
Victoria, Saanich to work on amalgamation question for next municipal election
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CTV News
3 days ago
- CTV News
B.C.'s public service union prepares for strike vote after talks reach impasse
BCGEU president Paul Finch speaks to reporters at the legislature on Friday, July 18, 2025. (CTV News) VICTORIA — British Columbia's public service union representing 34,000 members says it's preparing for a strike vote after months-long negotiations fell apart. Paul Finch, president of the B.C. General Employees' Union, says the impasse came over wages, work from home rules and modernizing the contract. Finch says their members face an affordability crisis, and if wages don't keep up with inflation, skilled workers will be lost, including wildland firefighters, who 'are among the lowest paid employees in the entire government.' In the past 15 years, Finch says they have seen a 52 per cent increase in the size of 'excluded management' inside the public service, while at the same time, front line workers have been asked to do 'more with less.' Wildland firefighters are making $28 an hour, a wage Finch says does not reflect the work they do in protecting communities. B.C. Finance Minister Brenda Bailey says in a statement that the government respects its 'hardworking' public service employees, and believes that agreements will be reached through the collective bargaining process. 'I am hopeful the parties will return to the table soon — it's best to keep the bargaining discussions at the table so the parties can focus on reaching a settlement.' The union says in a statement that its proposal issued last month asked for a two-year deal, with wage increase for workers at the lower end of the pay scale, targeted adjustments for certain jobs and bonuses into base salaries. He says the employers' last offer was a 1.5 per cent increase in the first year, and two per cent in the second year, which isn't 'acceptable,' not to mention that it refused to address key issues such as basic telework protections and removal of an 'outdated' public service job evaluation plan. This report by The Canadian Press was first published July. 18, 2025.


CBC
4 days ago
- CBC
Victoria, Saanich to work on amalgamation question for next municipal election
In Vancouver Island, there are calls for two cities to join together. Councilors in Victoria have paved the way for a referendum on amalgamation with the district of Saanich.


CBC
4 days ago
- CBC
Victoria, Saanich to work on amalgation question for next municipal election
Social Sharing The municipalities of Victoria and Saanich have taken steps towards amalgamation this week, with councillors in the capital city directing staff to work with Saanich staff to put together a short question that would be added to the ballot in the October 2026 local elections. The motion at Victoria city council Thursday morning, which included receiving the report from a citizens' assembly that recommended amalgamation after eight months of deliberation, passed unanimously after more than two hours of discussion. Earlier this week, councillors with the District of Saanich also discussed the report at length, with several of them expressing their support. Peter MacLeod, chair of the assembly on behalf of Toronto-based consultancy MASS SBP, said the members of the group were happy with the results. "I think the members are delighted," MacLeod told CBC News shortly after the meeting. "[They] were very pleased and gratified that both councils took their recommendations seriously." Saanich and Victoria are the two most populous municipalities on southern Vancouver Island, with populations of 117,735 and 91,867, respectively, according to 2021 census numbers from Statistics Canada. While they share some regional services, they are governed separately, with separate mayors and councils, separate police forces, and more. Years in the making If citizens vote in favour of amalgamation during the next local elections, MacLeod says it would still take at least four years for the process to be complete. The question of amalgamation in Greater Victoria has been years in the making. In 2014, seven of the 13 Capital Regional District municipalities said they wanted a study looking into amalgamation. In a non-binding referendum in 2018, residents approved each municipality spending up to $250,000 to study whether they would benefit from joining forces. The process was delayed by the pandemic but finally began last year. The Victoria-Saanich Citizens' Assembly, made up of 48 randomly selected residents from the two municipalities, released its recommendations in April. Criticism The discussion in Victoria Thursday morning did include criticism of the report and questions for assembly members. Coun. Jeremy Caradonna wondered why a financial analysis and risk assessment were not included as part of the process, or estimates of possible staff layoffs. At the meeting, MacLeod says the assembly recognized a "high degree of compatibility" between the two jurisdictions, including their populations and needs. Amalgamation discussions in other jurisdictions that MacLeod said he had taken part in often included a larger municipality absorbing a much smaller one, or several municipalities coming together — neither of which would be the case here.