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Nanaimo tugboat owner frustrated with justice system after offender released – BC | Globalnews.ca


A tugboat owner in Nanaimo, B.C., says he is frustrated with the justice system after a recent incident.

Nanaimo tugboat owner frustrated with justice system after offender released – BC | Globalnews.ca

On Saturday, a man was caught on Andrew Reynold’s security camera illegally entering his tugboat, which was docked off Cameron Island.

The man spent nearly 30 hours on board, helping himself to food and even cooking a meal, before vandalizing some of the furniture on board.

Reynolds said the man smashed the wheelhouse and cabin cameras and threw them overboard.

Then he appeared to be smoking something at one point and engaging in bizarre behaviour.

“He was running around the salon area, kicking, karate chopping, doing strange things, climbing on tables,” Reynolds said.

It appears the man left the tugboat on Feb. 1 and attempted to steal some groceries from Thrifty Foods in the Port Place Mall around 2:45 p.m.

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A short time later, the same man was seen boarding Reynold’s tugboat and that’s when he barricaded himself in and refused to leave.


Click to play video: 'Nanaimo grocery store puts locks on meat cooler to deal with shoplifting'


Nanaimo grocery store puts locks on meat cooler to deal with shoplifting


The Emergency Response Team used tear gas to eventually end the standoff and the 44-year-old man was arrested around 5:30 p.m.

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He was released on Monday, but was spotted back at the same dock not long after.

“I called 911 immediately,” Reynolds said. “Minutes later, he starts walking away.”

He said he is frustrated to learn the man was released from custody.

“He’s out on the streets again, 24 hours later, doing whatever he wants to do.”

Nanaimo Mayor Leonard Krog said people are understandably upset.

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“I think most people are pretty upset and are looking for why and how this happened and appears to continue to happen across this province far too frequently,” he said.

Marcel Alvin Fontaine, who has no fixed address, is now under a series of release conditions, which include staying 100 metres away from Reynold’s boat.

He is also charged with assaulting three people with a weapon on Dec. 23 and police allege he assaulted or tried to assault staff at Thrifty Foods, stole items and obstructed the attending officer.

Fontaine’s next court appearance is Feb. 10.


&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.




Ukraine: Civilians injured, miners killed, in separate Russian attacks



Ukraine: Civilians injured, miners killed, in separate Russian attacks

Matthias Schmale was “appalled” by the attacks in Dnipro, Kharkiv and Kyiv, noting that many more people in several regions – including Dnipro, Odesa and Vinnitsya – are facing power outages. 

“Systematic attacks by the Russian Federation Armed Forces on critical infrastructure affect the daily lives of millions and cause life-threatening conditions for the most vulnerable, including older people and children,” he said in a statement posted on social media. 

He recalled that international humanitarian law prohibits attacks on civilian infrastructure. 

Keeping families warm 

In the face of the “incessant attacks” on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, the UN children’s agency (UNICEF) is scaling up efforts to help keep critical services running amid freezing temperatures. 

Since November, UNICEF has delivered 106 mid- and large-capacity generators across the country to support water utilities and district heating companies.  

An additional 149 generators will be released over the coming weeks to further boost operations and strengthen back-up power solutions. 

“Across the country, vital services for children and families are strained and parents are struggling to keep their children warm, prepare hot food, and access regular running water,” said Munir Mammadzade, UNICEF Representative to Ukraine. 

These generators will help the brave technicians on the ground to keep systems running to keep the heating on, hospitals open and water flowing.”  

Miners killed in drone attack 

Meanwhile, UN human rights monitors confirmed that a Russian drone attack on Sunday in the Dnipropetrovsk region near the frontline in eastern Ukraine killed and injured coal mine workers commuting home after completing their shift. 

The attack occurred in the city of Ternivka, and 12 civilians were killed and 16 wounded, according to local authorities. 

“This incident highlights the dangers civilians face when hostilities extend into areas of everyday life, even well beyond the active fighting zone,” said Danielle Bell, Head of the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU). 

