Penticton Herald

Directors not accountabl­e

-

Dear Editor: Re: Conflict at RDOS over ‘bailouts,” Herald, A1, July 7

Bailouts and slush funds for rural directors combined with a lack of spine seem to be the biggest problem at the RDOS.

Coun. Helena Konanz asked for an accounting on behalf of Penticton citizens, while Mayor Andrew Jakubeit drew attention to the fact that no one holds the rural directors to account. (You got that right; most of all their own residents.)

The people of Penticton work hard to hold their local elected officials to account and I would venture to speculate Summerland and Osoyoos residents do a pretty good job of making sure their elected officials are accountabl­e not only for the money they spend but the actions they take on behalf of the citizens they are supposed to represent. And the taxpayers of these municipali­ties benefit from this oversight.

Those three cities carry 29 of the 54 eligible votes cast at the RDOS. Enough to form a majority vote to stop the rural spendthrif­ts in their tracks. Even though the rural director’s bail out and slush fund comes directly out of the rural region funds; Penticton; Summerland and Osoyoos have a responsibi­lity towards their taxpayers’ and they should have used this leverage to stop this unaccounta­ble waste in its tracks. Penticton pays 39 per cent of the budget; Summerland 14 per cent; Osoyoos eight percent. That is 61 percent of the budget.

It seems to me that the rest of the region is asleep. The fawning comments reported by directors in Naramata and Area D (Kaleden; Heritage Hill; OK Falls etc.) particular­ly speak very clearly: ‘Milk me, I am yours for the taking; you can have it all just don’t make me uncomforta­ble by asking.’

That is not taxpayers’ out there. More likely sheep or with all that milk flowing, cows. The rural regions probably deserve what they get.

Speaking now of the satellite communitie­s of Penticton: This is a good a reason as any why they are too cheap to support the recreation­al needs of their residents and instead live off the backs of Penticton taxpayers. They are too lazy to control the spendthrif­t ways of their directors and too spineless to stand up for their right to responsibl­e and accountabl­e government.

Keep your rural directors happy. Roll over in your beds give a big yawn and go back to sleep. Life is good on the public purse. Elvena Slump

Penticton

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada