Our recommendations in the 2022 Comox Valley local government elections

Our recommendations in the 2022 Comox Valley local government elections

Our recommendations in the 2022 Comox Valley local government elections

By

In local government elections, the official campaign period lasts a mere four weeks. For some people, that’s long enough and they can’t wait for all the signs to come down and for hopeful candidates to stop knocking on their door.

But that isn’t really much time at all for such an important event as choosing the future of your community.

But we understand that voting can be a difficult task. It takes a concerted effort to scope out which candidates will best represent your views because you don’t get a lot of help. There are too few all-candidate forums this year that allow you to assess and compare the candidates in person. That leaves local news outlets and social media as the primary distributors of helpful information.

Decafnation tried to interact with as many candidates as our resources permitted this year but we found it disheartening that some candidates refused to collaborate with us. While most candidates did respond to our questionnaires and answer questions via email, an unusual number of candidates did not.

We think that reflects a prevailing mood in this year’s local elections that turned dark and menacing after the ultra-conservative and secretive group Take Back Comox Valley published advertisements that contained intentional misinformation.

Our candidate interactions, or the lack of them, have played a crucial role in determining which candidates we recommend today.

Some observations about our recommendations.

Four years ago, we generally supported qualified younger candidates because they are the ones who will have to live with the decisions our local governments make today. We respectfully encouraged the old horses in the race that their time had passed and that it was now time to let go.

Voters had similar thoughts, electing all but four of the candidates we endorsed for the region’s 22 local government positions. We did not endorse for school district trustees.

This year, we are again supporting that youthful and progressive movement so that they may complete their four years of work charting a path for the future of the Comox Valley suited to this modern time.

For example, the candidates we’ve endorsed understand that municipal-level decisions must always improve our adaptation to climate change.

That means, among other things, creating the opportunity to move around our communities without using a car, preserving a larger tree canopy, not giving in to urban sprawl and protecting future taxpayers from the unnecessary infrastructure debt it creates and supporting every practical policy to shift away from consuming fossil fuels.

We believe the local governments you elected in 2018 have made important strides toward a better future for everyone who lives here and that they have earned the chance to continue this work for another term.

It is the responsibility of incumbents to defend their record and it is the job of challengers to show why they would do better. This year, the challengers have failed to make that case.

Decafnation realizes that some readers won’t agree with our choices. We’re okay with that. Information, not persuasion, is our objective. 

We admire and congratulate everyone who’s stood for election. It takes courage and love of community.

Finally, look for our coverage of the District 71 Board of Education election, and endorsements, later this week.

Now, here are our recommendations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ADVANCE VOTING BEGINS TODAY. READ ON FOR TIMES AND PLACES IN YOUR AREA

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WHERE AND WHEN TO VOTE

General Voting Day is Saturday, Oct. 15 for all local government positions.

Comox Valley Regional District

General Voting Day and advance voting take place at the CVRD building in Courtenay from 8 am to 8 pm.

Go to this link for General Voting Day locations in the three Electoral Areas.

Additional voting takes place on Oct. 6 from 9 am to 12 pm on Denman Island and on Oct. 6 from 2 pm to 5 pm on Hornby Island

Courtenay

Advance Voting begins on Wednesday October 5, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Native Sons Hall, and again on Wednesday October 12, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Florence Filberg Centre.

General Voting Day, Saturday, October 15, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Queneesh Elementary School, and at the Florence Filberg Centre.

Comox

Advance voting begins Wednesday, October 5 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre, and on Saturday, October 8 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and again on Monday, October 10 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and on Wednesday, October 12 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre.

General Voting Day runs from 8 am to 8 pm on Oct. 15 at the Comox Community Centre.

Cumberland

All voting in the Village of Cumberland takes place from 8 am to 8 pm at the Cumberland Cultural Centre. Advance voting takes place on Oct. 5 and Oct. 12

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This list of candidates is anything but ‘mainstream;’ why running ‘out of town’ feels icky

This list of candidates is anything but ‘mainstream;’ why running ‘out of town’ feels icky

Voters can cast ballots as early as Wednesday, Oct. 5 in the 2022 local government elections. Complete voting info below

This list of candidates is anything but ‘mainstream;’ why running ‘out of town’ feels icky

By

For the last six years, readers have known us as Decafnation.net. As of last Friday, we moved to a new Internet address, Decafnation.ca. We went from ‘net’ to ‘ca’ and we also moved our business to a local web design firm, Milan Web.