Deadly explosion 

The mine employees were travelling by bus on a regular commuter route through Ternivka, approximately 65 kilometres from the frontline, when multiple Russian drones struck the road near the vehicle over several minutes. 

The bus windows were blown out in the explosion, killing and injuring passengers. Other civilians driving nearby, as well as people who rushed to help, were also reportedly among the casualties. 

Simply trying to return home 

UN rights monitors visited the scene on Monday and interviewed witnesses.  They observed two craters, in front of and behind the destroyed bus, along with remnants of the drones used in the attack. 

One of the injured coal miners described climbing out of a bus window after the first explosion.  He heard screams from inside the bus, and then a second explosion shortly afterwards. 

He told the UN team that “this is all wrong” adding that “we are ordinary coal mine workers. People were simply returning to their homes, to their families.” 


Trump’s emotional call to parents of fallen Staten Island Army hero Michael Ollis to reveal their son will receive Medal of Honor



President Trump had an emotional phone call with the parents of Staten Island native and Army Staff Sgt. Michael Ollis to inform them that their son would be posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for heroically sacrificing his life in Afghanistan over a decade ago.

Robert and Linda Ollis were in the kitchen of their Staten Island home on Monday when the commander in chief greeted the couple on the phone and asked how they were holding up, according to a video posted on the SSG Michael Ollis Freedom Foundation Facebook page.

“We’re very nervous,” Robert said on speakerphone.

“You should be, because your son is going to get the highest honor that you can have,” Trump shared. “There is no higher honor than the Congressional Medal of Honor.”

The soldier’s father’s eyes lit up at the announcement, his expression shifting into a proud smile.

“He’s looking down at you right now, he’s saying, ‘Well, my mom and dad are handling this pretty well,’” Trump said of their son.

Ollis was just 24 years old, serving as an Army infantryman, when he was killed in Afghanistan on Aug. 28, 2013, during a Taliban attack on Forward Operating Base Ghazni.

In the chaos of the attack, Ollis threw himself between a suicide bomber and a Polish officer, absorbing the deadly blast and laying down his life in an act of pure selflessness.

Witnesses said his actions likely protected more than 40 service members and civilians on the base.

Staff Sgt. Michael Ollis was killed in Afghanistan in 2013 after shielding a Polish Army officer from a suicide bomber with his own body. I Have Your Back / Facebook
Ollis’ actions likely protected more than 40 service members and civilians on the base during the attack. White
Ollis was only 24 years old when he was killed. HANDOUT

Ollis was initially awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the Army’s second-highest combat award, before efforts began to elevate the recognition to the Medal of Honor, according to Military Times.

After years of advocacy by his family, veteran groups, elected officials — most notably Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-NY — and the Staten Island community, Trump approved the nation’s highest military honor for Ollis.

The Medal of Honor is reserved only for service members who go above and beyond the call of duty by showing remarkable valor and selflessness in the heat of battle, at the risk of their own lives.

The Medal is awarded after cases are rigorously reviewed, a process that requires detailed battlefield reports, at least two sworn eyewitness accounts, and additional corroborating evidence.

Ollis parents follow behind his casket at Our Lady Queen of Peace in Staten Island, NY, on Sept. 14, 2013. White
The Staten Island native was initially awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the Army’s second-highest combat award, before efforts began to elevate the recognition to the Medal of Honor. White

The couple expressed deep gratitude to the president for approving the Medal of Honor, which has been awarded posthumously 618 times, according to the Army.

“Thank you so much, Mr. President. You have no idea the happiness we have,” Robert shared.

“Thank you for facilitating this! This is so wonderful,” Linda said, adding that the family had advocated for their son to receive the honor for years and reached out to countless people before he finally approved it.

Trump also applauded the parents for their tireless work to keep their son’s story alive for more than a decade.

President Trump called Ollis’ parents at their Staten Island home on Monday to inform them of the news. REUTERS

“Otherwise, how are we going to know, right? You know, people don’t know. So I think that’s fantastic,” Trump said.

