My name is Tina Marie Bradford, and I'm a labour lawyer practising in British Columbia.
Until two years ago I was a resident of the riding of Vancouver East. This area of Vancouver struggles with poverty and the associated problems of substance addictions and mental illness.
For a number of years I have organized a group of volunteer lawyers to assist residents of this area to obtain sufficient identification to permit them to vote in the federal, provincial, and municipal elections.
Types of identification that are common to you and me are simply not available to the majority of the people living in this area. My experience with these individuals is that they have transient lifestyles similar to those of students or workers who are moving with work. I simply point this out, as I'm going to be speaking just in respect to my experiences with residents of the downtown eastside.
They often reside in rooming houses, hotels, or other forms of transient housing, such as shelters. They have difficulty obtaining government identification. If they do obtain it, personal belongings are often lost or stolen.
The types of identification that are easily obtainable for you and me, such as property tax notices, bank information, and credit card information, are simply not available to a number of people in this area, who are struggling simply to feed and clothe themselves.
The only types of identification they are able to scrape together, and which they try to use for voting on election day, are things such as welfare receipts, rent receipts, shelter receipts, and possibly court documentation.
A number of years ago, a group of Vancouver lawyers came together to try to help people vote in elections. We would set up tables in the downtown eastside and swear what's called a “statutory declaration” for them, which they could use as a piece of identification to take to the voting stations.
During the last few years, I've spent countless hours during the advance polls and all of election day swearing statutory declarations for these individuals. In the many hours I've spent in polling stations, I've seen first-hand many people turned away from polling stations because they did not have sufficient identification.