The Mack Laing Trust: BC Supreme Court hears arguments in 40-year case

The Mack Laing Trust: BC Supreme Court hears arguments in 40-year case

Hamilton Mack Laing tends trees in his Nut Farm above Comox Bay in the early to mid 1900s

The Mack Laing Trust: BC Supreme Court hears arguments in 40-year case

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The 40-year saga of an internationally famous naturalist and Comox Valley pioneer who left his waterfront property, possessions and money to the Town of Comox finally made it to the BC Supreme Court recently, where lawyers argued the legal technicalities of his Trust Agreement and his Last Will and Testament.

The the three-day proceedings in Courtroom 200 at the Courtenay Courthouse with Justice Jennifer A. Power presiding provided a stark contrast to the rich history and universal respect for the man, Hamilton Mack Laing, and his passion for the natural world and the biodiversity he found in the early 1920s along Comox Bay.

Instead, a lawyer for the Town of Comox and another for the BC Attorney General speculated on a broader meaning of certain words used in the Trust Agreement and other documents. They cited statues in municipal governance and jurisprudence that didn’t exist in 1973 when Mack Laing started making his gifts to the town or even in 1981 when he wrote his last wishes before he died in early 1982.

The lawyers hoped to convince Justice Power that despite misappropriating Laing’s money and misleading past council members, the Town of Comox should be allowed to demolish the man’s heritage home, Shakesides, and use his money for purposes that Laing had not explicitly envisioned.

They also spent a large portion of their time before Justice Power arguing that she should ignore most of the hundreds of pages of evidence and documentation submitted by the Mack Laing Heritage Society (The Society), an intervenor in this case, because they are “not relevant” to section 184 of the 2003 BC Community Charter.

They dismissed the numerous affidavits provided by The Society as “opinion and hearsay” that purport to describe Laing’s importance to the town’s history and the field of natural history generally and to prove that the terms of his gifts were crystal clear.

But something was missing in this cold, binary courtroom summarization of the legal fine points, which the lawyers so aptly boiled down to what was documented or not and which words were precise or vague and whether agreements made between 1973 and 1981 do or do not comport with a 2003 law. Absent from the discussion, except when The Society’s lawyer took the podium, was the context of the social-political-bureaucratic environment during which this 40-year travesty took place.

The Society’s lawyer did his best to paint that bigger picture. The Society believes that Justice Power, and anyone else masochistic enough to read through the mountain of public filings in this case, will discover the struggles of a lone female advocate for Laing’s wishes, the pursuit of personal agendas, the political strategies that were afoot and the unsavory means used to achieve them.

The Society believes Justice Power will learn that Laing was a good-hearted man, albeit naive about fickle town councils, who wanted his life’s achievements to live on and educate those who came after him and that the intention for his gifts to the people of Comox were clear and indisputable.

The Society’s lawyer said the Town of Comox had made its own mess and was now in a rush to clean it up. But, he argued, there is no good reason why, after 40 years, the town can’t wait for a thorough accounting of how much money should be in the Trust Fund and for an independent assessment of Shakesides’ viability by heritage building professionals.

After hearing from the town, the Attorney General and The Society, Justice Power gave no immediate ruling. Her decisions in this case could take weeks.

The Mack Laing saga is ultimately a story of how clever people can obfuscate the big picture using the detachment of legal proceedings and try to rewrite history to serve a modern agenda. It’s a cautionary tale about how municipal staff can lead a town council down an ethically wrong path and how a majority of them willingly follow it.

The case puts an exclamation point on the importance of electing mayors and council members who believe in playing by the rules. In other words, serious public servants who are determined to fully understand the issues before them and who refuse to take the lazy route of blindly accepting staff recommendations.

But that’s just our opinion.

What follows now is a brief summary of the arguments heard by Justice Power.