 

A VERY TELLING LIST

Stop the presses! The Comox Valley Mainstream group – we hesitate to use that word ‘group’ because we think CVM is just Dick Clancy, Murray Presley and a couple of other guys – gave us their list of endorsed candidates over the weekend.

Has your whole family been holding their collective breath and sitting on the edge of their seats with their legs and arms and fingers double crossed waiting for this announcement? No? Neither were we.

But, this list. “Toto, I’ve got the feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.”

Dick and the boys have endorsed a climate change denier (Tamara Meggitt), at least four candidates running in jurisdictions where they don’t live (Peter Gibson, Richard Hardy, Mano Theos and Phil Adams), one apparently running on a personal grudge (Richard Hardy), one taking credit on his campaign brochure (Ken Grant) for something he opposed and voted against, one person (Steve Blacklock) recently fined by Elections BC for a campaign violation and one person (Matthew Ellis) who says on his campaign page that local governments need to prepare for a global economic collapse.

According to Dick and the boys, these are the Comox Valley’s best and brightest, which tells you a lot about Dick.

But it doesn’t tell you anything about why they endorsed these particular candidates. They say nothing about why this collection of political wannbes would be better than the wannastay incumbents (Grant and Theos are incumbents). Not one word of justification for their endorsements.

Instead, Dick and the boys say, “Trust us. Don’t ask questions.”

Surprised? Surely you didn’t expect more from a bunch that won’t even reveal who they are? Dick and Murray won’t ever say why they endorsed these specific candidates because, if they did, you’d probably run for a cave in the hills.

 

EVEN THE RIGHT DROPS BRENNAN DAY

But we were curious that Dick’s boys left perennial candidate Brennan Day off their list. We thought he’d be one of their ‘Stars’ for Courtenay council, especially because Day doesn’t live in Courtenay. CVM seems to really like those carpet-baggers this year.

It’s a stretch to think Day isn’t right-wing and pro-development enough for them. He’s probably memorizing Poilievre’s speeches right now. No, it must be some other reason.

Maybe it’s because Day has gone 0-2 in his desperate desire to get elected to something and they didn’t want to back somebody who might go 0-3. Maybe it’s because Day pulled a boner move by using Courtenay and BC logos on some signs and then made himself look stupid while trying to shrug off his boo-boo.

Or, maybe it’s reverse psychology and they really do want Day to get elected, but they figured getting Dick’s nod might sour his chances, so they trotted out this lot instead.

Well, it doesn’t matter. Day won’t be on Decafnation’s list of preferred candidates either. But at least we’ll tell you why when we publish our list of endorsements this week.

 

IT’S A BAD IDEA TO ‘RUN OUT OF TOWN’

There’s something funny going on this local election year, even beyond the lies and misinformation spread by the Take Back Comox Valley conspiracy theorists.

By the way, it appears quite likely that these same anonymous people are now making, or paying some service to make negative campaign phone calls. These are not calls to support a candidate or extol her virtues. No they are telling lies to attack the candidates they don’t like, mostly incumbents.

The main lie they tell is that progressive candidates are taking money from the Dogwood Initiative, a citizen action network. But it’s not true.

Anyone can search the incumbent’s 2018 financial disclosure statements on the Internet and see exactly who gave money to each of them. You won’t find Dogwood. When this election is over, you’ll have access to the 2022 statements, too.

It’s all there in the public domain. Very transparent.

An alert reader who received one of these calls took a photo of her phone and recorded the number (778-743-2319). When our reader tried to call it back, it went immediately to voicemail. Dirty tricks by faceless people.

Anyway, we digress. The funny thing going on this year is that so many candidates are running for council positions in communities where they don’t live. We normally see this in provincial and federal elections when a party will parachute in a candidate to a riding where they aren’t strong.

Stewart Prest, a political scientist at Quest University, told the Vancouver Sun that this is “not as common at the municipal level because of the emphasis on being close to a community and being able to speak on its issues.”

In other words, if you really cared about a place, you would live there.

But that doesn’t seem to bother Mano Theos, who has lived in Nanaimo for a good chunk of his last term on Courtenay council and plans to continue living there with his fiance. Nor does it seem to bother these other candidates:

Phil Adams: lives in Fanny Bay, running in Courtenay.
Richard Hardy: lives in Comox, running in Area B.
Brennan Day: lives in Area B, running in Courtenay.
Peter Gibson: lives in Area C, running in Comox.
Lyndsey Northcott: lives in Royston, running in Courtenay.

A Decafnation reader who used to be a Chief Administrative Officer of a BC municipality told us that there are many reasons candidates would ‘run out of town,’ so to speak.

