The Hamilton Spectator

Delegates have their say on city’s budget

Residents touched on issues including living wage, the police budget and community engagement

- SEBASTIAN BRON Sebastian Bron is a Hamilton-based reporter at The Spectator. Reach him via email: sbron@thespec.com

Brock Bodo learned to swim at the Valley Park Community Centre. He won his first recreation­al hockey game at the Mohawk 4 Pad Arena. He was taught how to read and write at Janet Lee Elementary School.

“I love Hamilton,” Bodo, a lifelong Ward 9 resident, told councillor­s Monday. “But the debt I have really makes me scared that I’m not going to be able to live in this city after I graduate.”

The 19-year-old was one of several young speakers who urged council to give a contingent of city workers — particular­ly summer students — a living wage of $16.45 per hour during a budget feedback session.

Councillor­s voted not to increase the $14-an-hour minimum wage pay of non-union, part-time casual employees and non-union full-time summer students last March, arguing such a change would be too costly for taxpayers.

But several delegates told councillor­s another rejection of a proposed wage hike would be detrimenta­l to the city’s economic growth.

“Living wages help cultivate worker retention,” said Sharoni Mitra, a social scientist and president of CUPE 3906, which represents more than 3,000 academic workers at McMaster University. “(This), of course, is valuable and a positive benefit towards the sustainabi­lity of Hamilton employers and businesses.”

Aiden McIlvaney, 18, told councillor­s the thought of incurring

thousands of dollars in student debt — and without the option of a well-paid, city job to help pay that off — keeps him up at night.

“It puts people like myself off from going to post-secondary school,” he said. “Just because students are students, doesn’t mean they should be paid less than workers who aren’t students.”

More than 40 delegates were on hand to address council during Monday’s virtual general issues committee.

The majority expressed support for the Just Recovery for Hamilton policy, an extensive document which boasts more than 150 recommenda­tions for how the city can bounce back from the pandemic.

The policy, spearheade­d by 11 community organizati­ons, is spread over nine themes like

affordable housing, disability and mobility justice, investing in women and tackling systemic racism, among others.

“A just recovery for Hamilton must focus on the communitie­s in the city that are experienci­ng the pandemic’s disproport­ionate negative effects,” said Kojo Damptey, executive director of the Hamilton Centre for Civic Inclusion.

One recommenda­tion Damptey pointed councillor­s to is a restructur­ing of the board of public health to include members who are women, people with disabiliti­es, Indigenous peoples, and those who are from low-income and racialized

communitie­s.

Council also heard from dozens of delegates who urged officials to reduce Hamilton police’s $171-million budget by 20 per cent or about $34 million.

“I am frustrated to see the continued overfundin­g of the police while much-needed community services and organizati­ons are underfunde­d,” said resident Jamie Stuckless.

Stuckless further implored council to review its community engagement process around the annual budget.

“We have only this one day where community members can make delegation­s to council,” she said, adding council should provide multiple ways for the public to chime in on budget deliberati­ons. “These engagement­s could occur as early as the spring or summer … allowing feedback early in the budget process.”

“Living wages help cultivate worker retention.” SHARONI MITRA

 ??  ?? Sharoni Mitra, social scientist
Brock Bodo, student
Sharoni Mitra, social scientist Brock Bodo, student
 ??  ?? Anthony Marco, Hamilton and District Labour Council
Anthony Marco, Hamilton and District Labour Council
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Karl Andrus, Hamilton Community Benefits Network
Karl Andrus, Hamilton Community Benefits Network
 ??  ?? Tom Cooper, Roundtable for Poverty Reduction
Tom Cooper, Roundtable for Poverty Reduction
 ??  ?? Maanvi Dhillon from McMaster Students’ Union
Maanvi Dhillon from McMaster Students’ Union
 ??  ?? Ward 1 Coun. Maureen Wilson
Ward 1 Coun. Maureen Wilson
 ??  ?? Aiden McIlvaney, student
Aiden McIlvaney, student

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