 

WHAT THE TOWN AND ATTORNEY GENERAL SAID

The BC Attorney General, represented by Sointula Kirkpatrick, and the Town represented by Mike Moll, argued that Laing had made two separate trusts. In the first one in 1973, the Park Trust, Laing gifted his property including the Shakesides house. In the second in 1981 via his Last Will and Testament, the Trust, Laing left the residue of his estate – money and possessions – to the town.

The lawyers said only the 1981 trust was before the court. That argument, if accepted by Justice Power, means that the Shakesides house was given to the town without conditions in the earlier Parks Trust and was the town’s property to do with as it pleased. The only issue before the court was whether the later Trust funds could be spent to construct a viewing platform.

“It has been 40 years since he made his bequest. Shakesides was never suitable to be a museum and the Trust Funds were and are not sufficient to make it one,” Kirkpatrick told the court.

She said further that “most of The Society’s evidence is not relevant to this court’s determination under Section 184 of the Community Charter.” And she went on to argue details of general trust law principles.

At that point, Justice Power stopped the proceedings to address the gallery, comprising only members of The Society. Justice Power said that despite the AG lawyer’s opinion of The Society’s evidence, only she would determine its relevance.

In regards to the comprehensive plan prepared by The Society and two dozen community volunteers to restore Shakesides and convert it to a natural history museum, Kirkpatrick said their proposal was “beyond the scope of this proceeding and has no basis in law.”

She concluded that the town’s proposal to construct a “Nature Park Platform can accommodate the K‘omoks First Nations’ concern about disturbance to the Great Comox Midden on which Shakesides is located, without further delay or unnecessary litigation.”

She said Mack Laing’s charitable intentions should be carried out through the building of the platform and she asked the court to “grant the variation sought on the conditions proposed by the Attorney General and to which the Town agrees.”

The town’s lawyer, Mike Moll said, “The Town is applying to vary the Trust because the Town’s Council now considers the terms of the Trust to no longer be in the best interests of the Town. The Town says that the Nature Park Platform containing natural history education panels will better further both the intention of the will-maker and the best interests of the Town.’

 

WHAT THE SOCIETY SAID

The Mack Laing Heritage Society, represented by Kevin Simonett of Campbell River, argued that “In breaching its obligations as trustee and allowing waste and neglect of the culturally valuable and irreplaceable trust object (Shakesides), Comox has manufactured the very crisis it now claims as justification to vary the trust.

“Comox does not come before the court with clean hands and is the author of a delay of several decades.”

Simonett went to say that after 40 years of the town’s financial mismanagement and dereliction of trustee obligations and fiduciary duty – “to which Comox has essentially admitted” – a forensic accounting of the trust funds and an independent assessment is required to ascertain the true financial health and structural integrity of Shakesides.

“Comox offers no explanation as to why they cannot wait for such forensic auditing
and physical inspection to be completed. Instead, they insist on immediate
demolition of a culturally valuable and historic home to be replaced with little more than a concrete slab,” he told the court.

Simonett argued that the town’s conclusion that Shakesides is unsuitable for use as a museum was “a foregone conclusion.” Since the town received Laing’s gifts, “the town has selectively sought out informal information tending to confirm that conclusion, rather than carrying out proper due diligence and obtaining expert opinions.”

He detailed how a town executive ignored the misspending of Laing’s money, stacked an advisory committee to get the result he wanted and then misled council members to make decisions based on a non-existent Park Plan and a flawed process designed to achieve personal and political purposes.

He argued that there was only one trust, not two, which Laing continued to amend through the period from 1973 to 1981.

“By way of gift in his last will and testament, the (Laing) carried out the Settlement upon the Park Trust; his intent was to add the residue of his estate to the trust corpus established under the Park Trust, on the terms set out in the instrument of gift. The Town in its capacity as Trustee had notice of these terms, and indeed had a hand in negotiating them, and accepted these terms when it accepted the funds forming the Settlement upon the Park Trust,” Simonett said.

