
Hundreds of municipal politicians preparing to convince the British
Columbia Liberal government to help pay for local sewer upgrades, the
pothole brigade or memorial gardens can expect a sympathetic ear but
little else at a week-long gathering in Victoria. Up to 1,500 delegates registered to attend the Union of BC
Municipalities Convention starting Monday will receive polite but firm
rejections of most funding requests, says Bill Bennett, minister of
community, sport and cultural development. The conventions have historically served as occasions for previous
Liberal governments to make big financial announcements, removing the
tolls on the Coquihalla Highway, introducing smart meters and
electrifying northern BC. But Bennett says times have changed and saving money, not spending it, is the order of the day. "I won't be saying, 'You're wasting your time, there's no money,'" said Bennett. "What I'll be saying is, 'We want to understand what your
needs are. We want to understand what your challenges are.' Then we'll
try to help people solve their problem." "We don't have a lot of money at this point," he said. More than 200 resolutions are up for debate at the UBCM convention,
including decriminalizing marijuana, banning shark fins and cleaning up
tsunami debris, but Bennett said the hard issues revolve around funding
infrastructure projects. "They will quite understandably argue that they need more money for the
roads and the sewers and the water and the transit. We will say, 'Yes,
we know you need that.'" "But, I will also be raising the issue of local government generally
trying to keep their expenses down the way the province does," Bennett
said. "It will be a good, honest discussion with local government."
Bennett said cities such as Prince George and Penticton have been doing
a solid job of managing their expenses. But others, which he did not
name, have been giving their workers pay raises and spending a
considerable amount of money. The BC Business Council released a study in May that examined municipal spending in Metro Vancouver. It found that municipal operating spending in Metro Vancouver increased 80 per cent from 2000 to 2010. The study concluded that the 21 Metro Vancouver municipalities spent
$3.1 billion on operations in 2010, up from $1.7 billion in 2000. BC government spending increased by 10 per cent over that same period. "We'll be saying, 'You've got to find the best, low-cost alternative to
whatever it is that you want to do,'" Bennett said. "I have some real
good honest to goodness empathy for the challenges they face, but we
have to include in that discussion, however, a discussion about their
rapidly escalating expenditures." He said the province is currently in talks with the federal government on a new infrastructure funding model. That deal may not be complete until 2014, Bennett said. Premier Christy Clark is slated to address the convention on Friday,
after Opposition New Democrat Leader Adrian Dix speaks to delegates on
Thursday.
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