The Daily Courier

West Kelowna report card

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Dear Editor: Evaluating the present mayor and council of West Kelowna, all the missed opportunit­ies and poor decisions, far out weight the good decisions and running of the day-to-day business of the city.

What do the majority of resident of the city want from the council?

1. Clean, safe drinking water — years away for the Rose Valley water treatment plant.

2. Proper management of storm water — surface water flooding in many districts as developmen­ts do not have adequate drainage as we cover more and more of the ground.

3. Manage wildfire risks and threats. No forestry management of timber cutting to prevent wildfires approachin­g the city, no equipped early response team specific to wildfires.

4. Top quality police force. We are short four to eight full-time RCMP members, we have very few traffic laws and speed enforcemen­t.

5. Low tax rates. Rates increase far faster than inflation, developmen­t charges are treated as non-tax items and spent as fast as they are collected on pet projects, not on needed urgent community-wide infrastruc­ture.

6. Careful budgeting and spending. Budgets are increased by percentage­s whether the funds are needed or not. Staff increases of seven members last year far exceeded the increase in population. Why not zero-based budgets rather than last year’s amount plus 4 to 10 percent increases?

7. Secure electricit­y supply. Mayor Doug Findlater’s personal reason to run for council was to get this done. Premier John Horgan just delayed it to 2025 or beyond; clearly the province is not listening to our mayor.

8. Safe, well-maintained roads. Most roads are at a rural standard, open storm water ditches, and many have recurring potholes and broken edges due to narrow paving and no turn space at corners.

9. Safe sidewalks and bike paths. These should be in places frequently used like Webber Road, Brown Road, Butt Road, Thacker Drive, Anders Road, Old Okanagan Highway and Shannon Lake Road just to name a few examples.

10. Good parks for community recreation for everyone. We get a new $4 million soccer dome over a water main rather than a new soccer pitch and a cheaper $1.5 million dome over an easy site to service and commute to.

11. Steady investment in infrastruc­ture moving from rural to urban communitie­s-We get an outrageous $9 million spent on 1.3 kms of poorly planned (power poles in sidewalks, no emergency pullouts, duel sidewalks and bike paths for minimum users) rather than improvemen­ts in every community where walkers, and bikes frequent Doug Waines West Kelowna

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