Simonett told Justice Power that the town and the AG have provided evidence, “only on the putative cost-effectiveness of varying the Park Trust to remove Shakesides, and none as to the superiority per se of the viewing platform. It is the Intervenor’s position that the relative cost-effectiveness of the competing visions for Mack Laing Park has not been determined, due to the protracted intransigence of the town.”

 

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The Week: One election is already over, candidates running in other towns and new shenanigans

The Week: One election is already over, candidates running in other towns and new shenanigans

General Voting Day is Saturday, Oct. 15. See the sidebar on this page for advance voting dates.

The Week: One election is already over, candidates running in other towns and new shenanigans

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The official campaign period for this fall’s municipal election doesn’t begin until Saturday, Sept. 17, but one race is already over.

Meet Nicole Minions, the new mayor of Comox. When the clock ticked past 4 p.m. on Friday, the deadline for candidates to file their nomination papers, she was the only person to file for mayor of Comox. She will win the mayor’s chair by acclamation.

Minions becomes only the second woman since 1946 to serve as the town’s mayor. Alicia Burns served one term in the mayor’s chair from 1992-1995.

When incumbent mayor Russ Arnott publicly announced on Facebook Thursday evening that he was stepping down due to illness, many people speculated that 17-year council member Ken Grant would want the job. Instead, Grant filed for a sixth term as a councillor.

Maybe Grant didn’t think he could win against the bright, under-40 Minions, who has comported herself well over the last four years.

Minions, who is coming off her first term on council, was considering a challenge to Arnott and had actually dropped her filing papers at town hall before the incumbent’s announcement.

She expected a competitive race but now is happy to be relieved from the burden of campaigning. She plans to use the time before her first official council meeting in late October to get to know all the council candidates and preparing for her new role.

You can read Decafnation’s full profile of the soon-to-be-Mayor Minions tomorrow when we start publishing interviews with some of the candidates.

 

CAMPAIGN SHENANIGANS ALREADY STARTED

Elections: they bring out the best in us and the worst in us.

The local government election campaigns may have just gotten started, but the dirty tricks and other political shenanigans are well underway.

Brennan Day, a candidate for Courtenay City Council, made some rather large campaign signs that display the official logos of the City of Courtenay and the Province of BC making it appear he has the backing of the city and the provincial government.

That’s got to be a violation of campaign ethics, if not the law.

In fact, Kate O’Connell, the chief electoral officer and director of corporate services at the city, told Decafnation today they have ordered the Day campaign to change its signs.

“The City does not endorse any candidates and does not permit candidates to use the City logo,” she told Decafnation. “We have contacted the campaign to remove/cover the logo or remove the sign.”

Presumably, Day will take off the provincial logo at the same time. He ran unsuccessfully for council in 2018 and as a candidate for the BC Liberal Party in the last provincial election, which he lost to Ronna-Rae Leonard of the NDP.

And the sign vandals have been busy. They’ve knocked over Courtenay incumbent candidate Will Cole-Hamilton’s signs a couple of times. Decafnation also spotted another election sign hanging from the top of a street sign.

 

RUNNING OUT OF SPACE

There are 45 people running for 28 local government positions this year, not counting the seven school board seats or the four positions on the Islands Trust. And about 15 percent of them are seeking office in jurisdictions where they do not live.

There is no prohibition in British Columbia election laws from living in Nanaimo and running for office in Courtenay, as Mano Theos is doing. You can live in Port Hardy and file for the office of the Mayor of Victoria if you’re crazy enough to do it.

It’s a curious law that doesn’t extend the exact same courtesy to voters, who can only vote in the jurisdictions where they live unless they own property in another jurisdiction. In that case, they can also vote in the jurisdiction where they own property. For example, Mano Theos can’t vote in Courtenay unless he owns property there, but he can hold public office whether he does or doesn’t. 

Here are some candidates who appear to be running out of their jurisdiction of residence, based on the addresses on their nomination papers:

Running in Courtenay – Brennan Day (lives in Area B), Phil Adams (lives in Area A), Lyndsey Northcott (lives in Area A) and Mano Theos (lives in Nanaimo).

