Category Archives: Municipal

The Fault Lies Not in Our Stars but in Ourselves

” What’s the matter with all of our elected officials? Obviously, health care is not your top priority. Taxing us to death seems to be at the top of your list.”

What is the matter with our elected officials Ms Whiteford? You and the majority of other citizens, along with reporters, pundits, the media and opposition politicians.

Where do you suggest the government get the funds to build more hospitals or pay more medical staff? Perhaps capture Rumplestiltskin, imprison him in the basement of the Legislature and have him spin straw into the tons of gold required to pay for the multi-billion dollar demands of yourself and others?

Billions of dollars in demands for new infrastructure and services that everybody demands and refuses to pay for – ” Taxing us to death…” Citizens behave as if the provincial government did have Rumplestiltskin in the Legislature basement generating an unending supply of gold from straw.

That may seem, may well be, a little snarky but – people demand to keep underutilized schools open, build new schools, smaller class sizes, more hospitals and hospital beds, more medical staff, more expensive medical treatments and drugs, they want to spend billions more to build and staff prisons to lock more people up for longer periods of time, they want……they want……they want……..

They want everything NOW and they want it for FREE – or at least they don’t want it to cost them any money or to raise their taxes.

You want more schools and hospital beds? Then that is what you should have been demanding the government spend its money on rather than spending billions on the two week blowout that was the Winter Olympics. The money being spent on replacing the stadium roof in Vancouver would pay for St. Paul’s hospital to be renovated.

We want it all without having to pay for it; the size of government debt bears witness that for years we have been consuming more government services that we were paying for – whipping out the credit card and running up a huge debt to pay for our lavish lifestyle; we don’t want to set priorities and make the tough choices; we behave like two year olds with no acknowledgment of reality, no economic sense or view for anything beyond the now, certainly no thought to the future.

And as happens in the real world our spendthrift ways are catching up to us. The cost of the services government provides are climbing – medical costs are increasing exponentially. Without an increase in revenue to offset these spiking costs we are going to be getting less services across the board – forget about more services.

Will we have a discussion about our priorities, about the costs of programs, about what we can afford and what we cannot, about what is – rather than what we believe or want to be, acknowledge we cannot have everything we want and discuss what we are willing to pay and what services the dollars we are willing to pay will purchase?

No, people will support the party that tells them what they want to hear – that there is no problem and to party on.

Then people will complain that the politicians lied to them. Ignoring the fact that lying to them is what voters reward politicians for doing.

Could the government be run in a more cost effective manner – yes;, could the money be spent more wisely – yes; could the future financial health of the province be much improved – yes. Will it? Well…..

Should anyone make the mistake of talking about acting in a fiscally responsible manner, of paying for what services we use rather than saddling our children and their children and their children with debt because we ‘put it on the provincial (or federal) credit card’, of setting priorities……

They will be sent home with their tails between their legs for not telling the people the lies they want to hear.

Pointing fingers at others, blaming others will not improve the financial reality of provincial (federal, municipal) finances. If people want to see the root cause – and where the solution lies – to our current (and increasing) political, social and economic woes they need only look in a mirror.

P3 – Public Pocketbook Pauperization

Reading that Abbotsford City Council is working on a P3 my first thought was ‘Hasn’t council done enough financial damage to the city and to taxpayers pocketbooks’?

My second thought was to be glad I was not a homeowner.

??? – The taxes and costs imposed by Abbotsford council have raised the cost of owning a home in Abbotsford. These costs show no sign of stopping or slowing under the current city council and staff’s demonstrated unwillingness and/or inability to get the city’s finances under control. The proposed P3 will significantly increase the yearly cost of city taxes/fees/levies when taxpayers begin paying for the P3 in a few years.

The concern is that the cost of the P3 will push the level of city taxes/fees/levies to the point where the cost will make owning property in Abbotsford unaffordable to many potential new taxpayers as well as some current taxpayers. This will have a negative effect on the real estate market; on both price and the time it takes to sell.

Knowing that the P3 is coming, that it will impose significantly higher cost and hit the real estate market – are you going to be able to afford the additional carrying costs of owning property in Abbotsford or should you be selling and getting out of town while the getting is good?

