The Province

Metro area could see massive turnover of mayors

- JENNIFER SALTMAN jensaltman@postmedia.com twitter.com/jensaltman

At least half of Metro Vancouver’s 21 mayoral seats could be vacant going into this fall’s municipal election, according to many of the region’s mayors.

“It’s probably going to be one of the largest turnovers of mayors this region has ever seen,” said New Westminste­r Mayor Jonathan Coté. “That’ll be a really interestin­g dynamic.”

With eight months to go before the Oct. 20 election — and just under seven before the nomination period begins — six Metro Vancouver mayors have already announced that they will step down or indicated previously that this is their final term: Gregor Robertson (Vancouver), Greg Moore (Port Coquitlam),

Ted Schaffer (City of Langley), Nicole Read (Maple Ridge), Wayne Baldwin (White Rock) and Lois Jackson (Delta).

Many more mayo rs, from Co quit lam to the District of North Vancouver, are on the fence while some have confirmed their intentions.

Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan, who described himself as “one of the fools that keeps coming back again, and again, and again,” said he’ll be running for a sixth term in October.

He says he has some big issues he’d like to see through — including the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion, to which the city is opposed — and he’s comfortabl­e in the position.

Corrigan is one of the region’s longest serving mayors and he estimates, based on the conversati­ons he’s had, that half of the region’s mayors won’t be running for re-election.

“Come October I think we’ll see more change than we’ve seen in a lot of years,” he said. “There’s going to be a kind of a leadership deficit that’s going to go on while some new mayors get their bearings.”

Over the past 30 years of elections, there have only been two occasions where the number of Metro Vancouver areas mayors leaving has come close to the number of mayors who have already announced for 2018.

In 1987, there were six mayoral seats up for grabs in Langley Township, Surrey, Maple Ridge, Pitt Meadows, Delta and Lions Bay. Technicall­y, a seventh seat was available in Anmore, which held its first municipal election that year. Five mayors decided not to run in 1993 and 2011.

“This sounds unpreceden­ted, to have that many at the same time,” said Gordon Price, a fellow at the Simon Fraser University Centre for Dialogue and a former Vancouver city councillor. “I wouldn’t be surprised if it would be very tough to find any time you’d have 50 per cent turnover, maybe more — so there’s something going down.”

There is a multitude of reasons why a mayor would decide against running for another term.

“I think every mayor will have their individual and very personal reasons,” said Coté, who will run for a second term in October.

Some have been in politics for a long time and are looking for a change. “It’s a busy, busy job and I think after people have done it for a period of time they often get burned out and they look for a change,” Corrigan said.

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP ?? Port Coquitlam mayor Greg Moore, left, and Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson are stepping down.
ARLEN REDEKOP Port Coquitlam mayor Greg Moore, left, and Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson are stepping down.

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