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New Westminster to remove U.S. flag from Queen's Park Arena
New Westminster to remove U.S. flag from Queen's Park Arena

CTV News

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • CTV News

New Westminster to remove U.S. flag from Queen's Park Arena

The U.S. flag will soon be removed from Queen's Park Arena in New Westminster. The American flag has hung inside New Westminster's Queen's Park Arena for decades. It is a permanent fixture that sits alongside historic championship banners from glory days past, and a vintage scoreboard that, this week, New Westminster city council has voted to take it down. The decision came after a councillor was put off by a moment during the anthems at a recent youth hockey tournament. 'It just struck me as almost inappropriate that the kids were having to look up [during the anthem] when their country is being told it's a 51st state,' city councillor Daniel Fontaine told CTV News on Tuesday outside the arena. 'It isn't even a real country and the kids are singing O Canada, and they're singing it to an American flag, and I just thought, the timing has come for us to remove a very old tradition.' The flag will be replaced by a City of New Westminster flag. Fontaine notes American teams rarely come to the civic arena these days, and a U.S. flag could be used on a temporary basis when needed. 'For me, it was more about our arena, our community, our civic facility, than it was necessarily about what other facilities are doing,' Fontaine said. 'If they choose to keep an American flag up, I'm not here to judge them.' As for when the flag is coming down, no exact date has been set as of yet. Staff will remove it quietly in the coming weeks in what Fontaine describes as a 'Canadian way,' with little fanfare.

Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more B.C. oversight of municipal spending
Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more B.C. oversight of municipal spending

CTV News

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • CTV News

Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more B.C. oversight of municipal spending

Richmond councillor and former B.C. MLA Kash Heed in a file photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck VICTORIA — Four Metro Vancouver area councillors have launched a petition asking the British Columbia government for closer oversight of municipal spending in the province, amid a police investigation into alleged misuse of a city hall gift card program. Richmond's Kash Heed, Daniel Fontaine and Paul Minhas from New Westminster and Burnaby's Richard Lee say in an open letter to Premier David Eby that the province needs to either reinstate a specific office to oversee municipal spending or expand the auditor general's mandate to cover it. The councillors cite media reports that hundreds of thousands of dollars were spent on gift cards in Richmond, B.C., with little oversight, as well as multiple instances of 'questionable expenditures' at the Metro Vancouver Regional District. Richmond RCMP says its serious crime section has opened an investigation into the gift card case reported by Global News, which says Richmond spent more than $400,000 on the cards in three years. The premier's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter. The councillors have also launched an online petition on the issue, asking for public comment on what they would like to see from the province in terms of municipal spending oversight. 'Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident,' the letter says about the Richmond gift card case. 'Over the past year, Metro Vancouver has also faced public scrutiny over questionable expenditures, including lavish business-class travel, unnecessary sponsorships, and other spending that appears disconnected from the priorities of local taxpayers.' The letter also criticizes cost overruns and delays at the North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant as another example of the need for provincial oversight of municipal spending. 'These examples reflect a broader systemic issue: the absence of consistent, independent financial oversight at the municipal and regional levels,' the letter says. This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 20, 2025.

Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more provincial oversight of municipal spending
Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more provincial oversight of municipal spending

CBC

time20-05-2025

  • Politics
  • CBC

Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more provincial oversight of municipal spending

Four city councillors in the Metro Vancouver area have launched a petition asking the B.C. government for closer oversight of municipal spending in the province, amid a police investigation into alleged misuse of a city hall gift card program. Richmond's Kash Heed, New Westminster's Daniel Fontaine and Paul Minhas, and Burnaby's Richard Lee say in an open letter to Premier David Eby that the province needs to either reinstate a specific office to oversee municipal spending or expand the auditor general's mandate to cover it. The councillors cite media reports that hundreds of thousands of dollars were spent on gift cards in Richmond, B.C., with little oversight, as well as multiple instances of "questionable expenditures" at the Metro Vancouver Regional District. Richmond RCMP says its serious crimes section has opened an investigation into the gift card case reported by Global News, which says Richmond spent more than $400,000 on the cards in three years. The premier's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter. The councillors have also launched an online petition on the issue, asking for public comment on what they would like to see from the province in terms of municipal spending oversight. "Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident," the letter says about the Richmond gift card case. "Over the past year, Metro Vancouver has also faced public scrutiny over questionable expenditures, including lavish business-class travel, unnecessary sponsorships, and other spending that appears disconnected from the priorities of local taxpayers." The letter also criticizes cost overruns and delays at the North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant as another example of the need for provincial oversight of municipal spending.

Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more B.C. oversight of municipal spending
Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more B.C. oversight of municipal spending

CTV News

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • CTV News

Metro Vancouver area councillors urge more B.C. oversight of municipal spending

Richmond councillor and former B.C. MLA Kash Heed in a file photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck VICTORIA — Four Metro Vancouver area councillors have launched a petition asking the British Columbia government for closer oversight of municipal spending in the province, amid a police investigation into alleged misuse of a city hall gift card program. Richmond's Kash Heed, Daniel Fontaine and Paul Minhas from New Westminster and Burnaby's Richard Lee say in an open letter to Premier David Eby that the province needs to either reinstate a specific office to oversee municipal spending or expand the auditor general's mandate to cover it. The councillors cite media reports that hundreds of thousands of dollars were spent on gift cards in Richmond, B.C., with little oversight, as well as multiple instances of 'questionable expenditures' at the Metro Vancouver Regional District. Richmond RCMP says its serious crime section has opened an investigation into the gift card case reported by Global News, which says Richmond spent more than $400,000 on the cards in three years. The premier's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter. The councillors have also launched an online petition on the issue, asking for public comment on what they would like to see from the province in terms of municipal spending oversight. 'Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident,' the letter says about the Richmond gift card case. 'Over the past year, Metro Vancouver has also faced public scrutiny over questionable expenditures, including lavish business-class travel, unnecessary sponsorships, and other spending that appears disconnected from the priorities of local taxpayers.' The letter also criticizes cost overruns and delays at the North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant as another example of the need for provincial oversight of municipal spending. 'These examples reflect a broader systemic issue: the absence of consistent, independent financial oversight at the municipal and regional levels,' the letter says. This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 20, 2025.

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