“Some might need the money, not that council positions pay all that well. And they see an opening even though it’s somewhere else.”

“Or, sometimes non-residential candidates are backed/supported by locals who want specific issues supported by council and need an advocate “on the inside” to help make this happen. This is a regular ploy used by developers in years past.”

The idea that candidates might be backed by special interests – tipoff: big signs – and will listen to them rather than the people who actually live in the community sounds icky. But that may be why Gibson is running in Comox. We wouldn’t know, of course, because Gibson won’t answer our emails.

Whatever the reason, there is nothing illegitimate about running out of town. It’s just that the idea of a carpet-bagger taking advantage of a political opportunity feels unethical, and in most cases doesn’t provide good governance.

The practice is just a bad idea all around. The province should change the election laws to restrict running out of town to specific, rare circumstances; for example, in larger communities where the boundaries between one jurisdiction and another are blurred.

 

NONE OF OUR BUSINESS?

Decafnation reached out to several of the candidates running ‘out of town.’ We asked them to explain why they weren’t running where they live.

Mano Theos was the only one to respond. He said he hoped to go back to his long-time restaurant job in Courtenay. But when we followed up and asked when he would be working here, and where and how often he would be in Courtenay, Theos said it was none of our business. “This is my private life,” he said.

But knowing how much time a candidate has to spend on council work and how often he’ll actually set foot in the community he pretends to represent are perfectly legitimate questions to ask. And voters should ask them at every opportunity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHERE AND WHEN TO VOTE

General Voting Day is Saturday, Oct. 15 for all local government positions.

Comox Valley Regional District

General Voting Day and advance voting take place at the CVRD building in Courtenay from 8 am to 8 pm.

Go to this link for General Voting Day locations in the three Electoral Areas.

Additional voting takes place on Oct. 6 from 9 am to 12 pm on Denman Island and on Oct. 6 from 2 pm to 5 pm on Hornby Island

Courtenay

Advance Voting begins on Wednesday October 5, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Native Sons Hall, and again on Wednesday October 12, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Florence Filberg Centre.

General Voting Day, Saturday, October 15, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Queneesh Elementary School, and at the Florence Filberg Centre.

Comox

Advance voting begins Wednesday, October 5 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre, and on Saturday, October 8 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and again on Monday, October 10 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and on Wednesday, October 12 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre.

General Voting Day runs from 8 am to 8 pm on Oct. 15 at the Comox Community Centre.

Cumberland

All voting in the Village of Cumberland takes place from 8 am to 8 pm at the Cumberland Cultural Centre. Advance voting takes place on Oct. 5 and Oct. 12.

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“Sexual deviancy in our schools!” says local disciple of right-wing Christian group

“Sexual deviancy in our schools!” says local disciple of right-wing Christian group

A portion of the Action4Canada leaflet handed out this week by a school trustee candidate

“Sexual deviancy in our schools!” says local disciple of right-wing Christian group

By

In a crazy election year when a few municipal council candidates are running to avenge personals grudges or spread misinformation about climate change and COVID vaccinations, why shouldn’t a school trustee join in on the fun?

Anita DeVries, a candidate for the School District 71 board of education, took to the streets earlier this week in an unusual campaign strategy to warn people around Courtenay Elementary and Lake Trail that schools are “grooming” our children for “sexual exploitation.”

We had no idea what vile things were happening in our local schools until we saw the brochure DeVries was handing out. It’s shocking!! So shocking that it requires two exclamation points.

DeVries’ brochures claim our schools have been infiltrated by radicals who are using sexually explicit and pornographic books to promote homosexuality and normalize sexual deviancy. Apparently, according to the material Ms. DeVries was handing out, teachers are encouraging our kids to masturbate. They intentionally confuse kids about their gender and then offer surgeries that will permanently mutilate their bodies and sterilize them.

Holy mackerel! And this is going on right under our noses?

Of course not. It’s all bullshit dreamed up by a far-right Christian nationalist organization called Action4Canada. They don’t like the SOGI 123 curriculum used by public school teachers, which is endorsed by the provincial government to educate students about sexual orientation and gender identity. The program is designed in a way to make every student feel like they belong.

And here’s a big surprise: Action4Canada supported and participated in the trucker convoy and anti-vaccination occupations earlier this year. Among the issues they are targeting, according to their website, are 5G technology, abortion, vaccine mandates, cannabis legalization, the United Nations Global Compact on Migration, “political LGBTQ” and “political Islam,” whatever that means.

