on the social media site appear in the 23 communities where byelections will be held Dec. 10 to fill 31 vacancies.
Kimberly Poffenroth, the province's chief electoral officer, said the agency spent between $1,200 and $1,400 on the ads.
"It's a very low-cost campaign," Poffenroth said. "And we're hoping not only that people will see the Facebook ads, but then share them, like them and pass it on to family and friends that live in the areas where we have vacancies."
Nominations opened earlier this month and close on Friday at 2 p.m. There are still some communities where no one has filed nomination papers.
Elections NB began the campaign Nov. 6 and the ads have been viewed about 26,000 times. The campaign ends Wednesday.
Margot Cragg, executive director of the Union of Municipalities of New Brunswick, said she's pleased Elections NB is trying to drum up awareness of the byelections.
"One of the challenges we have where you see those vacancies is awareness," Cragg said. "Many people are simply not aware of the byelections."
The group representing 60 municipalities in the province had called for Elections NB to hold the byelections this fall, rather than pushing them to next spring.
Cragg said municipal elections often receive far less news coverage than other elections, despite the impact councils have on people's lives from streets to water and sewer service.
"It's less flashy, but it's incredibly important to our day-to-day lives," she said.
As of Tuesday afternoon, the Elections NB website showed no nominees for byelections in Alma, Aroostook, Ward 4 in Beaubassin East, Doaktown, Florenceville-Bristol, Hartland, Lac Baker, Rexton, Rivière-Verte and Salisbury.
Village without quorum
Aroostook, a village of 300 in western New Brunswick, needs to fill two of its four council seats. The community's council is unable to make quorum until then, meaning it can't carry out official business like passing a budget.
Poffenroth said if no one is nominated, the provincial minister of local government will administer the village.
No one stood for the vacant Ward 2 council seat in Florenceville-Bristol when Elections NB held byelections in May this year.
Poffenroth said byelections will be held again in May for any positions not filled in the December votes.