My next thought was that this time I hoped council and staff would cross all their t’s and dot all their i’s so that taxpayers would not find themselves once again, ala Plan A, promised millions of dollars in senior government funding that never materializes. Hoping that some taxpayer would not be asking Ed Fast why he did not get Abbotsford federal funds only to have him reply, as he did when asked that question about Plan A, “I was never asked.”

Finally I thought to myself ‘nice try George but no cigar’ for the mayor’s seeming attempt to suggest going with a P3 would make the project eligible for up to $50 million in federal funds. Let’s be clear that the federal funding is due to the nature of the project and has nothing to do with how the project (P3 or otherwise) is paid for.

P3’s are loved by politicians for a number of reasons, foremost among them being a total lack of accountability to the public or evaluation by the public.

Politicians can operate behind closed doors and keep the details, and thus the costs, totally secret because citizens lose their right to freedom of information about the details of an agreement when private business interests are involved. By definition a P3 has to have private business interests which means P3s are cloaked in secrecy leaving taxpayers questions unanswered.

Being veiled in secrecy as P3 agreements are, strips away taxpayers right and ability to evaluate and judge how detrimental the P3 will be to the public’s pocketbooks.

The second reason politicians have for loving P3 agreements is that spreading costs over time – a decade’s long period of time – ensures the public is unable to know what a P3 project actually cost them out of pocket until decades after the project begins at the time the project is finally fully paid out. How could politicians not love a plan that, no matter how bad the agreement is and how many millions or hundreds of millions or even a billion extra dollars it will cost taxpayers the veil of secrecy hides the details of the P3 from the public, ensuring that the public cannot know how many millions or hundreds of millions extra dollars they paid until long after the politicians are gone, retired on their golden government pensions.

Mayor Peary, following Abbotsford Council policy when someone fails to cheer council’s plans, or worse raises questions as to the wisdom of council’s plan, played the naysayer card.

“Some people have a political and philosophical objection to P3s,” he [Mayor Peary] said.

I had no political or philosophical objections to Plan A – I had financial objections and objections based on the infrastructure needs of the city. I have no political or philosophical objections to P3’s – I have financial objections.

The question is not whether a P3 will cost the public more money, extra cost to the public purse is inherent in the nature of a P3. There has to be a profit for the private partner, a profit that must be guaranteed and substantial enough to make the headaches and risks of a ‘partnership’ with the government/public worthwhile.

P3 projects also have longer time lines to ensure the private partner has no difficulty in meeting the completion date. The fact that Abbotsford’s new regional hospital was completed 108 days early is not an indication of how efficient the builder was but how effective the builder was at bargaining an overly generous completion schedule.

However, the factor that adds the millions or hundreds of millions of dollars of extra cost to the projects and to taxpayer out of pocket cost is the financing costs. Financing costs are a significant portion of the costs of any long term project (look at the financing costs of Plan A for an example of the high cost of financing).

Because the financing for P3s is provided by the private partner and interest rates for private borrowers are higher than for governments, the financing (interest) costs of P3 projects are higher than they would be for a public financed project.

These increased interest/financing costs add millions or hundreds of millions of dollars to the interest costs of P3 projects.

I would love to be able to discuss specifics of the increased costs involved in P3 projects but I can’t, no citizen can. The details of the BC governments P3s are hidden from the public until everything has been paid out decades from now.

Over his term in office Mayor Peary has made many statements that made many an accountant or manager’s blood run cold because of the negative impact these statements would have on the city’s finances and on taxpayer’s pocket books.

But “He [Mayor Peary] pointed to the Abbotsford Regional Hospital and Cancer Centre as an example of success, calling it the “poster child” for P3s” dwarfs any of those statements in its promise to deny taxpayers any ability to evaluate the agreement and in the millions of extra dollars it will cost Abbotsford’s battered and impoverished taxpayers.

Taxpayers need to keep in mind that the Abbotsford Regional Hospital and Cancer Centre P3 that mayor Peary calls a “’poster child’ for P3s” was so generous and profitable for the private sector that the agreement became a financial instrument bought and sold among international banks.