Canadians used to politely humour people who spewed wacky ideas, but it’s not funny now. Spreading misinformation meant to scare people goes beyond civil discourse and issue-based disagreement.

And the people who promote that misinformation now feel legitimized enough to run for public office. They want to control our local governments and schools. Places they should be banned from getting closer to than, let’s say, a hundred miles.

But they’re real and just like down in the states they want time on the big stage. We should not give it to them.

Based on DeVries’ apparent inability to separate fact from fiction about SOGI 123, she should receive zero votes. But our guess is she’ll get more than that.

 

SPEAKING ABOUT MISINFORMATION

Incumbent Comox Councillor Ken Grant went all out on an expensive tri-fold campaign brochure this year. But we noticed some misinformation in his section about climate action.

Grant lists a number of items and puts a checkmark next to them, supposedly climate actions he supported. Except he didn’t.

When Grant lists “Tree Bylaw” and puts a checkmark next to it, he’s telling you this is something he had a hand in achieving. But on Feb. 16, 2022, didn’t Grant actually vote against the town’s Tree Retention Bylaw?

 

ONLY VOTE FOR THE CANDIDATES YOU LIKE

Many voters don’t realize that if there are six council positions up for election, you don’t have to vote for six candidates. Your ballot will be perfectly legal if you only vote for one candidate, or four. There is no requirement to vote for all six positions.

In fact, by only voting for the candidates you really like, you give your favorites a better chance of winning than if you vote for other candidates just to “fill out” your ballot. Your vote for somebody you’re unsure about could put that candidate ahead of those you actually want to elect.

This is especially true for voters who haven’t had the time or opportunity to learn about every candidate and really understand why they’re running for office, which is most of us.

Vote only for those you know and trust. Period. Don’t take a flyer on somebody who might be wrong for you just because you think there must be six Xs on your ballot.

 

NO ALL-CANDIDATES DEBATES

It’s disappointing that nobody organized an all-issues, all-candidates meeting this year. Without an opportunity to quiz the candidates in person and hear them respond spontaneously to a variety of issues, voters will be going to polling stations armed with less than the usual information.

But there will be an opportunity to see and hear the Courtenay council candidates discuss climate change-related questions at 6.30 pm next Tuesday, Oct. 4 at the NIC theatre. Thank goodness for the college’s nursing students.

And all Comox Valley candidates for municipal office have been invited to discuss the social determinants of health in a cafe-style format on Friday, Oct. 7 at the K’omoks First Nation band hall. Area A, Comox and Cumberland candidates will discuss the topic from 3.00 pm to 4.45 pm. Then, Area B, Area C and Courtenay candidates will take the stage from 6.00 pm to 7.45 pm.

What we’re missing this year is an anything-goes debate where voters can see who really has command of the issues and who’s faking it. Who shines and who fades.

The Comox Valley Chamber has taken on this role in the recent past. But they’re in the middle of a transition to a new CEO, so that might explain their absence this year.

So where are the Comox Valley Record and the two radio stations that like to boast of their news coverage, The Eagle and The Goat, when we need them to fill that gap? In other communities, we know that private media companies regularly fulfill their community service obligations by organizing town hall meetings or all-candidate forums. Maybe next time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHERE AND WHEN TO VOTE

General Voting Day is Saturday, Oct. 15 for all local government positions.

Comox Valley Regional District

General Voting Day (Saturday, Oct. 15) and advance voting (Wednesday Oct. 5 and Wednesday Oct. 12) take place at the CVRD building in Courtenay from 8 am to 8 pm.

Go to this link for General Voting Day locations in the three Electoral Areas.

Additional voting takes place on Oct. 6 from 9 am to 12 pm on Denman Island and on Oct. 6 from 2 pm to 5 pm on Hornby Island

Courtenay

Advance Voting begins on Wednesday October 5, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Native Sons Hall, and again on Wednesday October 12, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Florence Filberg Centre.

General Voting Day, Saturday, October 15, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Queneesh Elementary School, and at the Florence Filberg Centre.

Comox

Advance voting begins Wednesday, October 5 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre, and on Saturday, October 8 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and again on Monday, October 10 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and on Wednesday, October 12 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre.

General Voting Day runs from 8 am to 8 pm on Oct. 15 at the Comox Community Centre.

Cumberland

All voting in the Village of Cumberland takes place from 8 am to 8 pm at the Cumberland Cultural Centre. Advance voting takes place on Oct. 5 and Oct. 12.