Trump then told the pair that they would head to the White House for the ceremony, where a “few” recipients would also receive the honor, noting that they were “all brave people.” The president did not clarify whom he was referring to.

“I read what your son did, and it’s — I wouldn’t do it, Linda,” Trump told Ollis’ mother about her son’s bravery.

“I’m not brave enough either,” Linda said with a soft laugh.

“Neither am I. Even though I’m a Vietnam Vet, I still wouldn’t have done it,” Robert added.

Trump encouraged them to gather the family and “go celebrate,” reminding them their son would be proud before ending the call.


AI, Automation, and Biosensors Speed the Path to Synthetic Jet Fuel | Newswise


BYLINE: Will Ferguson

Newswise — When it comes to powering aircraft, jet engines need dense, energy-packed fuels. Right now, nearly all of that fuel comes from petroleum, as batteries don’t yet deliver enough punch for most flights. Scientists have long dreamed of a synthetic alternative: teaching microbes to ferment plant material into high-performance jet fuels. But designing these microbial “mini-factories” has traditionally been slow and expensive because of the unpredictability of biological systems.

In a pair of recent studies, two teams at the Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), which is managed by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), have demonstrated complementary ways to dramatically speed up this process. One combines artificial intelligence and lab automation to rapidly test and refine the genetic designs of biofuel-producing microbes. The other turns a microbe’s “bad habit” into a powerful sensing tool, uncovering hidden pathways that boost production.

Their shared target is isoprenol — a clear, volatile alcohol that can be converted into DMCO, a next-generation jet fuel with higher energy density than today’s conventional aviation fuels. Producing isoprenol efficiently has been a long-standing challenge in synthetic biology.

The two studies — one published in Nature Communications, the other in Science Advances — tackle different sides of this challenge. The first uses automation and machine learning to engineer Pseudomonas putida strains that produce five times more isoprenol than before. The second approach turns the bacterium’s natural fuel-sensing ability into an advantage. By rewiring that system into a biosensor, the team could rapidly screen millions of variants and identify strains that make up to 36 times more isoprenol.

“These are two powerful complementary strategies,” said senior author of the biosensor study Thomas Eng, JBEI deputy director of Host Engineering and a research scientist in Berkeley Lab’s Biological Systems and Engineering (BSE) Division. “One is data-driven optimization; the other is discovery. Together, they give us a way to move much faster than traditional trial-and-error.”

A new engine for strain design

The AI and automation study was led by Taek Soon Lee, director of Pathway and Metabolic Engineering at JBEI, and Héctor García Martín, director of Data Science and Modeling at JBEI, both staff scientists in Berkeley Lab’s BSE Division. They set out to accelerate one of synthetic biology’s most time-consuming steps: improving microbial production through a series of genetic tweaks to different combinations of genes. Traditionally, scientists alter a few genes at a time and test the results — a painstaking, intuition-driven process that can take months or even years to yield meaningful gains.

By contrast, the Berkeley Lab researchers built an automated pipeline that uses robotics to create and test hundreds of genetic designs in parallel. After each round, machine learning algorithms analyze the results to systematically suggest the next set of strain genetic designs. The result is a system that moves 10 to 100 times faster than conventional methods.

“Standard metabolic engineering is slow because you’re relying on human intuition and biological knowledge,” said García Martín. “Our goal was to make strain improvement systematic and fast.”

Lead author David Carruthers, a scientific engineering associate with JBEI and BSE, developed a robotic workflow that connects key lab steps into one automated system. Working with collaborators at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, the team introduced a custom microfluidic electroporation device that can insert genetic material into 384 Pseudomonas putida strains in under a minute — a task that typically takes hours by hand.

At the core of the system is CRISPR interference (CRISPRi), a tool that lets researchers “turn down” gene activity rather than switching genes off completely. This fine-tuning makes it possible to test subtle gene combinations that shape the cell’s metabolism and track the effects through detailed protein measurements. After each round, the machine learning model analyzes the results and recommends the next set of genes that are most likely to boost performance when dialed down.

