Times Colonist

How Harper could change Saanich council

Atwell might have an ally in new councillor, who is pushing for amalgamati­on

- KATIE DeROSA kderosa@timescolon­ist.com

Karen Harper’s election to Saanich council could change its entire dynamic, possibly giving Mayor Richard Atwell another ally on a council that’s often sharply divided.

Harper will be sworn in on Monday, replacing veteran councillor Vic Derman, who died in March at age 72.

She was endorsed by Atwell, which she said might have helped her win the Sept. 23 byelection with 2,340 votes. In 2013, the two worked together on Amalgamati­on Yes, which promotes amalgamati­on of Greater Victoria’s 13 municipali­ties.

Harper said time will tell whether that connection means Atwell will have another ally on a council, where he’s often a minority voice.

An endorsemen­t from Atwell appears on Harper’s website. “Karen Harper is a highly qualified candidate for Saanich council,” it says.

“She also brings a level-headed approach to decision making that involves citizens.

“Her track record of fiscal successes from her public sector work experience would be a valuable asset on Saanich council.”

Harper said she is open to having alliances.

“I don’t feel that I’m bound to say ‘That’s so-and-so’s idea, so I can’t support it,’ ” she said.

“I think that’s part of the tension we’ve seen on council.”

Harper said she will step down as a director for the grassroots Amalagamat­ion Yes group, but will continue to advance her proamalgam­ation stance on council.

“We need a proper [regionwide] study that reviews the pros and cons of amalgamati­on so we can present to the public what the various options might look like,” she said.

Harper has spent the past three years attending council meetings and making a list of what she thinks needs to change.

First, she said, homeowners need relief from higher costs of living and rising property taxes. A former member of Grumpy Taxpayer$ of Greater Victoria, a budget watchdog organizati­on that pushes for fiscal restraint, Harper said the municipali­ty should conduct a review of services in order to find efficienci­es.

“I’m not saying do away with services, I’m saying do it better,” said Harper, who worked with the B.C. Pension Corp. as vice-president and chief knowledge officer before retiring.

Harper has also promised to push to rescind the controvers­ial Environmen­tal Developmen­t Permit Area (EDPA) bylaw and start over from scratch.

She was endorsed by the Saanich Citizens for a Responsibl­e EDPA, which opposes the bylaw.

It was passed in March 2012 and aims to protect sensitive ecosystems by restrictin­g what more than 2,000 property owners can do to their properties. Only five per cent of private properties in Saanich are within or partially within the Environmen­tal Developmen­t Permit Area; 52 per cent of the affected area is on public land, mostly parks.

Harper started looking into the issue when her mother found out her land was included in the permit area. She said properties were included based on a flawed mapping system.

She said she does not want to roll back environmen­tal protection­s, but to find a more scientific­ally accurate way to protect environmen­tally sensitive properties and not “someone’s lawn and shrubs.”

Saanich council has hired a consultant for an independen­t review of the bylaw. A report is to be presented to council this month.

 ??  ?? Karen Harper will be sworn in Monday to replace veteran councillor Vic Derman, who died in March.
Karen Harper will be sworn in Monday to replace veteran councillor Vic Derman, who died in March.

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