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Comox Valley local government elections ramping up for Oct. 15 vote

Comox Valley voters will elect new councilors, mayors, regional district representatives, school board members and Island Trust reps on Oct. 15. Find out who’s running for what … and why. Decafnation returns to shine more light on local government issues and candidates

We ask the candidates about pandemic health orders, the RGS and taking climate change seriously

We ask the candidates about pandemic health orders, the RGS and taking climate change seriously

We ask the candidates about pandemic health orders, the RGS and taking climate change seriously

By

F olks, are you asking yourself this question? What’s the point of dragging yourself out of the house on a perfectly nice autumn day to stomp down to some barren gymnasium and scratch an X next to the name of somebody you don’t know but who wants to represent you in local government?

If so, then you might be part of the 65 percent of the local population who have registered to vote but see no point in doing it for local government elections. Like you, they say “screw it” and stay home.

Of course, these people later scream bloody murder and jump up and down and yell epithets at the elected officials who just decided to allow a 10-story high-rise next to their house and a stinky sewage plant down the street.

Or perhaps, you’re a member of the other 35 percent of the registered population that sees a very important reason to vote in municipal elections. These people want their neighbourhood, their town, their whole dang region to grow into the idyllic community of their dreams.

And how do they do that? By electing people who think as they do. People who share the same values. People whose vision of an “idyllic community” pretty much resembles their own. Well, that sounds easy enough to do. Except most voters don’t really know the people they’re voting for.

Casting a vote based on a familiar name or because you know somebody who knew somebody who knew a candidate 10 years ago is politically dangerous. Because there are chameleons out there who appear to be the kind of people who share your dreams but who will actually crush them at the first opportunity if you give them half a chance.

These are people who never reveal their real agendas or their real motivations for running for public office. They talk in vague terms or not at all because if they ever said out loud what they really plan to do with your vote, you’d grab the nearest stick and whack that mole back into the hole it crawled out of.

So how should an honest citizen decide who deserves their vote?

What you really need are a few defining questions. Ones that tell you pretty clearly whether this person or that one thinks like you and shares your dream. So with the help of a few local curmudgeons and crazies, Decafnation put three questions to this year’s candidates for public office.

The idea behind our first question was to find out who supported the common good during the pandemic and who is probably driving a monster truck around town covered with Canadian flags the size of Montana. We don’t know if Aaron Dowker, a candidate for Courtenay mayor drives a truck but one of his social media posts sure makes him sound like a Freedom Convoy Guy and possible anti-vaxxer.

That’s probably why he’s one of the few candidates who didn’t respond to our questions.

Our second question gets to the heart of both public process and community development. We suspect more than a few of the candidates running this year are still angry that the CVRD didn’t bend to the wishes of the Big Money Gang and allow 3L Developments to build 1,000 single-family homes that only their friends can afford on the banks of the Puntledge River. Affordable housing is something they don’t get. Instead, they want to gain control of the Courtenay council in order to annex some of that land in the Puntledge Triangle and pump up the real estate profits.

Our third question is meant to expose the climate deniers lurking behind those smiling faces on the fancy campaign signs. We suspect there are a few, including Tamara Meggitt running in Electoral Area A, who pretty much outed herself in a single social media post in March wondering, “Could environmentalism be the biggest scam of all time?”

Yeah, let’s elect some people who think like that and hasten the demise of the human species.

So think about your dream future for the Comox Valley and see which of the candidates on your ballot comes the closest to sharing that vision.

For starters on your who-to-vote-for list, scratch off all the losers who didn’t respond. Any candidate afraid to answer a few questions doesn’t deserve another minute of your time.

If a candidate won’t respond to issues of interest to electors before the election, how forthcoming will they be if they’re elected and no longer need to hear from the electors for four years? Think about that.

We’re publishing the candidates’ responses by jurisdiction. We begin today in a separate post with the Village of Cumberland.

 

 

 

 

 

WHERE AND WHEN TO VOTE

General Voting Day is Saturday, Oct. 15 for all local government positions.

Comox Valley Regional District

General Voting Day and advance voting take place at the CVRD building in Courtenay from 8 am to 8 pm.

Go to this link for General Voting Day locations in the three Electoral Areas.

Additional voting takes place on Oct. 6 from 9 am to 12 pm on Denman Island and on Oct. 6 from 2 pm to 5 pm on Hornby Island

Courtenay

Advance Voting begins on Wednesday October 5, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Native Sons Hall, and again on Wednesday October 12, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Florence Filberg Centre.

General Voting Day, Saturday, October 15, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Queneesh Elementary School, and at the Florence Filberg Centre.

Comox

Advance voting begins Wednesday, October 5 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre, and on Saturday, October 8 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and again on Monday, October 10 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and on Wednesday, October 12 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre.

