Non-Canadian living in Dartmouth wonders why she's a registered voter - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Non-Canadian living in Dartmouth wonders why she's a registered voter

A Dartmouth woman who is a not a Canadian says she wrongly received a voter information card.

Elections Canada says 'some errors occur' and there is no requirement to prove citizenship when voting

A Dartmouth woman who is not a Canadian citizen and is not eligible to vote has received a voter information card. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Dartmouth resident Joan Helson is wondering why she received a voter information card in the mail when she's not a Canadian citizen.

"It's the first time in over 33 years that I'vereceived a card and I've been living in Canada since I was three," Helson told CBC Radio's Maritime Noon.

Helson, whois not a Canadian and is not eligible to vote, has gone online and confirmed she is a registered voter.

She said two of her friends who are not Canadian have also received the card. The cardadvises people to take it and a piece of ID to a pollingstation to vote.

Helson is concernednew residents of Canada whose first language is not English may get thecard and think they can vote.

"Given the Fair Elections Act and what I feel is the creation of two-tiered Canadian citizenship,where some Canadianshave the right to vote and others don't;suddenly you've opened the door,inadvertently or otherwise, to non-Canadianshaving perceived rights to vote when other Canadians do not," Helson said.

Honour system in place at polls

Morethan 26million voter informationcards are issued in the span of two weeks, according to Elections Canada spokesperson Francoise Enguehard.

"Clearly errors can occur and the case before us is one of those," she said.

The voter registration list is compiled using a variety of sources, including Canada Revenue Agency (if you've given permission) and provincialsources such as motor vehicle registries and vital statistics.

Enguehard says 14 per centof the list is updated every year.

Non-Canadians could be on some of those lists and that's how they may have appeared on the National Register of Electors, according toEnguehard.

"[Voting]is an honour system," she said. "There has never been a requirement to prove citizenship at the polls and we depend on people doing the rightthing."

She acknowledged that hundreds, if not thousands of ineligible people who receivevoter informationcardscould cast a ballot, butsays there are signs posted "everywhere" at polling booths telling people they must be aCanadianin order to vote.

She saidpenalties for illegal voting include afine of up $20,000, up to a year in jail, or both.

She urged anyone who incorrectly received a card to call Elections Canada and report it.