Times Colonist

Sayward calls on province to help settle council difference­s

- CARLA WILSON cjwilson@timescolon­ist.com

The Village of Sayward is calling on the province to send in advisers to help settle ongoing difference­s around the council table, as it mulls its future as a municipali­ty.

Council voted unanimousl­y Tuesday in favour of a motion from Mayor Mark Baker to turn to Ministry of Municipal Affairs advisers and support.

The motion came out of discussion­s with the ministry, said Baker, noting there is a divide on the five-member council. “I’m positive that it is going to be beneficial to us,” he said. “We need some help.”

A ministry spokespers­on said in a statement Wednesday that Sayward has not formally reached out, but “the ministry is here to help local government­s should they need advice or support about any matters that may be affecting a council’s ability to move forward. Our door is always open.”

In extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, the ministry can appoint a temporary adviser to help council work with staff to improve communicat­ions, clarify roles and facilitate effective decision-making, the spokespers­on said.

Advisers are independen­t contractor­s who will work with a council and then make a final report with recommenda­tions to help with future decisionma­king.

Sayward is the latest small municipali­ty in B.C. struggling with ongoing internal divisions. Tahsis council is facing a byelection this spring after two of its five council members resigned, one due to difference­s with fellow council members. Harrison Hot Springs and Lions Bay called for help from the province last year.

With a population estimated at 350, Sayward is between Campbell River and Port McNeill on the eastern side of Vancouver Island. The forestry-based community is in a picturesqu­e location at the head of Kelsey Bay with a federal and small craft harbour.

Friction among council members and between council and the public is ongoing. The community has seen turnover among its mayors and chief administra­tive officers. Each role has changed hands several times in the past several years.

Baker said municipal finances and covering costs in a community with a small tax base are among local issues being contested.

Meetings have seen council members and the public yelling at each other, said Coun. Scott Burchett, who wants the ministry to investigat­e the administra­tive functionin­g and performanc­e of the village.

The conflict has boiled over on social media.

Burchett said he is frustrated by his inability to obtain informatio­n about budget overruns, adding he has submitted a formal freedom of informatio­n request.

He said he is not given access to resources needed to do his job. “That’s a huge red flag.”

The municipal hall has also been closed for two months due to staffing issues that he cannot discuss, Burchett said.

Alex Turner, who lives in an adjacent valley, has suggested that Sayward hold an informatio­nal workshop to investigat­e the idea of dissolving the municipali­ty and joining the Strathcona Regional District. That would mean the community would no longer have a mayor and council, and would instead by represente­d by an area director.

Turner said he’s seeing democratic processes “deteriorat­ing right across the whole Western world.” At the local level, councils are having real difficulti­es functionin­g and getting along, he said, adding Sayward’s council “is not able to function as a team.”

Baker said the subject will be discussed at an upcoming committee of the whole meeting, but he opposes dissolving the municipali­ty, saying the village boundaries would still be in place and residents would be responsibl­e for paying the costs of infrastruc­ture such as water and sewer.

Also, being a small municipali­ty means Sayward receives federal and provincial grants to offset many local costs.

The idea of dissolving the municipali­ty previously came up about four or five years ago, Baker said.

Under the Local Government Act, changes to a local governance structure, such as incorporat­ion or disincorpo­ration, require community input, according to the Ministry of Municipal Affairs.

The province can revoke the letters patent of a municipali­ty only where a majority of electors have requested its dissolutio­n in writing, a spokespers­on said.

Existing municipal dissolutio­n legislatio­n pre-dates the creation of regional districts and does not contemplat­e the transfer of service or governance arrangemen­ts to a regional district, he said.

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