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Disaster aid motion shot down

SILGA: Convention brings municipal issues to the forefront.
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All smiles: Salmon Arm Coun.Marg Kentel presents a gift basket to B.C. Auditor General for Local Government Basia Ruta

While this year’s  Southern Interior Local Government Association convention was successful for Salmon Arm, it wasn’t entirely so for the District of Sicamous.

Last week the City of Salmon Arm hosted 200 local government representatives, who were in town for the three-day convention.

Held at the Prestige Harbourfront Resort, the event provided an opportunity for members to discuss pressing issues of the day, pass related resolutions to go to the Union of BC Municipalities convention for wider support, and learn from numerous guest speakers including former Shuswap MLA George Abbott, B.C. Auditor General for Local Government Basia Ruta and former Vancouver Canuck Trevor Linden. But the event, organized and co-ordinated with the help of Salmon Arm council’s SILGA representative Chad Eliason and city staff, was also an opportunity to showcase the city.

There were 34 resolutions voted on during the convention. While Salmon Arm did not have any resolutions, the District of Sicamous had four, of which only two passed.

Of the resolutions that didn’t succeed, the most surprising for Sicamous Mayor Darrell Trouton had to do with seasonal property owners not being covered under the province’s Disaster Financial Assistance. The resolution urges the province  review this policy, “with a view to allowing all property owners regardless of principle or secondary occupancy, to qualify for DFA.” What was particularly surprising for Trouton was the sole person who spoke against this resolution, the Columbia Shuswap Regional District’s Area E–Sicamous/Malakwa director Rhona Martin.

Martin said she spoke against the resolution because the policy is the same elsewhere, including Alberta. She also noted B.C. wouldn’t have the money to cover the proposed change.

“I know how horrible it is, I’ve had to watch it twice now, where you have folks on one side of the street that are able to get coverage because they live there all the time, and you have folks on the other side of the street and it’s their seasonal property and they don’t receive any compensation,” said Martin. “At the same time, it would be millions of dollars and I don’t think we can afford it.”

After the municipal auditor’s presentation, Ruta addressed a question on the minds of many present – the pressures an audit might have on already limited resources. Ruta suggested avoiding duplication and the provision of additional resources via the Local Government Management Association as possible solutions.

Sicamous administrator Heidi Frank is hopeful that, if an audit should proceed, that some kind of support comes with it.

“Because we are all at full capacity and there’s no way we can take any of our staff and pull them aside to work with an auditor general,” said Frank. “While I understand what the province is trying to do, the strain is going to be huge on small communities.”