“Traditionally, optimizing production is a kind of guess-and-check process,” Carruthers said. “You make one change, test it, and hope you’re climbing toward a higher peak. By combining automation and machine learning, we were able to climb that landscape systematically — in weeks, not years.”

Lee, who led the metabolic engineering work, emphasized why this level of automation is so transformative for biology.

“We have been engineering Pseudomonas by hand for years, but biological experiments always come with small variations that are hard to control,” he said. “Automation gives us the ability to generate the same high-quality data every time, which is essential for machine learning to work well.”

Patrick Kinnunen, a former Berkeley Lab JBEI postdoctoral researcher who co-developed the data strategy, highlighted how crucial that reproducibility was for the algorithms. “Automation didn’t just make the experiments faster — it made the data cleaner,” he said. “That clarity is what lets it uncover non-intuitive genetic combinations that we probably would have missed by hand.”

Using their automated learning loop, the team completed six engineering cycles, each lasting just a few weeks instead of the months typical of manual workflows. They boosted isoprenol titers (the concentration of product in the culture) five-fold compared to their starting strain.

Turning a bug into a feature

Meanwhile, a second team led by Eng tackled a different but equally stubborn hurdle: how to select target genes that, when dialed down, improve isoprenol production significantly. The team’s microbe, Pseudomonas putida, posed a peculiar problem. It didn’t just make isoprenol, it also consumed the fuel molecule almost as soon as it produced it, undermining production efforts. Initially, this looked like a flaw. But during the COVID-19 pandemic, Eng and colleagues realized it might be a clue: if the microbe could sense and eat isoprenol, it likely had a built-in molecular sensor.

“There was a real ‘Aha!’ moment,” Eng said. “We had spent more than a year trying to figure out why the cells were consuming the product. One day we thought, ‘Wait, if they can sense it, there has to be a protein that detects it. Maybe we can turn that from a problem into a tool.’”

The team discovered the molecular system the microbe uses to sense isoprenol: two proteins that work together to detect the fuel and send signals inside the cell. They then rewired this system into a biosensor — a kind of biological “engine light” that turns on in proportion to how much fuel the cell produces.

Then came the clever twist: They linked the sensor to genes essential for survival, creating a system where only the microbes that make the most fuel can grow. Instead of measuring thousands of samples by hand, they let natural selection do the screening. This approach rapidly surfaced “champion” strains, including variants that produced up to 36 times more isoprenol than the original.

“What started as a frustrating bug became our biggest asset,” Eng said. “We turned the microbe’s fuel-eating behavior into a sensor that reports and selects for the best producers automatically.”

The approach also revealed surprising biology; high-producing strains switched to feed on their own amino acids once glucose ran out, sustaining production by rewiring their metabolism in unexpected ways. Just as importantly, the workflow can be applied to other molecules, offering a flexible new tool for rapidly engineering microbes — not just for isoprenol, but for a wide range of bio-based products.

Scaling up to industry-ready

Although developed independently, the two approaches fit together well. The AI-driven pipeline excels at rapidly optimizing combinations of a known set of gene targets, while the biosensor method is best for discovering novel gene targets, revealing genetic levers that would be difficult to predict.

“One is depth-first; the other is breadth-first,” Eng said. “Machine learning systematically optimizes combinations of annotated targets, while the biosensor approach starts fresh and lets the cells tell us which gene targets matter.”

Both teams are now working to scale their methods from lab experiments to industrially relevant fermentation systems — a critical step for producing synthetic aviation fuel at commercial levels. They’re also adapting their approaches to other microbes and target molecules, aiming to make them broadly applicable in biomanufacturing.

“If widely adopted, these approaches could reshape the industry,” García Martín said. “Instead of taking a decade and hundreds of people to develop one new bioproduct, small teams could do it in a year or less.”

Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, BSE deputy director for science, director of Host Engineering at JBEI, and a coauthor on the biosensor study, said these kinds of tools are changing how biological research gets done.

“Engineering biology is challenging due to the inherent unpredictability of metabolism and that makes the engineering slow,” Mukhopadhyay said. “By streamlining key steps — as we did through selections — and leveraging automation and AI, we’re making it a faster, more systematic process that is easier to adopt.”

JBEI is a Bioenergy Research Center funded by the Department of Energy Office of Science.

###

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) is committed to groundbreaking research focused on discovery science and solutions for abundant and reliable energy supplies. The lab’s expertise spans materials, chemistry, physics, biology, earth and environmental science, mathematics, and computing. Researchers from around the world rely on the lab’s world-class scientific facilities for their own pioneering research. Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest problems are best addressed by teams, Berkeley Lab and its scientists have been recognized with 17 Nobel Prizes. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

DOE’s Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit energy.gov/science.




Naked images remained in Epstein files despite outcry


Ahead of the deadline set by Congress, deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the files would not be published on time, citing the extra work needed to guard victims’ identities. “We are looking at every single piece of paper that we are going to produce making sure every victim – their name, their identity, their story, to the extent that it needs to be protected – is completely protected,” he said at the time.


Flames take season series with 4-3 win over Oilers | Globalnews.ca


CALGARY – Rookie Matvei Gridin had a goal and an assist for his first multi-point NHL game to lead the Calgary Flames to a 4-3 victory over the Edmonton Oilers on Wednesday.

Nanaimo tugboat owner frustrated with justice system after offender released – BC | Globalnews.ca

Jonathan Huberdeau and Ryan Lomberg, with the game-winner, also scored for Calgary (23-27-6). Nazem Kadri, MacKenzie Weegar and Zach Whitecloud had two assists apiece.

The Flames took the season series against their provincial rival winning of three of four meetings.

Leon Draisaitl, with two goals, and Kasperi Kapanen scored for Edmonton (28-22-8) as the Oilers limp into the Olympic Break on a three-game losing skid.

Flames goaltender Devin Cooley had 36 stops to record the win and improve to 7-6-3.

Suffering the loss was Tristan Jarry, who had 21 saves to fall to 15-7-2.

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The Flames never trailed with Huberdeau opening the scoring 3:12 into the game and after Draisaitl tied it, Gridin restored Calgary’s lead at 14:44 of the first period.

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With the lead up to 3-1, Draisaitl’s second of the game on the power play got the Oilers back within one at 18:26 of the second period.

Kapanen tied it 4:17 into the third.

Both teams now hit the Olympic break where they’ll be off for three weeks before returning to action in California where both will begin three-game road trips.

Takeaways

Oilers: Edmonton has now surrendered goals on five consecutive penalty kills thanks to Calgary converting each of its first two power plays in the first period. Edmonton lost on the road in regulation for the first time since the Flames beat them 3-2 on Dec. 27. They had been 4-0-1 since.

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Flames: Gridin’s third career goal was his second in three games as the 19-year-old continues to impress on a line with Huberdeau and Morgan Frost. Joel Farabee has also played well of late with goals in each of the past two games, but he wasn’t able to extend the streak to three.

Key moment

A bouncing puck in front of the Oilers net went on net off the skate of Lomberg, forcing Jarry to kick out his pad, and Lomberg buried the rebound 6:44 into the third.

Key stat

Draisaitl (1,036) moved past Mark Messier (1,034) into fourth on the Oilers’ all-time points list. Draisaitl is seven back of Jari Kurri for third. Wayne Gretzky (1,669) leads, followed by Connor McDavid (1,178).

Up next

Oilers: Head to Anaheim to face the Ducks on Feb. 25.

Flames: Visit the San Jose Sharks on Feb. 26.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 4, 2026.


&copy 2026 The Canadian Press




Kelowna residents warned to stay alert following theft of paramedic uniform | Globalnews.ca


Ashley Salmen is reeling after a recent theft from her vehicle outside her Kelowna, B.C., townhouse.

Nanaimo tugboat owner frustrated with justice system after offender released – BC | Globalnews.ca

“I want the uniform back. I want it off the street,” Salmen said.

Salmen is a paramedic and among the items recently stolen was her uniform and paramedic ID.

“It has the patches, the emblems and that’s my concern, is that someone is going to use this uniform for ill will,” Salmen told Global News.

The theft happened on Saturday, Jan. 31 on Kneller Road in the city’s Rutland area.

The first responder says it was just before 7 a.m. when she came home after working an overnight shift.

She says she parked her vehicle in front of her garage to run inside and grab something before leaving again. But when she got back outside, her bag was gone.

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“I didn’t realize my passenger door was unlocked. I didn’t double check my vehicle because I was only going for not even two minutes,” Salmen said. “I parked at 6:50 in the morning and by 6:52 my stuff had been taken.”

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A neighbour’s security camera captured a video of a woman walking through the townhouse complex with a bicycle during that brief time Salmen was inside.

The paramedic says her bag is on the handlebars.


Click to play video: 'Firefighter uniforms stolen from North Vancouver dry cleaners'


Firefighter uniforms stolen from North Vancouver dry cleaners


B.C. Emergency Health Services said no one was available for comment Wednesday.

RCMP confirmed they are investigating the theft and working towards identifying a suspect, including reviewing surveillance footage from the area.

“It is important to the public to know that this uniform is out there,” said Kelowna RCMP Cpl. Steven Lang.

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With the uniform representing a position of authority, it raises public safety concerns if misused, something Lang said people need to be aware of.

“If they think there’s anything suspicious or the person that may be in front of them isn’t who they pretend to be or say that they are just to contact the agency that is being represented,” Lang said.

“And if their instinct is telling them something might be untoward or feels a little off, that they should believe in those signs.”

Salmen is also encouraging residents to be vigilant.

“I want the uniform back. I want it off the street,” she said.


Click to play video: 'B.C. paramedics’ union calls for mediation in contract talks'


B.C. paramedics’ union calls for mediation in contract talks


&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.




Long waits, complex procedures frustrated some voters in 2025 Edmonton election: report – Edmonton | Globalnews.ca


Long lineups, complex voting procedures and challenges with new technology affected the voting experience for a significant number of Edmontonians during the 2025 municipal election, according to a newly-released interim post-election report.

Nanaimo tugboat owner frustrated with justice system after offender released – BC | Globalnews.ca

The report, presented to the city’s audit committee Wednesday, outlines early findings from Edmonton Elections’ review of the October 2025 vote and identifies several areas for improvement ahead of the next municipal election in 2029.

While a majority of voters were able to cast ballots without major difficulty, the report suggests that changes driven by new provincial legislation — including the introduction of a permanent electors register and a shift to hand-counted ballots — contributed to delays and confusion at some voting stations.

“There were so many changes,” said Thu Parmar, one of the city councillors who reviewed the report at city hall on Wednesday.

“It wasn’t one change. It was one bill that came through, then one bill got amended, and so there were multiple changes leading up to that election day.”

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About 60 per cent of voters surveyed said they completed the voting process in 30 minutes or less, and 83 per cent finished within an hour.

However, 16 per cent reported waiting longer than an hour, with longer wait times strongly linked to lower satisfaction.

Overall, 63 per cent of Edmonton voters said they were satisfied with their experience, the report said.


Click to play video: 'Some Alberta voters ‘walk away’ from municipal election lineups'


Some Alberta voters ‘walk away’ from municipal election lineups


Satisfaction dropped sharply amongst those who waited more than an hour: dropping to 24 per cent for waits of one to two hours and just 14 per cent for waits exceeding two hours.

“Edmontonians were very committed to voting,” said Ward Ipiihkoohkanipiaohtsi councillor Jon Morgan. “I did hear about long lines during the election, upwards of two hours… but I also heard they were committed to seeing it through.

