British Columbia · Municipality of Squamish

How to run for School Trustee in Squamish

A plain-English guide to the 2026 cycle — eligibility, deadlines, paperwork, and key local contacts for school trustee candidates in Squamish, British Columbia.

Election day: Saturday, October 17, 2026
Population (2021)
23,819
Boards
Squamish-area trustee seat(s)
Term
4 years
Wards
At-large.

Step 1

Are you eligible?

On the day you file your nomination paper for school trustee in Squamish, you must be:

  • A Canadian citizen.
  • At least 18 years old.
  • A resident of Squamish, OR a non-resident owner or tenant of land in Squamish (or the spouse of one).
  • Not legally disqualified from running.
Common disqualifications include sitting judges, sitting MPs / Senators / MPPs (must resign before filing), municipal employees (must take an unpaid leave or resign), and people serving a sentence in a penal institution.

Step 2

What does the school trustee do?

School trustees represent voters on a school board and oversee policy, budgets, and the hiring of senior staff for public schools in Squamish.

RoleSeatsTermNotes
School Trustee — SD48 (Sea to Sky)Squamish-area trustee seat(s)4 yrsSD48 covers Squamish, Whistler, Pemberton; trustees by trustee electoral area (multiple Squamish-area trustees). 2022 Squamish trustees elected by acclamation.

Step 3

The nomination process

Filing happens at the local Chief Election Officer, in person during regular office hours and on nomination day until 2:00 PM. You'll need to bring:

  • Nomination paper, signed in the presence of the clerk or a commissioner of oaths.
  • 2 / 10 / 25 nominators (varies by municipal bylaw) from eligible electors of Squamish.Most cities over 5,000 residents require 25 nominators. Check your municipality’s nomination package for the exact number.
  • Government-issued photo ID showing your name and qualifying address.
  • Filing fee: Up to $100 (refundable on disclosure filing). Set by municipal bylaw; many smaller municipalities charge nothing.

Where to file

Office of the Chief Election Officer / Legislative Services, Squamish Municipal Hall, 37955 Second Avenue, Squamish BC V8B 0A3 (by appointment during the nomination window).

Step 4

Key dates — 2026 cycle

DateEvent
Sep 1, 4:00 p.m.Nomination period opens
Sep 11, 11:00 p.m.Nomination period closes (last day to file)
October 17, 2026Election day
November 6, 2026New term of council begins
March 27, 2027Campaign financial statement due

Missing the financial-statement deadline can trigger automatic disqualification from running in the next cycle and forfeiture of your filing fee.

Step 5

Campaign finance

Squamish runs under British Columbia's Local Government Act + Local Elections Campaign Financing Act. The headline numbers for the 2026 cycle:

Per-individual contribution
$1,429.70 per campaign (2026, indexed annually by Elections BC)
max from any one person to your campaign
Aggregate / additional rules
Same total can be split across candidates
across all candidates in the same municipality
Spending limit
Set by Elections BC; published by May 31 of the election year
the local Chief Election Officer issues your written limit after nominations close
Corporate and union donations are banned. Cash gifts of $25 or less generally don't need to be tracked individually; anything more must be by cheque, debit, credit, money order, or e-transfer that traces to the contributor.

Local

Specific to Squamish

  • Squamish is the largest member municipality of the SLRD; the SLRD also includes Whistler, Pemberton, Lillooet, and 4 electoral areas (A–D).
  • Major local issues for 2026: housing affordability, growth management, Squamish Nation reconciliation/development partnerships (the District has active joint-planning agreements with Squamish Nation).
  • Sign bylaws: Squamish has strict sign placement rules — the District controls sign placement on municipal property and public ROW.

Ballot

Other roles on the same ballot

Voters in Squamish also choose:

  • MayorAt-large, FPTP.
  • CouncillorAt-large, plurality block voting.

Sources

Official resources

Related guides

Also running in Squamish?

Considering a different office? We have plain-English guides for every position on the Squamish ballot:

This page is a plain-English summary, not legal advice. Always confirm details with the local Chief Election Officer and the most recent provincial candidate guide before filing. Last reviewed 2026-05-01.

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