Vancouver Sun

Bizarre end to Surrey’s budgetary process

- DAVID CARRIGG dcarrigg@postmedia.com twitter.com/davidcarri­gg

Surrey’s controvers­ial 2020 fiveyear financial plan was passed in a bizarre manner Monday night after Mayor Doug McCallum ruled opposition councillor­s would not be able to speak due to “safety conditions.”

Following that ruling and despite a vocal protest from rival Coun. Steven Pettigrew, McCallum quickly read out the number of each of the 33 bylaws related to the plan, his four loyal councillor­s supported them and the meeting was recessed.

Before the vote, McCallum and councillor­s Doug Elford, Laurie Guerra, Mandeep Nagra and Allison Patton had walked out of chambers after being heckled by some of the hundreds of people gathered, many of whom had earlier been outside protesting. During this time, there were also people in the crowd shouting out in favour of McCallum and his Surrey police force plan.

The decision by council to spend $129 million to help create the municipal police force, while not funding more firefighte­rs or building additional community resources for the growing community were at the heart of Monday’s protest, organized by former councillor Mike Starchuk.

The $129 million now approved for the police force is comprised of $45.2 million in 2020, then $84.4 million for additional policing costs spread over five years.

Once the police force is operating in 2021, it is expected to cost around $205 million a year. Surrey will spend $162 million on the RCMP in 2019. Surrey’s total budget for 2020 will be $1.3 billion.

Just before walking out the first time, Guerra said in November 2018 council had been unanimous in its support for a municipal police force. She said Surrey, with a population of 550,000, was the only city in Canada with more than 300,000 people that did not have its own police force. The Safe Surrey Coalition, from which three sitting councillor­s have now defected, campaigned on the idea.

Now approved, the budget will see a 2.9 per cent hike in property tax and a big increase in user fees: energy-related fees from constructi­on are expected to go from $2.8 million in 2020 to $8.6 million in 2025, while water rates will rise 2.9 per cent. Some garbage fees will also rise. According to the plan, the city will lean more heavily on developers with Community Amenity Contributi­ons expected to be a “key factor in providing a balanced capital budget.”

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