The Daily Courier

Amalgamati­on has worked elsewhere

- Editor: David Perron, West Kelowna

Even though I live in West Kelowna, I am spending more time driving to Kelowna to buy something. Every couple of months another store closes in West Kelowna and/or on Westbank First Nation land. There is no shortage of gas bars opening.

I was talking to a local business owner who was complainin­g about all the different municipal rules, regulation­s to opening/expanding a business in the Okanagan Valley. Also how some municipali­ties were flexible and others as rigid as could be.

Under our constituti­on, municipali­ties can be created, amalgamate­d, or disbanded by the provincial government which controls them.

I have lived in two other provinces that decided to amalgamate municipali­ties. I lived in Nepean, a city with a population of 40,000. It was similar to West Kelowna where most of the people lived in Nepean, but worked in Ottawa.

In 2001, the provincial government amalgamate­d the regional district, Ottawa, the surroundin­g Àve cities and four townships into the City of Ottawa. It is now the fourth largest city in Canada and therefore receives a lot of attention from the provincial government.

The city uses a ward system and therefore you vote for the councillor in your area/ward.

Ottawa has a total of 23 councillor­s compared to each city/town/district in the Okanagan which has a minimum council size of seven.

I was the president of a community associatio­n before and after the amalgamati­on and my level of access to city staff and politician­s increased after the amalgamati­on.

Nepean had a Ànancial motto of pay as you go, save up the money rather than borrow and therefore had a sizable reserve.

Fifty per cent of that reserve was transferre­d to the new City of Ottawa and the other half was given back to the taxpayers.

The former city halls were turned into client centres, libraries and community halls.

Any service centre can be used to obtain a permit/licence within the 2,500 square kilometre City boundary. Okanagan Lake is 350 square km.

Maybe it's time for our provincial government to contemplat­e this idea.

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