Miscommunication delayed byelection result, says Elections P.E.I. - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 12, 2024, 02:23 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Miscommunication delayed byelection result, says Elections P.E.I.

An almost two-hour delay in reporting the results of the Summerside-Wilmot District 21 byelection was caused by a misunderstanding of procedures, according to an Elections P.E.I. review.

Led to embarrassing moment with candidate conceding before official results in

A supervisor at one of two polling stations thought he was supposed to call the results in all at once, a mistake that led to an almost two hour delay in Elections P.E.I. reporting results. (CBC News)

An almost two-hour delay in reporting the results of the Summerside-Wilmot District 21 byelection was caused by a misunderstanding of procedures, according to an Elections P.E.I. review.

Interviews with staff at the polling station revealed that a supervisor at one of two voting locations thought he wassupposed to call in all the results at once, when he should have been reporting them as each poll count was completed.

P.E.I. Chief Electoral Officer Gary McLeod,thought the procedure was made clear in training, but said it will be emphasized in future training. (Sally Pitt/CBC)

"He thought that he was doing the right thing by being able tocallin all the results at one time, but the reason we need them called in right away is exactlywhat happened," said Gary McLeod, P.E.I.'s chief electoral officer.

"The scrutineershave the results and they're releasing them to the party, and we have to have those results so we can release them as well."

Embarrassing moment

The delay led to an embarrassing moment when PC candidate Brian Ramsay went to Liberal Chris Palmer's campaign office and conceded. Palmer was surprised by this because official results hadn't been released yet.

McLeodsaid the supervisor had been involved in provincial elections before, and had had three hours training before the byelection.

"I thought it was clear at the time, but people don't do this all the time. This is a one time event," said McLeod.

"Moving forward we're going to make sure that is very clear."