Posts Tagged ‘Shirley Bond’

It’s time for Metro Vancouver mayors to set their sights on Gordon Campbell

Posted by Jonathan Ross

Premier Gordon Campbell has guaranteed that construction for the Evergreen Line will start in the spring of 2011. It is a promise, however, that is made on the backs of the municipalities, not his own government.

Watching the Translink Mayors’ Council  go back and forth with regards to Translink’s demands for funding is becoming exhausting, and is most definitely frustrating.

It is time to take the gloves off, and go bare knuckle with the ailing Premier (you know, the one who has a 12 per cent approval rating), because his empty rhetoric with regards to transportation funding and the municipalities is wearing really thin.

Let’s take a quick look back at the past month in regards to the ever evolving positions of this group.

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Meggs is right – Translink is just a scapegoat

Posted by Jonathan Ross

The business "drive out the tax" voices are going after the wrong target in Translink.

I can understand Councillor Geoff Meggs’ frustration with the “Drive Out the Tax” campaign, as it does seem to let the province entirely off the hook from the equation that is causing the coalition members such heartache.

It is the province that needs to take a hard look at itself and the burdens unfairly being spread around to sources that cannot possibly pony up enough to bridge these shortfalls.

As I have mentioned in a previous post, I feel that Translink held the Mayor’s Council at Metro Vancouver for a $130 million ransom back in October – give us more cash, or your transit service levels go back to 1990 levels.  This of course was caused by the complete lack of interest in taking responsibility for public transit by the Gordon Campbell administration:

“Cities had been poised to consider a bigger funding increase, stumping up $275 million in large part by charging an annual vehicle levy, provided the province delivers other sources, such as road pricing, to add another $175 million.

That’s off the table because Victoria balked and [Shirley] Bond on Monday continued to argue that local cities can raise more for TransLink from property taxes – an option the mayors reject.”

I do agree that the downtown businesses most definitely played their cards wrong by not protesting as loudly as possible when the province eliminated Translink’s ability to levy  the parking stall tax.  They continue to miss the buck with this campaign, largely out of fear of pissing off the Premier.

So as a result, an organization that is cash-starved gets the brunt of the attack.  Am I suggesting that Translink and the way it is administered can’t be dramatically improved?  Absolutely not.

But realistically, like Meggs suggests, a couple of fired executives and internal cutbacks are not going to solve the chronic crisis of underfunding that Translink currently faces.  We are talking hundreds of millions – even billions – of dollars that need to be kicked in before any 10-year transportation dream can be properly contemplated within Metro Vancouver.

Once again, these kinds of funding gaps are far too massive to expect homeowners, businesses and municipalities to make up.

Ultimately, whatever “restructuring” and “mandate shifting” that I am predicting will occur with Translink over the coming years, the burden of failure will fall squarely on the shoulders of the Premier – an individual that unfortunately continues to fall through the cracks when it comes to British Columbia’s business community.

Random quick thoughts

Posted by Jonathan Ross

 KFC 'colonel' dupes UN security  Steven Edwards, Canwest News Service  Published: Monday, October 26, 2009 More On This Story      *        Steven Edwards: Sneaking into the UN is finger-lickin' easy     *        Shockvertising: Subtle is out as companies struggle to be noticed  Related Topics      *        Ali Treki     *        Harland Sanders     *        International Relations     *        Political Policy     *        United Nations  Powered by Inform Story Tools      *        - + Change font size     *        Comment on this story     *        Print this story     *        E-Mail this story  Share This Story      *        Facebook     *        Digg     *        LinkedIn     *        More  Story tools presented by  The KFC Colonel (Robert Thompson) meets with the President of the United Nations General Assembly, H.E. Dr. Ali A. Treki of Libya in New York, October 22, 2009 following a security breach that the world body said Monday "should not have happened." Handout The KFC Colonel (Robert Thompson) meets with the President of the United Nations General Assembly, H.E. Dr. Ali A. Treki of Libya  Read more: http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=2147862#ixzz0VAMXycJg The New Financial Post Stock Market Challenge starts in October. You could WIN your share of $60,000 in prizing. Register NOW

The Colonel meets UN General Assembly president, Dr. Ali A. Treki of Libya.

  • This is clearly as a result of the fact that the authors never offered a concrete plan with targets that wasn’t an exercise in personal brand building for their “fearless” former leader.  Energy use, water consumption, waste management, food production and air quality were all ignored completely by the past majority council, and now the City of Vancouver finally has a plan.
  • This warning by Victoria Chief of Police Jamie Graham shows how out of step lone NPA Councillor Suzanne Anton is with her ongoing arguments that mental health is a provincial responsibility.  She voted against the idea of a mental health advocate at the civic level, and continues to believe that the city has no place in wading into the realm of mental health support.  It is time for Anton to pull her head out of the sand and start to recognize that inaction by one level of government (the feds) is no justification for inaction by another.
  • I am not sure why the Mayors blinked in their staredown with the province over Translink funding, but they should have a new strategy based on the legitimacy they have now achieved by ponying up more money.  Rumour is that Transportation Minister Shirley Bond is in the preliminary stages of planning a sit-down with Translink to ensure long-term sustainable funding for their 10-year regional transportation plan.  The Mayors should wage a very public campaign to push the province towards this so that if and when this provincial commitment happens, these civic leaders can at least lay claim to some of the credit.

Trankslink and the province hold Mayors to ransom

Posted by Jonathan Ross

Metor Vancouver face a tough decision tomorrow - one that seems inevitable in its result, however.

Metor Vancouver face a tough decision tomorrow - one that seems inevitable in its result, however.

In spite of  the fact that the Mayor’s Council at Metro Vancouver is poised to okay an extra $130 million for Translink tomorrow, I find it disturbing how municipalities are being held hostage with threats of 40 per cent drops in transit  that would resemble levels of service from the 1970s.

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Wed Feb 08, 2012

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FACT OF THE DAY

In 2010, Vancouver had fewer than half the number of murders than it had in 2009.  There were nine homicides within Vancouver’s city limits, down from 19 killings the previous year.

Quote OF THE DAY

“Perhaps it was my silk dress or the new perfume I’ve been wearing lately. When I asked Suzanne Anton what her New Year’s resolution was, she replied, “To kiss a pretty girl!” and pecked me on the cheek.”  – Writer Emily Barca describing her encounter with the lone NPA City Councillor on New Year’s Eve.

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