While that level of profitability undoubtedly makes the Abbotsford Regional Hospital and Cancer Centre P3 a ‘poster child’ from the viewpoint of the private sector, it makes it a pricey cautionary tale for taxpayers when politicians try to sell them more snake oil.

By the very nature of a P3, using a P3 to build the needed water system improvements will cost taxpayers millions of dollars extra in interest charges alone. How many more millions it will cost depend on negotiation ability – or lack thereof of staff and council.

The staff and council who built the Reach for $10 million; a structure that any farmer in the valley who has built a barn could have managed and built for a fraction of the cost. The staff and council who built the AESC with a promised, a sworn to $55 million cost for only $110 million – double the guaranteed ‘contracted price’.

As to Abbotsford city staff and council and P3s:

The deal between the City of Abbotsford and the Abbotsford Heat is, for all intents and purposes, a P3. So since Mayor Peary, staff and council are speaking about using a P3 – let us take a look at the deal between the Heat and the City.

Abbotsford’s taxpayers have no idea what the Abbotsford Heat are in fact costing them. Taxpayers have no facts as to the number of taxpayer’s dollars being poured directly, or indirectly (staff time spent on the Heat but paid by the city – for example. ARC where space and staff promote the Heat and provide box office services) into the Heat. Taxpayers have only rumours about the ownership of the Heat and cannot determine if the city is directly involved in/with Heat ownership. A recent Freedom of Information request to provide clarity on these questions was refused because of the involvement of private interests.

Why would local politicians not embrace a P3 to bail themselves out of the mess they have made of managing the city’s infrastructure and finances; of their inability to prioritize projects that address needs (water, road maintenance) over council and councillor’s ego projects (million dollar, unused garden; a professional hockey team and a building for them to play in); a P3 that will hide all the details of the agreement from the public.

A P3 will deny taxpayers their right to know the total out of pocket costs to taxpayers of the project – an out of pocket cost that a P3 will add millions of dollars to.

Why would Abbotsford’s and Mission’s politicians worry about the fact that a P3 will add millions of dollars to the cost to taxpayers? After all the politicians will be long, decades long, gone before the final payment is made and taxpayers can determine just how many more millions of dollars Abbotsford’s council poor financial decision making cost them.

Clearly a P3 is not a decision to be rushed into; particularly not rushed into merely so Abbotsford city council can say (during the upcoming municipal elections?) “no need for taxpayers to worry their little heads – we have taken care of the water matter” (now where have I heard that kind of line in a municipal election before?); not a decision to be made behind closed doors.

A P3 will impose not only substantial costs for decades, but the costs imposed on the taxpayers of Abbotsford (and Mission) will be significantly higher than the costs of a well managed municipal project (the most important factor affecting the cost of a public project being the level of management skill available to bring to the project).

Indeed, considering the secrecy involved, the inability of taxpayers to evaluate the P3 as a result of being denied the details by that secrecy and the millions of dollars that a P3 will cost the taxpayers of Abbotsford and Mission……

……if Abbotsford council and staff are determined to forge ahead with a P3 it is a decision that should be deferred to give the taxpayers, who will be paying for the P3, a chance to have their say on whether to use a P3 in November’s upcoming municipal election.

“I am a taxpayer and I’m entitled …

The television news report on Royal Columbian Hospital using Tim Hortons for emergency patients had an on camera interview with a daughter who’s mother was one of the patients in Tim Hortons who stated “how awful that you’ve been a taxpayer all of your life … that your end days are with that kind of quality of care … there is no excuse for that, I think they should be ashamed.”

I have heard, I suspect we have all heard – perhaps have stated ourselves – variations on the ‘I’m a taxpayer! What am I paying taxes for? I have paid taxes all my life……….

I had just spoken to a class at UFV on affordable housing, homelessness, addiction, mental illness, poverty and related social issues stating that these were not problems but consequences of both the way politics is practiced and the way though is practiced. More accurately about what we ‘know’ or what is ‘known’ or ‘common knowledge’ and how if we applied thought to these matters we would find or realize reality is markedly different from what is ‘known’.