Running in Comox – Ruby Sidhu (lives in Courtenay) and Peter Gibson (lives in Courtenay).

Running in Area B – Richard Hardy (lives in Comox).

 

WHY DO CANDIDATES FILE SO LATE?

We have never understood why some candidates, including incumbents, wait to file their nomination papers until the last minute. But it never fails that in every local government election the official list of candidates doubles or more in the last few hours before the deadline.

Courtenay Mayor Bob Wells, for example, announced he was running a couple of months ago, but didn’t file until the day before the last day. Comox Mayor Russ Arnott, who everyone knew was ill and could not run again, only announced the obvious the night before deadline day. These are just two high-profile examples, but many candidates do it.

Do they think they’re being clever or is it some political strategy? A chess match in their own minds? Or, are they just disorganized people who can’t get it together until they absolutely have to? It’s a mystery to us.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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.

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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Mack Laing goes to court today and, have spies infiltrated local government?

Mack Laing goes to court today and, have spies infiltrated local government?

Hamilton Mack Laing, a man who gave his house, property, many possessions and money to the Town of Comox, who took it and then snubbed him.

Mack Laing goes to court today and, have spies infiltrated local government?

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It’s a shame the Town of Comox waited almost four years before finally taking their petition back to the BC Supreme Court today (Wednesday, Sept. 7) to vary the town’s trust agreement with Hamilton Mack Laing to tear down his heritage house and spend the money he gifted for purposes other than his original intentions.

The Town Council could have collaborated to find a win-win with the Mack Laing Heritage Society and those community members who have volunteered to preserve some form of the house, called Shakesides. Instead, the Town Council stopped listening.

And they also stopped going to court for the permissions they need.

The court dates this week fall just 37 days before the 2022 municipal election, making it unlikely the Justice hearing arguments will rule before voters go to the polls. Win or lose, we would have preferred that those incumbents seeking reelection had to account for their voting record on this issue.

As an intervenor, the Mack Laing Heritage Society has asked the court in public filings to dismiss the town’s application to vary the trust, and instead order a forensic accounting of the Trust Fund, an independent assessment of the viability of the Shakesides structure and to direct the town to include the rental income it derived from Shakesides into the trust fund or a related separate fund.

“In breaching its obligations as trustee and allowing waste and neglect of the culturally valuable and irreplaceable trust object (Shakesides), Comox has manufactured the very crisis it now claims as justification to vary the trust; Comox does not come before the court with clean hands and is the author of a delay of several decades,” the society says in its written submission.

The society goes on to assert that the town has “willfully ignored all evidence, offers of assistance and reports that do not contemplate the demolition of Shakesides, or that require a proper accounting of the Trust Fund.”

If the court agrees with the MLHS and orders an accounting and structural assessment before ruling on the town’s application, it could be another year before the matter is finally settled.

Of course, the Town of Comox has had about 40 years to atone for their neglect, so what’s another dozen months?

What’s important for this election is that only one incumbent candidate in the race for Town Council, Nicole Minions, had the ethical integrity to vote against proceeding with this petition and for continued collaboration. Stephanie McGown voted with Minions, but she is not likely to seek office in Comox this year.

Jonathan Kerr no doubt would have joined those two in doing the right thing, but he only joined the council nine months ago.

Stay tuned, as Decafnation will file additional reports on the court case later in the week.

 

Candidates coming out of the woodwork

Former Courtenay mayor Starr Winchester has filed again for City Council, and so has Deana Simkin. They both ran in 2018 and missed the cut by about 10 percent. Brennan Day, who failed to get elected provincially, is now trying local government again. He fell short by nearly seven percent of the vote last time. Nobody has filed for mayor except perennial candidate Erik Eriksson.

Incumbent Arzeena Hamir will have at least two challengers in Area B, Richard Hardy and Keith Stevens. And Tamara Meggitt will challenge incumbent Daniel Arbour in Area A.