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“So I’m pretty proud of that fact — for Edmontonians to be that committed to it, but, I can understand their frustrations.”

Voters and election workers both pointed to complexity in voting process as a key source of their frustration.

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Fifteen per cent of surveyed voters reported difficulties with forms, verification steps and multi-station workflows — particularly in situations where they needed to be added to or updated on the new permanent electors register.

Those more complex transactions often slowed voting lines, the report said, contributing to bottlenecks during peak periods at some polling locations.


Click to play video: 'Slow results and long lines in 2025 Edmonton election'


Slow results and long lines in 2025 Edmonton election


The changes this year prohibited the use of electronic vote tabulators and instead required all ballots to be counted by hand, increasing the number of ballots and ballot boxes used at each voting station.

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“I would definitely like to see a return to our tabulators,” said Morgan, who was elected to city council back in October. “That would be a big help for our election team and for the safety and security of our elections.”

Several boxes of ballots had to be re-counted by hand during the election, delaying the release of the results. Morgan said using paper ballots and people counting introduces room for error.

“We should be using the tools that are proven to make sure that our elections are fair and free.”

The 2025 election marked the first time Edmonton was required to use a permanent electors register, following amendments to Alberta’s Local Authorities Election Act.

To support the permanent register, Edmonton Elections deployed an electronic elector register at voting stations. While the system allowed for real-time updates and added security protections, it also posed challenges for some people hired to work the polls.

Election workers were surveyed and 22 per cent said the technology was difficult to use, while nine per cent reported technical issues during their shift.

They also reported difficulty completing required paperwork, including ballot accounting forms, with 22 per cent saying those procedures were hard to complete.

“There is so much more work to this election than there has been in the past,” Parmar said.

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During the election, residents voted for mayor, their city councillor, and school trustee and instead of one electronic ballot with all their names on it, the 2025 election saw it split up.

“In this sense, it was actually three separate votes. So that created more time,” Parmar said of the workers having to physically doll out the three different sheets of paper.

“That may not have been factored when you were looking at how many people you were going to hire.”


Click to play video: 'Long municipal election lines in Alberta after legislation changes'


Long municipal election lines in Alberta after legislation changes


The report notes while accurate ballot accounting is essential to election integrity, some workers felt the complexity of the process limited their ability to serve voters efficiently — especially during busy periods such as the early evening when people got off work and went to vote.

Gaps in training were another contributing factor.

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More than 5,400 election workers were hired to staff the election, filling more than 6,600 positions. While most workers completed mandatory online and in-person training, feedback suggested more hands-on training would have helped workers navigate the new systems and forms more confidently.

To address concerns raised during advance voting, Edmonton Elections offered additional hands-on training for supervisors.

Those who took part said it improved confidence and effectiveness, but the opportunity to take part could not be extended to all workers due to time and capacity constraints.

“I think what we heard very clearly was that it’s very difficult to train 5,000 people for one day, right? And I think to give some grace to that, what we saw was that the checks and balances did work.”


Click to play video: 'Albertans to elect municipal governments Monday in what’s been dubbed a ‘meh’ election'


Albertans to elect municipal governments Monday in what’s been dubbed a ‘meh’ election


In a separate advisory report, the city auditor echoed many of the same concerns, noting observations on election day revealed frustrations amongst both voters and staff — largely tied to system challenges and form completion.

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The auditor’s office had one main suggestion: Edmonton Elections consider a more comprehensive, hands-on training approach for future elections to reduce voter frustration and operational risk.

Parmar said she’s looking forward to seeing an action plan.

“What are they actually going to do to make sure that we can have higher voter turnout, that we can have a service level that is definitely not over one hour to be able to vote?

“That is not what Edmontonians expect, it’s not what I expect, it’s not what council expects and so we’ll be looking at that.”

Despite the challenges, the auditor reported Edmonton Elections addressed all significant findings before and during the election, and issues identified during ballot reconciliation did not affect election results.


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