General Voting Day runs from 8 am to 8 pm on Oct. 15 at the Comox Community Centre.

Cumberland

All voting in the Village of Cumberland takes place from 8 am to 8 pm at the Cumberland Cultural Centre. Advance voting takes place on Oct. 5 and Oct. 12

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More

Comox Valley local government elections ramping up for Oct. 15 vote

Comox Valley voters will elect new councilors, mayors, regional district representatives, school board members and Island Trust reps on Oct. 15. Find out who’s running for what … and why. Decafnation returns to shine more light on local government issues and candidates

THE WEEK: Busting the myth that council members come with a blank slate

THE WEEK: Busting the myth that council members come with a blank slate

Anonymous Old Guard political action groups in the Comox Valley have been trying to elect cohesive voting blocks for decades 

THE WEEK: Busting the myth that council members come with a blank slate

By

Some people made a big fuss during last fall’s by-election for an open seat on the Comox Town Council when a group calling themselves the “Comox Greens” formed to support candidate Dr. Jonathan Kerr, who won by a comfortable margin.

That group is no longer active, but what got folks all riled up was the idea that provincial party ideologies might weave their way into municipal government business.

Chief among the critics was Brennan Day, who had just run unsuccessfully for the BC Legislature as the BC Liberal Party nominee. Day, who doesn’t live in Courtenay and had been previously rejected by Courtenay voters for a council position, explained his concerns in a letter to the editor during the by-election.

Voters, he said, would “no longer … be electing representatives on their individual merits … A cohesive voting block does not need to worry about pesky little things like debate and compromise, it has the ability to circumvent those who disagree and push forward with a single agenda.”

But hasn’t the right-wing, pro-development faction of the Comox Valley political scene – that would naturally support Day – been trying to create that “cohesive voting block” for over a decade?

In 2014, they called themselves Comox Valley Common Sense. In 2018, they called themselves the Comox Valley Taxpayers Alliance. In 2022, they are calling themselves Comox Valley Mainstream. And this year there’s a new more extreme group calling themselves Take Back Comox Valley.

The objective of these groups has always been to elect a majority of council members who will vote together to further their outworn ambitions. And once again, they are supporting the effort to unseat incumbents who they perceive as being too progressive.

So, groups of citizens banding together to affect local government elections is nothing new.

Be that as it may, let’s get real and dispel this notion that any candidate for municipal government can and should come to office with no partialty, predilections or preconceived notions. If a candidate says that, they are lying to you.

No one who seeks public office is without preference for a federal or provincial political party, or is without values that run closer to one party than the others. It’s just a fact. People who are motivated to run for local government usually have strong opinions about the issues of the day and believe that their ideas about how to address them are the best.

Voters know that. They just want candidates to be transparent about those opinions and values so they can choose wisely on Election Day.

It’s unrealistic to expect that public officials can simply erase their life experiences and their personal values and philosophies when they walk through the council room door. They are who they are, and their decisions and council voting records will reflect that.

But that doesn’t mean that former BC Liberal Party MLA Don McRae checked in with the party executive before taking a position when he served seven years on Courtenay council. Of course not. But his values and political perspective led him on a journey to become the Minister of Education under former premier Christy Clark.

The same would have been true for NDP MLA Ronna-Rae Leonard who also sat on Courtenay Council for many years. And consider that former Comox council member Paul Ives who sought the BC Liberal Party nomination in 2016 while still serving as mayor.

It’s laughable to think that MLA Leonard’s perspectives and approach to local issues didn’t more closely resemble the NDP’s values than the BC Liberal Party’s values. And vice versa for McRae.

The same would be true for Brennan Day. That’s why you will see more Day campaign signs in the conservative Crown Isle subdivision than you will in the more liberal Puntledge Park neighborhood.

What Dr. Kerr tried to do in last year’s by-election was to put his political leanings and values out front for everyone to see. Total transparency. That way, if people shared those values, they could see he might be a good representative for them. And if not, they could vote for someone else.

We wish this year’s candidates and political action groups would be as honest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHERE AND WHEN TO VOTE

General Voting Day is Saturday, Oct. 15 for all local government positions.

Comox Valley Regional District

General Voting Day and advance voting take place at the CVRD building in Courtenay from 8 am to 8 pm.

Go to this link for General Voting Day locations in the three Electoral Areas.

