logo
City ‘pausing' work to scrap Vancouver Park Board pending provincial changes

City ‘pausing' work to scrap Vancouver Park Board pending provincial changes

Global News4 days ago

The City of Vancouver is 'pausing' work to abolish its elected park board.
It comes after the provincial legislature ended its spring session without amending the Vancouver Charter, a key legal step necessary to move forward with Mayor Ken Sim's plan to scrap the Vancouver Park Board.
According to an 'all staff' message circulated Friday by deputy city manager Sandra Singh, 'operational planning towards a governance transition will pause until we learn more.'
3:53
Vancouver Park Board transition could save $7M a year
'The provincial government has reaffirmed its commitment to at a future date enact these legislative changes and we will share any further indication of regarding potential timing when we receive that information,' the memo adds.
Story continues below advertisement
Vancouver green park commissioner Tom Digby, who opposes the transition, hailed the pause as a victory, posting on social media that '135 years of local democracy survives.'
Get daily National news
Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
Sim announced his plan to eliminate the park board in December 2023, after initially campaigning in the municipal election to keep it and fix it.
Sim has subsequently said scrapping the board would save the city $7 million per year and streamline a variety of city tasks from permitting to maintenance.
1:43
Vancouver Park Board chair defends staff 'gag order'
Last spring, Premier David Eby signalled the government was 'committed' to making the changes after the 2024 provincial election, should he be re-elected.
But a year later, he said action on amending the Vancouver Charter was a 'casualty' of a slow-moving legislature overwhelmed with rookie MLAs.
Story continues below advertisement
Abolishing the park board has proven controversial, with opposition from the BC Conservatives and from a majority of sitting parks commissioners, three of whom were elected under Sim's ABC slate but broke with the mayor over his parks plan.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Conservatives push back on new B.C. law banning MLAs from holding local office
Conservatives push back on new B.C. law banning MLAs from holding local office

Global News

timean hour ago

  • Global News

Conservatives push back on new B.C. law banning MLAs from holding local office

The BC Conservatives are pushing back on new legislation that bars sitting MLAs from simultaneously holding another elected office. The NDP's Eligibility to Hold Public Office Act passed last week with the support of the BC Greens, and will force BC Conservative MLAs Misty Van Popta and Korky Neufeld to resign, respectively, from positions as a Township of Langley city councillor and Abbotsford school trustee. Van Popta told Global News she felt the NDP had targeted her with the legislation. 1:56 Vancouver voters choose 2 progressive city councillors in byelection 'It's not something (my constituents) wanted. I heard loud and clear at the doors when I campaigned openly that I would temporarily hold both positions to not trigger a byelection, that I was willing to work extra hard for them to save taxpayer money,' she said. Story continues below advertisement 'I was playing within the rules, I was playing within what was allowed and what was done for decades before me, this is not a new concept, an MLA holding a local position.' Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The bill was authored by Esquimalt-Colwood NDP MLA and former Sooke city councillor Darlene Ratchford. Ratchford, who resigned her municipal role upon election to the legislature, said she was surprised to learn quitting the local job wasn't mandatory. 'British Columbians expect their MLAs to show up and participate and that was the intention of this bill. I was actually quite surprised when I was elected as an MLA I just assumed you had to step down from local government,' she said. Ratchord said her bill was to ensure that MLAs were giving '110 per cent' at the legislature, and to close a 'loophole' that allowed them to collect two paycheques. She added the new law brings B.C. in line with other provinces like Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba in banning dual mandates. 1:59 Vancouver byelection advance voting sees record turnout 'Thirteen of us (municipal officeholders) were elected during the provincial election as MLAs and 11 stepped down and did the right thing,' she said. Story continues below advertisement But Neufeld said by forcing the resignations, the province is now requiring Abbotsford and Langley to hold byelections with just over a year before the next municipal election. They're estimated to cost $300,000 for the school board post and $500,000 for the township councillor. 'Let the local municipalities, the local school boards where people are elected to define whether a person should resign and trigger a by-election, ' he said. 'It's overreach in my opinion for the province to mandate this, and now our school board is going to have to fork out $300,000. Well you tell me where $300,000 would stretch in a classroom.' No dates have been announced for the Abbotsford and Township of Langley byelections. British Columbians will next go to the polls for their municipal elections in the fall of 2026.

Court turfs Metro Vancouver attempt to delay sewage plant legal battle
Court turfs Metro Vancouver attempt to delay sewage plant legal battle

Global News

timean hour ago

  • Global News

Court turfs Metro Vancouver attempt to delay sewage plant legal battle

A B.C. Supreme Court judge has denied Metro Vancouver's attempt to delay an ongoing legal battle with Acciona, the former contractor of the North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant. The North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant is an estimated $3 billion over budget. Metro Vancouver blames the disaster on contractor Acciona, which it fired. Acciona maintains that Metro Vancouver's failure to deliver on its obligations prompted their $250 million damage claim. 1:59 Fired wastewater plant contractor fires back at Metro Vancouver In a July 2024 interview, Metro Vancouver's CAO said Acciona had failed to deliver. Story continues below advertisement Jerry Dobrovolny said, 'One of the difficulties we have is we're locked in litigation with our previous contractor, who we let go for not delivering on what was contracted'. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy In his ruling, Justice Bruce Elwood stated, 'I am persuaded that there is a real risk to Acciona of a loss of evidence if the adjournment is granted' and 'if the trial is adjourned, there will be a further three-and-a-half-year delay … For these reasons, the application to adjourn the trial is dismissed.' Elwood also ruled that Metro Vancouver 'is a sophisticated litigant represented by one of the leading law firms in the country. The resources required to litigate this case on the current schedule are not disproportionate to the amount of money involved.' 2:43 Wastewater treatment plant debacle Metro Vancouver told Global News, 'Acciona has produced nearly four million documents, an extraordinarily large document production that disrupts the usual flow of the litigation process.' Story continues below advertisement The regional district added that it 'respects Justice Elwood's decision and will continue to work diligently to prepare for the March 2027 trial date.' Acciona responded, 'We welcome the court decision and will continue to work towards a timely resolution. Acciona remains committed to full transparency and a full review of this project by the court.'

Eby fires back at Ford over suggestion B.C. would accept 2nd oil pipeline
Eby fires back at Ford over suggestion B.C. would accept 2nd oil pipeline

Global News

timean hour ago

  • Global News

Eby fires back at Ford over suggestion B.C. would accept 2nd oil pipeline

B.C. Premier David Eby says he won't be throwing his support behind a new oil pipeline through the province, dismissing Ontario Premier Doug Ford's suggestion that Eby would change his mind. Eby says in response to Ford's remarks on Monday that the publicly-owned TMX pipeline is already running through B.C., and the province doesn't support lifting the ban on oil tankers off British Columbia's northern coast. 1:58 Premiers talk possible new pipeline out west He says it's not his job to tell Ford it's 'extremely unlikely' there will be a tunnel under Toronto's Highway 401, or tell Alberta Premier Danielle Smith her 'vision' for a pipeline connecting Alberta and northern B.C. is 'many, many years off' with no proponent in sight. Story continues below advertisement Eby says his job instead is to protect the interests of British Columbia by bringing forward 'shovel-ready' projects. 2:17 Danielle Smith's pipeline push at premier's meeting gets support from Carney Ford had said heading into a meeting between premiers and Prime Minister Mark Carney that he was confident Eby and Carney would 'work things out' regarding a second pipeline. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Eby was speaking Tuesday from Osaka, Japan, on a 10-day trade mission in Asia, and deputy premier Niki Sharma represented B.C. at the meeting of premiers in Saskatoon.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store