When I heard the ‘been a taxpayer all my life’ statement I found myself examining the implications, the entitlement, contained in that statement. While the statement has the appearance or semblance of truth, when one carefully examines, carefully considers the statement it becomes clear that all it has is the appearance of truth.

The underlying fiscal reality for those who have paid taxes all their life is that what they are entitled to is CPP. The chart of Canada’s national debt below shows clearly that only those who retired prior to 1944 can make claims upon the federal government beyond CPP.

Year                                       Federal Debt

Prior to WW II                  $0

1944                                    $ 8,000,000,000

1961-62                             $ 14,825,000,000

1970-71                            $ 20,293,000,000

1980-81                              $ 91,948,000,000

1990-91                             $377,656,000,000

1996-97                            $562,881,000,000

2001-02                           $511,946,000,000

2007-08                          $457,637,000,000

2008-09                          $463,710,000,000

2009-10                          $519,100, 000,000

2010-11                           $522,337, 000,000 (projected)

2011-12                           $535,237, 000,000 (projected)

2012-13                          $542,537, 000,000 (projected)

If you purchase something for $1,500 and you pay out $1500 it is yours as you have paid out the full price of your purchase and are entitled to benefit from your purchase.

If you buy the something for $1500 and only pay $1200 you still owe $300 that must be paid and until you pay the final $300 you are not entitled to your purchase.

Beginning in 1944 Canadian taxpayers have been paying only a portion of the price of their ‘purchases’ of federal government services, borrowing to cover the remaining cost of the federal services ‘purchased’, putting the balance on a federal credit card- a balance that remains to be paid, a balance that continues to grow.

So, while taxpayers have paid taxes all their lives they have failed to pay sufficient taxes to cover the cost of the federal government . Taxpayers have avoided paying the full tab by running deficits, adding the outstanding unpaid yearly balances to the federal debt.

Every Canadian man, woman or child has/owes their portion of the federal debt, the debt of the province they reside in and the debt of the municipality they live in.

So while Canadians may be entitled to the CPP they paid into, the only ones entitled to anything else from the federal, provincial or municipal governments are those who loaned money to these governmental bodies and are entitled to repayment of principal plus interest.

Receiving medical care in Tim Hortons is a consequence of the decisions taxpayers have made (spending on the Winter Olympic venues rather than hospitals), together with years of choosing not to pay the full cost of all the services they were receiving from government.

If Canadians don’t want to be receiving medical care in Tim Hortons or hospital hallways they need to make better choices, to be willing to make hard decisions, face fiscal realities, understand we cannot have everything we want ‘right now’ and be willing to pay the full cost of the services etc we want (receive) from federal, provincial and municipal governments.

If Canadians don’t change our behaviours, choices and decision making, the days when you got medical services in the Tim Hortons at Royal Columbian are going to be the ‘good old days’ of public health care.

Society is Our choices.

A recent e-mail sent me to the Chilliwack Today website to read a column inspired by a Chilliwack Progress story concerning the proposed establishment of the Chilliwack Contact Center * for helping those living on the streets by converting the Days Inn hotel currently operating on Young Road.

*[A facility designed to offer housing and health services and solutions to the homeless that, according to Chilliwack MLA John Les will make a difference in people’s lives and improve our community. Medical care, court advocacy, rental assistance as well as help for those facing mental health or addictions issues.]

The first thought was about how many projects like this and other affordable housing projects have been bypassing, or in the case of the Olympic legacy housing passing right through, Abbotsford on the way to Chilliwack.

While Abbotsford ‘s Mayor and council have been very good at saying the right things and paying lip service to the need for affordable housing, they have failed at providing action based leadership on this issue, as they have on so many other pressing city issues (secure water supply, facilities and road maintenance, etc). Seeming to bury their heads in the sand, as if these issues/problems will disappear on their own.

But I digress.

The column and story were about a major, perhaps the major, problem that has given birth to our current society and that prevents us from addressing the problems and issues Canada and Canadians face – IT IS ALL ABOUT ME!

Which reared its ugly head in opposition to the Chilliwack Contact Centre.