Additional voting takes place on Oct. 6 from 9 am to 12 pm on Denman Island and on Oct. 6 from 2 pm to 5 pm on Hornby Island

Courtenay

Advance Voting begins on Wednesday October 5, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Native Sons Hall, and again on Wednesday October 12, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Florence Filberg Centre.

General Voting Day, Saturday, October 15, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Queneesh Elementary School, and at the Florence Filberg Centre.

Comox

Advance voting begins Wednesday, October 5 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre, and on Saturday, October 8 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and again on Monday, October 10 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and on Wednesday, October 12 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre.

General Voting Day runs from 8 am to 8 pm on Oct. 15 at the Comox Community Centre.

Cumberland

All voting in the Village of Cumberland takes place from 8 am to 8 pm at the Cumberland Cultural Centre. Advance voting takes place on Oct. 5 and Oct. 12.

 

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Comox Valley local government elections ramping up for Oct. 15 vote

Comox Valley voters will elect new councilors, mayors, regional district representatives, school board members and Island Trust reps on Oct. 15. Find out who’s running for what … and why. Decafnation returns to shine more light on local government issues and candidates

The Week: Big Money wants its control back and a candidate wins 2022 Moronic award

The Week: Big Money wants its control back and a candidate wins 2022 Moronic award

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The Week: Big Money wants its control back and a candidate wins 2022 Moronic award

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We have to hand it to that vicious Big Money Gang that pooled their pocket change to launch some mean-spirited attack ads on social media. They took a page right out of Trumpville and tossed down some nasty smack, never mind that the ads made no sense – Reality check: nobody’s trying to defund the Comox Valley RCMP detachment! – these are just a handful of chickenshit middle school bullies who have more lunch money than you but want to steal your snacks anyway.

Well, they got the attention they wanted, but, like all angry people who feel entitled, they made themselves look like morons. That’s what happens when you abuse the privilege of free speech by spewing lies and misinformation and then hide behind anonymity.

Take Back Comox Valley was smart enough, however, to schedule their smear campaign before the official “campaign period” began on Sept. 17. Elections BC tells Decafnation that it received a complaint about the Take Back Comox Valley social media drivel several weeks ago, but the EBC determined the ads did not violate election advertising laws because they ran during the pre-campaign period (July 18 to Sept. 16). Mind boggling. Slapping them with a fine wouldn’t have made a difference anyway.

But here’s the interesting question, where do they think the Comox Valley went? And who do they want to Take it Back from?

Where did “their” Comox Valley go? It went away from them. Over the last two municipal elections, increased numbers of progressively-minded voters have elected progressively-minded people to the Valley’s councils and boards who had the gall, the audacity to start challenging the old way of doing things. And that pissed off the Big Money Gang. They lost their self-claimed right to control and now they want it back.

And what might they want do with that control? They apparently don’t want safer streets (17th Street), but they do want to pave more rural land. They don’t want affordable housing, they want to build more expensive single-family houses. They aren’t concerned about forcing future generations of local residents into enormous debt by extending infrastructure to service new subdivisions outside the urban boundaries, but they stamp their feet when the council has to maintain existing infrastructure (Fifth Street Bridge). And for God’s sake don’t get them started on climate change or social issues like public health orders, childcare or rainbow crosswalks because their heads will explode.

So who was it that took “their” Comox Valley? Well, it’s a safe bet it wasn’t the Village Council in Cumberland. That council has been almost pitch perfect with its community for quite some time, so it would have strong immunity to the advertisements’ violent denunciations. And it’s unlikely the Big Money Gang planned a hit on the Comox Town Council because until the last year the old guard has controlled that bunch of obstructionists through their council henchmen.

So it feels like the Big Money Gang has its crosshairs aimed squarely at the Courtenay City Council and the regional district directors in Areas A and B. These are three of the hotbeds that breed the progressive ideas that are moving the Comox Valley into the 21st Century, where forward-thinking people are planning for the serious and wide reaching adaptations necessary to accommodate our population growth, the changing employment environment, unrelenting social issues and our evolution into an era dominated by climate change.

The good news is that these progressive thinkers didn’t get elected by accident or mistake. They were chosen by an electorate that has itself become more progressive; to wit, climate change deniers are now the crazies on the fringe. In municipalities everywhere, progressive thinking has become the mainstream by necessity. Wildfires, floods and heat domes are forcing us to think and plan for the unthinkable, such as where our food comes from and how much water we have.

The mayor of Lytton has said that as a man in his 60s, he thought climate change was something the next generation had to worry about. “Now I’m the mayor of a town that doesn’t exist.”

