The Guardian (Charlottetown)

At a glance

- Dave Pizio, mayor of the Rural Municipali­ty of Greenmount-Montrose, says the new MGA “has created a new bureaucrac­y level that is financiall­y crippling small communitie­s for no return of the investment other than additional administra­tive services.”

Dave Pizio is not putting much stock into his new title of mayor of the Rural Municipali­ty of Greenmount-Montrose.

He says chairman of the Greenmont-Montrose Community Improvemen­t Committee (CIC) suited him just fine.

The title change came about as a result of Prince Edward Island’s new Municipal Government Act, which took effect just before Christmas. That new act is something Pizio, on behalf of six small municipali­ties in West Prince, had vehemently opposed.

“As far as I’m concerned, this was a backdoor method to push for amalgamati­on without being, supposedly, the bad person,” he said, suggesting the new provisions will result in new costs being passed on to residents of small municipali­ties without residents seeing any benefits.

One of the first orders of business is to draft a council and committee remunerati­on bylaw. Pizio notes his council has always operated on a volunteer basis, and the administra­tor was paid a $300 annual honorarium.

The community of 254 residents must also prepare for an all-day municipal election next fall, replacing the traditiona­l election meeting.

They will be required to have at least six meetings a year.

“You know how many meetings we’ve had a year? One,” said Pizio, “unless it is an election year and then we have two.”

Going forward, there will be a need for an audit, but for the coming year a review engagement will suffice. Pizio doesn’t know what that will cost but pointed out it cost Greenmount-Montrose nothing to submit its annual budget previously.

But Pizio vows the P.E.I.’s new Municipal Government Act replaces the former Municipali­ties Act, Charlottet­own Area Municipali­ties Act and City of Summerside Act. Key areas of change relate to: t OFX TUSVDUVSF BOE TFSWJDF SFRVJSFNFO­UT t IPX FMFDUJPOT BSF IFME

municipali­ty he chairs will abide by the new legislatio­n for as long as it is a municipali­ty.

That timeline is up for discussion.

“Let’s be realistic here. I am not going to go to a resident and say, ‘I’m going to double or triple your municipal taxes, strictly for administra­tive purposes.’ I cannot sell that to people. I am not going to.”

He insists the MGA “has created a new bureaucrac­y level that is financiall­y crippling small communitie­s for no return of the investment other than additional t DPVODJM DPNQPTJUJP­O BOE DPOEVDU t BENJOJTUSB­UJWF FYQFDUBUJP­OT t BDDFTTJOH NVOJDJQBM JOGPSNBUJP­O BOE QSJWBDZ QSPtection t BSFBT PG NVOJDJQBM KVSJTEJDUJ­PO t QPXFST PG UIF NJOJTUFS SFTQPOTJCM­F t öOBODJBM NBUUFST

administra­tive services.”

On behalf of Greenmount­Montrose, Tignish Shore, Miminegash, St. Louis, St. Felix and Northport, Pizio has held public informatio­n sessions and appeared before a legislativ­e standing committee to outline concerns about the impact the MGA would have on small municipali­ties.

Bruce MacDougall, president of the Federation of P.E.I. Municipali­ties, welcomes the new act pointing out the basis of the one it replaces was drafted in the 1800s.

“This MGA, there’s a lot of

change in it. It’s an MGA for today,” said MacDougall. “We’ve come ahead a long ways.”

But MacDougall concedes the MGA is probably not so much geared towards smaller municipali­ties.

“The fact that there are 73 municipali­ties still in this province is something we have to get over because it is not really functional,” he maintained. “There has to be regionaliz­ation of some kind — coming together, sharing of services.”

“How is it we’re not viable now?” Pizio asks.

He’s not buying that annexation or amalgamati­on will make them viable.

Of the 59 former CICs, now known as Rural Municipali­ties, only 28 are members of the FPEIM.

None of the six communitie­s on whose behalf Pizio speaks concerning the MGA are members of the federation.

While hopeful that the act can be amended, Pizio draws little comfort from Communitie­s, Land and Environmen­t Minister Robert Mitchell’s assurance that certain sections of the act can be relaxed.

“My statement to that is, ‘If you, as a minister, are stating right now that you would relax certain rules and regulation­s, why are they in there? You’re not going to be the minister forever, and then the next one that comes in, because it’s there, that is law, and that is the end of it.’”

 ?? ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER ??
ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada