Recommendations for municipal election reform accepted by St. John's committee - Action News
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Recommendations for municipal election reform accepted by St. John's committee

The City of St. John's committee of the whole has approvedseven recommendations regarding the way municipal campaigns and elections are held.

City council will vote on report made by Citizens' Assembly for Stronger Elections

Mayor Danny Breen was on the four-person panel that put forth the recommendations regarding electoral reform. He says being on the panel gave him a new perspective on the electoral process. (Stephen Miller/CBC)

The City of St. John's committee of the whole has approvedseven recommendations regarding the way municipal campaigns and elections are held, a year and a half after the recommendations were made.

Mayor Danny Breen was one of four council members on an internal committee established to review recommendations in a 2018 report on electoral reformby theCitizens' Assembly for Stronger Elections.

"After we went through it [the CASE report] and looked at all of the different recommendations in areas, it became apparent to us that we needed to get some outside input on it," Breen said.

Council approvea panel with expertise in the area of electoral reform toconduct its own investigation. The committee of the wholevoted to adopt the recommendations made based on the panel's findings.

The report from CASE was given to city council in the summer of 2018 butthe committee felt a deeper examination was required. About a year later the four-person panel was approved, with their findings presented to council on Sept. 30, 2019.

The panel recommends council:

  • Amend election laws regarding disclosure of contributions/expenditures andexpenditure caps, reduce and eventually eliminate corporate/union donations, and limit the time in which contributions can be made.
  • Retainitscurrentstructure.
  • Work withMunicipalities Newfoundland and Labrador to lobby the province to allow more voting options.
  • Continue to engage with the public on ways to improve accessibility, diversity and voter turnout.
  • Work withMunicipalities Newfoundland and Labrador to see if there is interest in lobbying the province to allow permanent residents of Canadato vote, even if they aren't citizens yet.
  • Work withMunicipalities Newfoundland and Labrador to see if there is interest on their part in lobbying the provincial government to reduce residency requirements for voting eligibility from 30 days to 21 days.
  • Approve the continued use of election signage in campaigning efforts.

Councillors Maggie Burton, Ian Froude and Dave Lane were the other three members of the internal committee. All seven of their recommendations were adopted, five of them unanimously.

The recommendations will be voted on by city council itself at an upcoming regular meeting, most likely on March 9.

Breen says his time on the electoral reform committee caused him to examine his own feelings about the electoral process.

"When it came to limiting the sources that you can get for campaign contributions I was certainly looking at it from my own perspective," Breen said. "But I began to look at it from a different perspective, seeing that there was a movement to not allow corporate and union contributions. I see that was something that was a barrier to new candidates."

Some pushback

Of the seven recommendations to be adopted, the first and most contentious recommendation dealtwith several suggested amendments to the Election Finance By-Law.

Coun. Wally Collins and Coun. Sandy Hickman opposed the recommendation over an amendment that would reducethe limit for a financial contribution considered a donation from $250 to $100.

Coun. Sandy Hickman one of the seven electoral reform recommendations along with Coun. Wally Collins, which included an amendment that would lower the amount of money that can be contributed to a campaign without requiring the donor's identity to be disclosed. (Patrick Butler/Radio-Canada )

Breen said the newly adopted recommendations are necessary to deal with what he considers legitimate concerns from the electorate about campaign finances.

The recommendation to continue using election signage in campaigns received the only other pushback, with a vote of opposition from Hickman.

Mayor Danny Breen says the new recommendations would make the electoral process more transparent and accessible. (Patrick Butler/Radio-Canada)

Detailed information about the recommendations, as well as the original CASE report are available online in Wednesday's agenda.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said Coun. Deanne Stapleton voted against the recommendation to continue using election signage in campaigns. In fact, it was Coun. Sandy Hickman.
    Feb 28, 2020 2:08 PM NT