And the even better news is that we the people have the ultimate weapon to keep the Big Money Gang from eating our lunch: a vote. If you don’t want the clock turned backwards on progress in the Comox Valley, then haul your ass out of the house and vote.

 

HEY, BRENNAN, PICK UP A PHONE

Decafnation got a big kick out of Courtenay council candidate Brennan Day trying to shrug off his trademark infringement – using the logos for the City of Courtenay and the province on a couple of his campaign signs – by saying in a Comox Valley Record article that he was doing it intentionally to get attention, which we have to say sounds like a lot of BS.

It appeared to us and many others that Day was trying to make his signs look more “official” while complaining about the cost of maintenance on the Fifth Street bridge and to improve safety conditions on 17th Street. Because without the logos and with just the word “misspent,” handwritten to look like graffiti, the sign looks like it came from a crackpot.

But that’s not the funny part. At the end of the article is a long quote from Day in which he admits he knew using the logos was wrong, but since he couldn’t find precise language in the city’s bylaws saying so, he did it anyway. And then he goes on to blame the city staff for not having a more clear bylaw. So, is it their fault he broke the law?

And, then in the most alarming statement ever, Day admits that he checked out the bylaws of other cities and found out that they clearly prohibit using city logos in campaign material.

What?!

He makes the effort to check the bylaws of other cities, where he learns they say no to using logos, but he doesn’t bother to pick up the phone and ask his own City Hall staff? Oh, that’s right, he doesn’t live in Courtenay. Still, it’s not a long distance call.

Well, anyway, Day wins our award for the Most Moronic Explanation That Turned Into a Giant Foot In The Mouth of the 2022 election campaign. So far.

In case you missed it, here’s the whole quote from the Record.

“To be fair, I did check into the municipal bylaws, and they are ambiguous as to the use (of city logos), or at least I couldn’t find it in my research, so I decided to try it. Obviously, they are covered up now… In a lot of other jurisdictions, they spell it out very clearly, that use of the city logos on campaign literature and advertising is not allowed. Courtenay seems that they are a little bit behind in their bylaws.”

Good grief.

 

CANDIDATE FORUMS

Want to watch and hear some candidates answer questions in person? Here’s a few public events we know about:

Climate change will be the focus of an all-candidates forum for the mayor and council candidates in Courtenay. The event is at 6.30 pm on Tuesday, Oct. 4 in the North Island College theater. It has been organized by NIC nursing students and the Canadian Association of Nurses for the Environment. The public is also invited to submit questions.

The Comox Valley Chamber of Commerce has planned a “Meet and Greet” for all council, regional district and school board candidates from 5 pm to 7 pm on Tuesday, Sept. 27 at the Courtenay & District Museum.

There will be a forum for positions on the School District 71 Board of Trustees at 6:30 pm in the All Purpose Room at G.P. Vanier Secondary School. The event has been organized by the District Parent Advisory Council (DPAC), the Comox District Teachers’ Association (CDTA), and The Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 439 (CUPE). You can submit questions in advance. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHERE AND WHEN TO VOTE

General Voting Day is Saturday, Oct. 15 for all local government positions.

Comox Valley Regional District

General Voting Day (Saturday, Oct. 15) and advance voting (Wednesday Oct. 5 and Wednesday Oct. 12) take place at the CVRD building in Courtenay from 8 am to 8 pm.

Go to this link for General Voting Day locations in the three Electoral Areas.

Additional voting takes place on Oct. 6 from 9 am to 12 pm on Denman Island and on Oct. 6 from 2 pm to 5 pm on Hornby Island

Courtenay

Advance Voting begins on Wednesday October 5, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Native Sons Hall, and again on Wednesday October 12, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Florence Filberg Centre.

General Voting Day, Saturday, October 15, 2022, 8 am to 8 pm at the Queneesh Elementary School, and at the Florence Filberg Centre.

Comox

Advance voting begins Wednesday, October 5 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre, and on Saturday, October 8 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and again on Monday, October 10 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at the Genoa Sail Building at Comox Marina, and on Wednesday, October 12 from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Comox Community Centre.

General Voting Day runs from 8 am to 8 pm on Oct. 15 at the Comox Community Centre.

Cumberland

All voting in the Village of Cumberland takes place from 8 am to 8 pm at the Cumberland Cultural Centre. Advance voting takes place on Oct. 5 and Oct. 12.

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More

Comox Valley local government elections ramping up for Oct. 15 vote

Comox Valley voters will elect new councilors, mayors, regional district representatives, school board members and Island Trust reps on Oct. 15. Find out who’s running for what … and why. Decafnation returns to shine more light on local government issues and candidates