North

Whitehorse municipal election adds more polling locations

A new electronic voters' list means Whitehorse residents can cast their ballots for mayor and council this year at any polling station, not necessarily in the neighbourhood where they live.

Electronic list means residents can cast votes for mayor and council at any polling station

'We have many more people working for the election this time,' says Norma Felker, Whitehorse's returning officer. (CBC)

While municipal candidate hopefuls are starting to bolster support in Whitehorse, elections workers are finalizing voting logistics.

Whitehorse's returning officer Norma Felker says she hopes changes to the voting process will make it easier than ever to cast a ballot, increasing voter turnout on Oct. 15. 

"People can vote this time around wherever it's convenient rather than where they live because we're using an electronic list of electors and we've never done that before," she says.

There will be also be more voting stations and more elections workers.

"We wanted to take the election to where it was convenient," she says. 

Each election, mobile voting stations are set up at the jail, hospital and seniors' residences. Previously, only patients could vote at the hospital, but this year, Felker says hospital workers and visitors will also be able to take advantage of the mobile voting station.

For the first time, one of the mobile stations will spend several hours at the Kwanlin Dun Village, she says. Additionally, there will be an extra voting station downtown and one at Yukon College.

'I think it's a shame that [the municipal election] gets overshadowed by the territorial and federal elections,' says incumbent mayor Dan Curtis.
Incumbent Mayor Dan Curtis says it's a challenge to get people out to the polls.

"I know that last [municipal election] we had only 43 per cent of the people voting. I think it's a shame that it gets overshadowed by the territorial and federal elections." 

Council nominations open

Whitehorse residents interested in running for city council have from today until Thursday, Sept. 24 to submit their required paperwork. Felker says about 20 packages have gone out but it's no guarantee of interest.

"We could be inundated [with candidates] or it could be very small, and we have no way to guess," she says.