By Ian Austin, The ProvinceSeptember 27, 2011
Cabinet minister Ida Chong had a tough sell Tuesday to a hostile crowd at the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention. Chong,
along with deputy minster Don Fast, tried to pitch Premier Christy
Clark’s promise of a ‘municipal auditor general’ – a watchdog to check
the bottom line on, basically, the hundreds of local politicians
gathered and listening in. Chong, B.C.’s Minister of Community,
Sport, and Cultural Development, spent much of the first 48 of the
60-minute panel trying to calm the nervous, angry politicians. A few rude questions later, and the panel was shut down with more than a dozen people still lined up to grill the minister. The local politicians said they’re already prohibited from running deficits, and they’re already audited every year. Chong countered that ‘limited numbers’ of audits would be of the ‘value-for-money’ variety. “Why don’t we have a ‘value-for-money’ audit for the municipal auditor general?” heckled one of the crowd. The
idea surfaced when Clark made the MAG pledge during her run for the
B.C. Liberal leadership – but Tuesday Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan
called it a “thoughtless campaign promise. “‘Will the province intervene, how much will it cost, how much can we expect taxpayers to pay for this?” asked the mayor. Port
Coquitlam Mayor Greg Moore said he expected lots of resistance Thursday
morning when the UBCM delegates will decide where they stand about the
proposed municipal watchdog. “I think a lot of people will be
there to speak against it,” said Moore, the UBCM’s Metro Vancouver
representative. “A lot of local governments question this - ‘Where’s the
need for this?’ and ‘Why?’”
3 comments:
I think the answer to Mr. Moore's question is rather simple. The need has arisen because of taxpayer concerns about possible fiscal mismanagement in their municipalities and Regional Districts. It seems to me those that are enjoying taxpayer-funded largesse would have the most complaint about the taps perhaps running dry.
If you blindly trust that your local government is doing every thing it can with every penny, then this won't be an issue. But when you see money being spent on stuff that you find questionable, then you will have a number to call.
This is good for taxpayers and transparency. Now if we can only get the Provincial Government into the realm of equal transparency, and then the feds.....
very well said Anonymous.
This is good for taxpayers and transparency.
And no I well not trust our local Government blindly -
When public involvement is controlled from the top, it is always subject to being ignored. It certainly cannot be relied upon as a meaningful check on government decision making.
We need bottom-up solutions--they are the only sort that we can rely on--and these will not be easily achieved with a crippled electoral system
This just goes to prove how most politicians at the local level want to be free from having their actions reviewed.These same politicians have almost completed 3 years and think they know best.
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