Big news, Don Davis has filed again in Comox, as he has every election since, well, forever.

Bad news, Courtenay resident Peter Gibson has filed in Comox. The last time a Courtenay resident filed in Comox, to our knowledge, was when former Comox councillor Tom Grant moved to Crown Isle and tried to keep a seat in Comox. That ended badly as it should have and as it should again.

 

American political creep

The four or five people who are behind the vacuous website, Comox Valley Mainstream, are either rebranding themselves or they’ve gained partners.

A new anonymous website has cropped up called Take Back Comox Valley. Take back from whom, we wonder? The people who built a plant so we wouldn’t have regular boil water advisories? The people who have kept governments going during the pandemic and kept taxes reasonable while doing it?

The people who have taken the backroom dealing out of local politics and put their work transparently into formal policies to deal fairly and consistently with everyone concerned?

It seems these folks are dragging a little right-wing conspiracy tendency across the southern border. Even their name sounds a little like Make America Great Again.

Based on their website, the Taker Backers are going after some group they won’t name that wants to “to stop the expansion of our business community, disrupt our industries, and defund our police.” Holy Moly, who are those evil people?

Frankly, I haven’t heard anybody around here calling to defund the police. Anyway, wouldn’t that be the RCMP? Good luck with that.

And what industry is being disrupted? Even if we stop cutting old-growth timber, the logging industry will remain robust. The Alberta oil industry? Whether the Comox Valley allows 1,000 new gas stations or zero, it won’t send chills down anybody’s spine in Calgary.

But, these concerned citizens claim a righteous fight, “to keep American money and foreign activists out of our local politics.” That’s right, American billionaires are so concerned with issues like garbage and kitchen waste pickup in the rural areas that they are paying undocumented secret agents to infiltrate our local governments.

Sorry, Taker Backers. When you try to get QAnon-style conspiracy thinking going outside the American South, it just doesn’t roll so easily as it does in Alabama.

 

Heads in the sand

There is always a small element of the public that wants our municipal councillors to do nothing more than fill potholes and make the toilets flush. They may be the same people that want schools to do no more than teach students to read, write and add numbers.

The basics are important in every aspect of life but don’t people want, even demand a quality of life that goes far beyond that? Where would we be without music and art in our lives? Without hobbies? Parks and trails? Access to all the things that people are passionate about? Visionary thinking?

Those aren’t the basics, but they enrich our basic lives and in the Comox Valley it may be the single most common reason that people live here.

Councillors who only think about sewers and potholes won’t lead us toward a more vibrant, interesting and rewarding community. Such stunted thinking will do the opposite. And who wants to live in a town without any charm or soul?

 

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THE WEEK: Who’s running for mayor of Comox? And Elections BC issues fine

THE WEEK: Who’s running for mayor of Comox? And Elections BC issues fine

With Incumbent Stephanie McGowan now residing in Courtenay and Mayor Russ Arnott’s candidacy uncertain, the Comox Town Council will look quite different after Oct. 15.

THE WEEK: Who’s running for mayor of Comox? And Elections BC issues fine

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This article was updated on Sept. 6 to include comments from Stephen Blacklock.

With just one week left for candidates to declare their intentions, the big local government news heading into the long weekend involves the uncertainty surrounding who’s running for Comox Town Council and, more specifically, whether incumbent mayor Russ Arnott will seek a second term.

There have been social media posts from family members that suggest Arnott is not well and some community members confirm that he hasn’t looked well recently. Decafnation has reached out to the mayor via email, but we have not received a response. Some councillors have reached out as well without any response.

We can all empathize with someone who struggles with physical health problems and the complications that normally arise for their work and family. That is difficult to manage in any circumstance.

Arnott’s situation is particularly awkward and probably extra stressful for him because his health problems, whatever they may be, are happening during the local government office filing deadline, which allows him only days to decide whether he’s well enough to serve another four years.