You can recognize the presence of IT IS ALL ABOUT ME syndrome by the use of buzzwords or buzz-statements such as those uttered by area resident Renée Woods: “It’s not that I’m against the project in any way, I think Chilliwack definitely needs it.”

‘Woods main concern is the location, asking why the health contact centre couldn’t be established downtown instead.’

I cannot say whether those suffering from IT IS ALL ABOUT ME are lying to themselves or to the public to excuse their actions and obscure the reality that they are opposing the project they claim not to be against.

A location has been chosen, plans specific to that location have been prepared, a deal to purchase the property has been agreed upon – all that remains is rezoning. If the rezoning is not approved the Centre does not come into existence.

Regardless of how you try to spin it or delude oneself, the reality is that if you oppose the rezoning you oppose the Chilliwack Centre.

A reality more clearly seen in Ms Woods words “I’m worried that they’re just moving the problem from downtown to here. I feel they are taking the lowest socioeconomic group and moving it a block from my house,” she said. “If it changes the dynamic of our neighbourhood, it’s unfair.”

I believe I will let her words speak for, or more accurately against, themselves.

The deep, dark humour/irony here is the existence of neighbourhoods were Ms. Wood is seen as a member of the lower socioeconomic classes whose mere presence would change the dynamic of the neighbourhood.

People speak as though society results for someone else’s actions, is someone else’s fault as though their behaviours have nothing to do with or no effect on society.

Our society has been built and continues to be built by the choices, actions and behaviours of all of us. Every choice we make, every action we take – or don’t take, how we behave creates the society we live in.

In September 2010 I wrote about a business man who, finding a homeless man and his dog camped out under the awning of his building did not have man and dog removed but purchased a garden shed and installed it at the side of the building to provide shelter from the elements for man and dog.

This week the homeless man came down with pneumonia, requiring hospitalization. Once again the businessman stepped up to the plate when nothing compelled him to do so, except his own code of behaviour, and took the homeless dog home with him to make sure he is cared for.

The Society so many deplore is created and shaped by us. Society is us, our choices, actions and behaviours.

Choose which society you want to bring into being – the one that is created by Ms. Woods words, actions and attitudes OR the one that is created by the actions, attitudes and behaviour of the businessman.

Your/Our choices bring into being the Society we choose. If you do not like the Society that we live in – change your behaviour and influence others to change their behaviours until the Society you/we want exists.

They will never learn.

I want to salute local First Nations artist Raphael Silver for his sculpture. Elegant. It left me interested in seeing other works by Mr. Silver.

I also offer Mr. Silver my condolences as had his art been purchased by a fiscally sound and well managed city, or even an adequately managed city, the $64,000 would be considered to have been well spent.

Unfortunately for Mr. Silver he is dealing with the City of Abbotsford which, under its current mayor and council, does not meet even minimal standards of fiscal and management adequacy.

Leaving Mr. Silver’s artistry overshadowed by yet another demonstration by mayor and council of how out of touch with any sense of thrift, restraint, fiscally responsible behaviour or taxpayer’s wants/needs council is.

Council may consider $64,000 to be chump change, but $64,000 here, $64,000 there and before long it adds up to real money. The kind of money that the mayor, council and city management should have been setting aside to cover the $230 million cost of the needed new water supply.

In addition Mr. Silver’s art deserves a location where it can be savoured, rather than glimpsed – the case with its location at the center of one of Abbotsford’s new safe transit challenged roundabouts.

I wonder how many accidents will be caused, or claimed to have been caused, by drivers distracted by the sculpture. How many drivers will not see or have a chance to appreciate Mr. Silver’s art because they are focused on surviving their encounter with the roundabout?

Might I suggest that, rather than straining their arms patting themselves on the back for the $5 million ‘saved’, it would have been better to have invested the ‘savings’ making the roundabouts more travelable rather than leaving them in their current ‘accidents waiting to happen’ state.

But then making sensible investments in the basic operating infrastructure (roads, water etc.) of Abbotsford has never been of interest to council. Vanity projects – Yes. Nuts and bolts infrastructure and maintenance – No.