Toronto has said they just aren't ready to take the leap.
But internet and phone voting is becoming more and more popular in this province, with several municipalities taking it on for the first time.
Pickering is one of the largest cities to do so, with a population of just under 100,000 people.
Markham is arguably the largest at more than 300,000, and they've been doing it since 2003.
In Pickering though, the aim is to get a better voter turnout.
"Voter turnout is usually something like 25-30%." says Pickering's Chief Administrative Officer, Tony Prevedel.
He says people just don't have the time to vote.
"We find a lot of people are busy with their own lives, or their commuting and are coming home late at night."
What this does, is allow them to cast a ballot from the comfort of their own homes, or offices.
And the benefits are two-pronged.
"We no longer have to print off 70,000 paper ballots and destroy them at the end of the night, so it's a benefit to the environment too." says Prevedal.
If you think the elderly may not buy into the new technology, you'd be wrong.
"We had a lady who had turned 103, who got on a computer and voted."
But the City Clerk says studies have shown that internet voting, doesn't really affect the final number of people who head to the polls.
"The people who just like the paper ballot won't vote, but then you pick up the people who don't have time to go to a polling location, they'll vote." says Debbie Shields. "So it kind of evens out."
In Markham however, the numbers don't lie. Voter turnout has gone from 28% on paper ballots, to over 37% on e-voting.