That uncertainty has a trickle-down effect on other candidates who might choose to seek the mayoralty rather than a council position if Arnott steps aside. If he does, we would expect Ken Grant to file for the mayor position and he might be challenged by one of the other incumbent councillors, Maureen Swift, Nicole Minions, Alex Bissinger or Jonathan Kerr.

We’ve heard there was a large turnout of potential candidates and interested citizens at the Comox Council candidate information night this week, so it appears voters will have lots of choices.

And, of course, we wish Arnott peace and clarity of mind as he works through this heart-wrenching time.

 

ELECTIONS BC FINES LOCAL CANDIDATE

Staying with Comox Council, Decafnation has learned that Elections BC issued a monetary penalty on June 9 to Stephen Blacklock, a candidate in last November’s Comox Town Council byelection, for a violation of the Local Elections Campaign Financing Act (LECFA).

Blacklock was fined $1,115.52 for “exceeding campaign period expense limit contrary to s. 68.02 LECFA.” It is the second largest penalty imposed by Elections BC in the last four years.

According to public records made available to us, it’s the first time Elections BC has sanctioned a Comox Valley candidate for a breach of the laws it administers.

Blacklock told Decafnation on Sept. 6 that he received a campaign invoice after the by-election that was “much higher than expected.” Rather than “haggle and fudge my way into compliance,” Blacklock said he simply paid the Elections BC fine. 

Elections BC (EBC) is “the independent, non-partisan Office of the Legislature responsible for administering electoral processes in British Columbia in accordance with the Election Act, Local Elections Campaign Financing Act, Recall and Initiative Act, and Referendum Act.”

But in terms of municipal elections, EBC is responsible for only monitoring campaign financing and advertising regulations. The Ministry of Municipal Affairs regulates local government election

According to Elections BC Communication Director Andrew Watson there have been 58 valid complaints since 2018 about candidates’ violations of advertising or financing regulations. Most were related to campaign financing and only a few resulted in disciplinary action.

“Every complaint is unique and we investigate every complaint we receive,” Watson told Decafnation.

He said a complaint could result, if verified, in a monetary penalty, a criminal prosecution or a warning letter. The complaints can take months or even years to investigate and adjudicate, but the EBC tries to conclude them as soon as possible.

“We don’t want to cause any harm unnecessarily. So we don’t act until we have all the facts and have conducted a fair process,” Watson said. “We are neutral and non-partisan.”

The EBC considers a number of factors before taking action on verified complaints, including whether the violation gave the candidate a material advantage.

Watson said the Blacklock monetary penalty was comparatively large because the law at the time stipulated the fine for overspending the expense limit was two times the over-spend. Since the start of 2022, the EBC has been given more discretion to levy fines for overspending up to a maximum of two times the over-spend.

 

WHO’S FILED SO FAR

The websites for our four local governments display a list of candidates as their file their nomination papers. Here are links to each website so you can follow along as candidates announce.

For Courtenay, go here.

For Cumberland, go here.

For Comox, go here.

For the Comox Valley Regional District, go here.

As of noon today, only incumbent Leslie Baird had filed for another term as mayor of Cumberland and only Erik Eriksson had filed for mayor of Courtenay. Edwin Grieve in Area C will have a new challenger in Matthew Ellis. And it appears newcomer Shannon Aldinger will seek one of the Courtenay seats on the District 71 School Board.

It is curious that the websites of Cumberland, Courtenay and the three electoral areas at the regional district show the names of candidates who have filed, while the Town of Comox website shows that no candidates have filed to date. UPDATE: Candidates who have filed started showing up on the Comox website late this afternoon.

 

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The Week: One election is already over, candidates running in other towns and new shenanigans

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

Photo Caption

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

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In just 49 days, Comox Valley voters will decide who they want to form our local governments. At stake are seats on four municipal councils, three rural electoral areas, the school board and Island Trust representation for Denman and Hornby islands.

