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N.B. elections agency blames 'mix up' after 260,000 households get wrong voter letter

FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's elections authority says an error on voting letters may confuse residents about whether they should be voting in upcoming municipal elections.
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New Brunswick's provincial flag flies on a flagpole in Ottawa, Monday, July 6, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's elections authority says an error on voting letters may confuse residents about whether they should be voting in upcoming municipal elections.

Elections New Brunswick says some residents mistakenly received letters informing them that their community is not having an election — when in fact it is.

And the agency says other residents may receive a letter telling them their community is indeed having an election — when it is not.

Chief electoral officer Kim Poffenroth says nearly 260,000 households were sent incorrect information about the Nov. 28 local government elections, adding that her agency spent about $400,000 mailing the letters.

Poffenroth says the errors occurred because of a "mix up" of files by the vendor contracted by Elections Canada to print and distribute the letters.

She says the errors were missed during proofreading and were only discovered when two people called Tuesday saying they received incorrect information.

Poffenroth says people should go to the Elections New Brunswick website for up-to-date information on municipalities and voting.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 6, 2022.

The Canadian Press

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