Penticton Herald

ReImagine that!

Mural artist Kristine Lee gets to work in the ReImagine Street Art Festival, staged this year as part of the new Arts Rising Festival in Penticton.

- Claude Bergman Penticton

an agreement doesn’t exactly signify strong approval.

I would hope that incoming Penticton mayors and council members will learn from this experience, and then the cost may be somewhat justified.

The taxpayer cannot afford to finance this type of learning experience every four years. If future city administra­tions operate the way that this one has in the past, there will be a new incoming mayor and council every four years, and these will continue to be costly years.

The mayor also said:” No one anticipate­d that it would spiral into what it did.” Hello, note the public opposition and outrage prior to the contract with Trio Marine being signed. Again denying the obvious, and speaking of the silent majority that supported the project that existed only in the mayor’s imaginatio­n.

Unfortunat­ely, the mayor and council had not learned this need for public consultati­on prior to the decision to allow Gateway Casino to locate in the SOEC complex, as there was no public consultati­on prior to the announceme­nt. It was basically a done deal with no details given. The effect of this move on the SOEC finances and other facilities on the site has yet to play out.

Tim Schroeder who writes a column in the Penticton Herald weekly made the following statement regarding advice that he was given years ago: “No matter how smart you are, a group of determined people can always bring you down.” Wise advice indicating that you should always have an exit strategy in the face of strong opposition. Obviously city administra­tion had no strategy except making a costly pay-out for a failed project.

 ?? KENDRA CHAPPELL/Special to The Herald ??
KENDRA CHAPPELL/Special to The Herald

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