The official “nomination period” for candidates to declare their intention to seek public office starts Tuesday, Aug. 30 and closes on Friday, Sept. 9. That leaves about five weeks for the campaign because Election Day is on Saturday, Oct. 15, although there will be advance voting days.

General election advertising rules have already come into effect on July 18 and will extend through Election Day. The regulations governing candidate and third-party spending limits start on Sept. 17.

So, in just a few weeks, the public will know who’s running for what. But why they are running, well, that’s something else. You’ll get the usual candidate statements published in the local media that are carefully crafted to hit all the right notes without revealing the authors’ true voices.

We’ve decided to revive a version of Decafnation for the next couple of months to shine a little extra light on some of the candidates so that at least readers of this website will have some deeper insight into who they’re voting for.

We won’t be doing long investigative pieces, although we will interview some candidates. In the main, we’ll provide commentary on the issues and where candidates actually stand on them and, later on, provide our endorsements.

 

WHO WE THINK IS RUNNING

Many incumbent candidates and a few new challengers have already announced that they will seek re-election.

For the Courtenay City Council, we believe David Frisch, Wendy Morin, Melanie McCallum, Doug Hillian, Will Cole-Hamilton and Mano Theos are running. Newcomers Evan Jolicoeur and Michael Gilbert hope to get one of the six council seats. Brennan Day is also running again, he ran unsuccessfully in 2018 and also for MLA as a BC Liberal Party candidate in the last provincial election.

Former city council member Erik Eriksson plans to make another bid for Courtenay Mayor, opposing incumbent Bob Wells.

In Comox, Nicole Minions, Alex Bissinger and Jonathan Kerr will most likely seek re-election. Incumbent Stephanie McGowan’s family has moved to a Courtenay address, although that doesn’t prohibit her from running for a Comox Council seat. We’ve heard that Jenn Meilleur may run for council.

We expect the three Electoral Area seats on the Comox Valley Regional District board to receive some extra attention this year, but all we know at the moment is that incumbents Daniel Arbour (Area A) and Arzeena Hamir (Area B) are running again and that it’s likely Edwin Grieve (Area C) will also seek another term.

And incumbent Cumberland Mayor Leslie Baird says she’ll seek a fourth term leading the Village Council. At the end of the current term, she will have logged 32 years of continuous service in public office. It’s possible Baird will have a serious opponent this time if you believe the rumour that incumbent councillor Vicky Brown is leaning toward a run at the mayor’s chair.

And, finally, we’d be surprised if Jesse Ketler doesn’t run again for Cumberland Council and possibly return as chair of the CVRD, where she’s been a neutral force between the warring Comox and Courtenay representatives.

 

ISSUES IN THE 2022 ELECTIONS

Some of the issues most likely to emerge from the candidates during the 2022 local government campaign haven’t changed from 2018: housing affordability, access to green space, the livability of our valley and issues around local employment.

Some of the issues from 2018 have been resolved. Courtenay adopted a new Official Community Plan. The regional district won its battles with 3L Developments over violating the Regional Growth Strategy and finally, thankfully, disbanded the Economic Development Society.

But some issues still linger, chief among those would be the fate of Shakesides, the historic home of Hamilton Mack Laing. The Town of Comox has dragged its feet – and broken an ethical and fiduciary trust – on resolving this issue for the past 40 years, but never so disappointingly as during the last four.

All the incumbents pledged during the 2018 campaign to resolve the Shakesides issue (except Jonathan Kerr, who was only elected in the 2021 by-election). But they haven’t, despite Mayor Russ Arnott’s fury in 2019 to get the building torn down.

And there are big new issues waiting for the next local government officials. At the top of that list is a required review of the Regional Growth Strategy, which will be followed by an update to the Rural Comox Valley Official Community Plan. Myriad contentious issues live within those few words and we have no doubt that the 2022 election campaigns will only be the start of the debate.

