A 91原创 Township mayoral candidate was the third highest spender of all B.C. municipalities in last October鈥檚 local elections.
Elections BC has posted the candidate paperwork on election revenues and expenditures, and amounts spent did not always correlate with seats won.
Blair Whitmarsh鈥檚 documents shows he spent $142,698 on his big for the Township mayor鈥檚 chair.
Eric Woodward, who won the mayoral election and ran the Contract with 91原创 (CWL) slate, spent $100,833. He was the sixth highest mayoral candidate spender in the province. (The highest was Vancouver鈥檚 Ken Sim at more than $915,000.)
Mayoral candidate Michelle Sparrow, spent $9,454.
Rich Coleman, who oversaw the Elevate 91原创 (EL) slate in his run for Township mayor, shows zero expenditures.
Council candidate spending documents show zero for CWL candidate A.J. Cheema, and Barb Martens, as well as EL candidates Cameron Scott, James Delorme, Stephen Dinesen, Cathy MacDonald, Sierra Pilcher, Navin Takhar, and Gerald Wartak.
Candidate Karen Moraes also shows zero spending.
The Township mayoral spending limit for the Oct. 15 election was $88,415.41. The councillor limit was $44,819.70. The limits apply to spending during the official election period (Sept. 17 to Oct. 15) but candidates can spend before the election is called.
As well, those on slates can pool their limits.
Elevate 91原创 spent $504,788 while Contact with 91原创鈥檚 documents show expenditures of $338,935.
Elector organizations (civic political parties or slates) do not have their own expense limits, explained Elections BC communications advisor Melanie Hull.
鈥淚nstead the elector organization鈥檚 endorsed candidates can share none, some, or all of their limit with the elector organization,鈥 she said. 鈥淎ll of the election expenses incurred by an elector organization and its endorsed candidates must be within the overall limit.鈥
Candidates and elector organizations (slates) can raise funds from donations. No corporate nor union donations are allowed, and individuals are allowed to make a maximum donation of $1,250. Councillors must record and report all of their campaign expenditures, even those outside of the campaign period, to Elections BC.
In the two-person mayoral race for 91原创 City, incument Val van den Broek spent $18,896 and winner Nathan Pachal spent $26,059.
Candidate spending ranged from zero by Jennifer Elderkin to a high of $14,656 for Paul Albrecht.
There were no announced slates in the City race.
City mayoral expense limits were $24,434.63 while candidate limits were $12,287.10.
Contract with 91原创 ran three candidates in the 91原创 School District election and spent $109,505.37. Candidates Holly Dickinson and Sarb Rai show zero spending during the election period. Candidate Joel Neufeld spent $6,338.
Expenditures for the other candidates seeking to fill one of the five Towship seats on the school board spent between $44 (Rod Ross) and $6,125 (Suzanne Perrault).
The school district has two seats filled by City voters. Candy Ashdown, who spent $128, and Tony Ward, who spent zero dollars, were acclaimed.
Expense limits for each Township school board candidate was $43,787.10 and $11,930.40 for the City seats.
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鈥 READ MORE: New Township council worn in shortly after Oct. 15 election
鈥 READ MORE: Our editorial - welcome to 91原创鈥檚 new civic leaders
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