Times Colonist

Where is the economic developmen­t in Sooke?

- KATHERINE STRONGWIND A commentary by a Sooke resident and business owner.

In response to the recent article about Sooke proposing an 11% property tax hike, I am a Sooke resident who is quite concerned about the lack of investment in economic developmen­t.

The Sooke five-year financial plan outlines $10,000 in economic developmen­t under discretion­ary expenses and an economic developmen­t officer whose key function is to “stimulate local economic activity through continued implementa­tion of the Community Economic Developmen­t Strategy.”

I have no doubt that the economic developmen­t officer is working to develop business opportunit­ies in Sooke with the budget that is allocated, but she is one person. Without a budget attached, it’s only worth the paper it’s printed on.

What I’m more concerned about is the lack of investment in economic developmen­t in a community that is growing faster than we have housing and jobs.

Last fall, I quit my government job in Victoria partly because I could not justify spending an hour or more in my car each way. During this commute, I would often stop at grocery stores and gas stations along my way home — not in Sooke.

The recent provincial announceme­nt of the infrastruc­ture grant for the Little River multi-use trail was welcome news but does little to solve the increasing road blockages and emissions.

Imagine if the province invested that money in our business community where local jobs are created and expanded. Tourism businesses are still recovering from the pandemic – $500,000 would go a long way to boost these existing businesses and provide start-up money for very much needed new visitor experience­s in Sooke.

Geographic­ally, we are distanced enough from Victoria to be a destinatio­n, particular­ly if there is an alignment with Shirley, T-Sou-ke Nation, Pacheedaht Nation, Jordan River, Port Renfrew and beyond.

There must be alternativ­e, sustainabl­e transporta­tion to and from the west coast of the Island not only for tourism, but in the case of reducing emissions and congestion, and with the increasing chance of shutdown due to climate disasters.

There are no quick answers to solving the out-of-control Highway 14 congestion, but, with imaginatio­n, there are immediate initiative­s that would help solve the snarls on the road and keep people in Sooke.

We need a satellite campus for post-secondary students so they can live at home.

A business hub and commercial office building where workers could telecommut­e from and access office resources, tax incentives for businesses to relocate to Sooke, a more robust tourism strategy, and partnershi­ps with local First Nations must be priorities for our elected officials to develop jobs and reduce the painful traffic and emissions on the highway.

Last summer’s fire that shut the highway near Port Alberni was a stark reminder that if a highway is closed for any real length of time, goods are not getting through. Many commuters are single passengers. The park and ride lots are rarely full.

There must be a considerat­ion for carpool incentives and a ferry — at minimum, an electric passenger ferry to Songhees/ Seaspan and downtown, and for improved and reliable express transit.

Last week, there was another pileup and the highway was closed at rush hour. Fortunatel­y, everyone was OK but traffic was backed up for hours.

Emergency responders are often dispatched to the highway fender-benders during commuting times, meaning they are not available for in-town calls. Mayor Maja Tait is right that they are overstretc­hed, but not always for Sooke citizens.

As a property and home business owner, I would be more supportive of the proposed 10.53 per cent tax increase if there was a concerted effort to also increase opportunit­ies for our young people to study, work and start businesses in Sooke.

Multi-unit housing developmen­ts are being prioritize­d in Sooke, and rightly so, but with these developmen­ts must come investment­s in our growing community for economic developmen­t. If developers want to build in Sooke, they should have to contribute to an economic developmen­t budget so the economic developmen­t officer can actually implement the ambitious developmen­t strategy and build our community to keep our people at home.

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