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Who do you think makes the important decisions that affect our communities? It’s natural to answer, “Our elected officials.” That’s who we hold accountable for our government’s performance. But all too often …

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THE WEEK: Who’s running for mayor of Comox? And Elections BC issues fine

The Week: Comox voter turnout better than most; Elections BC reviews by-election complaints

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The Week: Comox voter turnout better than most; Elections BC reviews by-election complaints

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Isn’t it curious that elections for local government — the ones with the most direct impact on our day-to-day lives — routinely attract the fewest number of voters?

More voters turn out for provincial and federal elections because they build a higher profile among the general population. And they’re able to do that because political parties have more donors and therefore more money to spend on signs, campaign organizations and advertising. Local candidates just don’t have that level of resources.

And it doesn’t help to raise awareness of local elections when local radio and print media provide the bare minimum of coverage.

But here’s some good news. You might look at the recent by-election in the Town of Comox and lament the low voter turnout (18 percent of eligible voters), or you might draw a more positive conclusion: Comox by-election voters are among the most engaged in BC.

In the City of Burnaby, for example, only 8.4 percent of eligible voters turned out this year for a by-election. In the City of Richmond, only 9 percent cast ballots. The City of Abbotsford matched Comox with 18 percent, but even the City of Victoria fell short at 17 percent in 2020.

Comox did better in the 2018 general election, too, when 4,392 of Comox’s 10,867 eligible voters (40 percent) showed up at the polls. That was 4.8 percent better than the 36 percent average across the province.

In other words, the Comox population was well represented in the recent by-election, comparatively speaking. And especially so when you consider the town’s by-election came on the heels of a federal election campaign and in the midst of a storm that drenched voters on their way to the polling station.

By-election winner Dr. Jonathan Kerr credited his success to the 65 volunteers who ran a “positive, value-based campaign.” His team always took the high road, he said, and stuck to the issues that people told them were important.

“This was a win for participatory democracy,” he told Decafnation this week. “That was one of our six values at the core of our campaign. We focused on really engaging people and being open and accessible.”

Kerr praised his campaign’s volunteers for not slipping into a “hard political style campaign.”

“Our approach was to engage people whether on the doorstep or wherever by simply saying we’re here to learn about the issues that are most important to you,” he said.

Kerr said he’s looking forward to finding common ground with the other council members and to using creative methods of engaging the public, such as drop-in coffee shop chats and Zoom town hall meetings. He used both during the campaign and says there’s no reason not to do more as a council member.

Perennial candidate Don Davis told us that he thought the election results were predictable.

“The campaign was much different with Covid and digital,” he said. “Too early to say intentions for next year. I have alway tried to be non-partisan, but maybe it’s time to get a team behind me.”

First-time candidate Judy Johnson said she learned a lot in this campaign and that she feels more prepared for another run in 2022.

“I enjoyed meeting the candidates and hope that we all get elected next year because I think our four different perspectives and strengths will provide four solid pillars for an effective council,” she told Decafnation.

Candidate Steve Blacklock did not respond to our invitation to share his observations about the election. But he did post his thoughts on Facebook.

“Not the result we needed on Comox Election night. Very saddened that only 2100 people (18%) actually exercised their franchise democratic right. This is how democracy dies. Congratulations to Jonathan Kerr and the #ComoxGreens, with 4 out of 6 members of council now ‘aligned progressives’ the future of Comox is a (sic) bright as the rising sun.”

Elections BC confirmed that it has received two complaints as a result of the Comox by-election. The complaints allege violations of the legislation administered by Elections BC, including the Election Act, the Recall and Initiative Act and the Local Elections Campaign Financing Act.

A spokesperson for Elections BC told Decafnation this week that the office is conducting an official review of both complaints to determine if they warrant an investigation.

“We take any potential contravention of the legislation we administer seriously and we review every complaint we receive, but not all reviews result in an investigation,” the spokesperson said. “If a complaint does not result in an investigation, we will advise the complainant and tell them why an investigation will not be conducted.”

For all our palindrome fans, did you notice that yesterday’s date was 12-1-21?

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