By Don White
Okay, full disclosure. I’m still really shocked by the lack of enshrined rights of municipalities in provincial/federal constitutions. But even more concerning is how the lack of such rights is routinely used by some provinces to effectively disenfranchise voters at the local level.
Canadian municipalities are created by and exist at the pleasure of the provinces. They are creatures of the provinces without independent authority to decide on actions, policies, or solutions for local issues. This relationship is “often characterized by provincial dominance” and numerous examples exist where provincial governments have ruled against local wishes.
In the recent past, both Nanaimo and Penticton have experienced the willingness of Victoria to ignore or override local governments, community plans, and bylaws. In Ontario, Queen’s Park overrode Toronto’s choice of an electoral system on the eve on an election and have thrown around Ministerial Zoning Orders in a way that suggests that province is hell-bent on being the worst offender.
While BC isn’t alone in this, it may be one of the most committed to maintaining the imbalance of power. When Toronto sued Ontario for its actions on the eve of their municipal election, BC was the only province to file an opposing intervention. To repeat: BC was the only other government – out of the remaining eight provinces and three territories – to argue municipalities must remain subservient to provinces. (And Toronto subsequently lost its lawsuit.)
Equally dismaying are Victoria’s fiscal shenanigans associated with this imbalance. The province collects the tax dollars for funding many key programs and services located in municipalities. However, as noted in a previous VN Viewpoint, there’s a pattern of Victoria downloading responsibility for dealing with crises at the local level unaccompanied with the needed authority, funding, and training to manage the events. Recently, local efforts have been handcuffed by the province failing to act or provide the means to deal with floods, homelessness, overdosing, and recovery from disaster.
By downloading responsibilities to local governments without the needed funding … local voters stand to be short changed/shafted in the process.
By downloading responsibilities to local governments without the needed funding, the monies “saved” in Victoria can be shifted into provincial general revenues and used for other purposes. (Just sayin’.) And local voters stand to be short changed/shafted in the process.
How this situation came about is a matter for historians. There may have been good reasons to omit the rights of local governments when relationships between the federal government and provinces were constituted. If so, those reasons are long past.
Dividing responsibilities and authorities among the three levels of jurisdictions is fine when it is done to increase efficiency and effectiveness. But when one level of government uses it to wilfully impede another level only as an exercise of power or for its own self-serving benefit, it’s another matter. It is less a example of good governance than it is of authoritarian posturing.
If there is irony in this, it may be that all levels of governments are meant to be serving local voters since local voters comprise the electorates of all three levels. Granted, the purview of higher levels of government are broader than lower levels. However, community plans/bylaws should not be overridden unless there’s no other way to serve a greater and a broader good.
As the system stands, … municipalities have no effective means to protect their electorates when provinces go rogue.
Municipalities shouldn’t be losers in provincial power plays – as have happened in Nanaimo, Penticton, and Toronto, to cite only the three instances I’ve already mentioned. As the system stands, however, municipalities have no effective means to protect their electorates when provinces go rogue. They have no enshrined rights like the provinces have with Ottawa.
Interestingly, our best means of redressing this imbalance may also lie with the same commonality of local voters.
We consciously elect provincial governments to defend us from unwanted incursions by the federal government. Why not do the same in municipal elections? Why not elect a council in Nanaimo to defend us from Victoria overriding our local government and voters and withholding resources? Not for everything, of course, but on what would be determined as municipal rights, authority, and means.
We can consider the upcoming Municipal Election on October 15, 2022 as a timely opportunity to pursue that option. We can assess which candidates running in the upcoming municipal election
already understand how this imbalance and provincial dominance often render them powerless to act locally when local action is needed. Local voters can’t afford to wait for naive candidates – new or incumbent – to climb past this section of their learning curve.
We can ask candidates if they are prepared to work with Victoria to correct the situation for as long as the process is productive and mutually beneficial, and, when it’s not, assess whether they have the will and the stamina – the moxie – to continue the fight alone.
Recognizing that it is unlikely that Nanaimo, on its own, can prevail against the Capital, another measure of the suitability of Nanaimo Council candidates can be their willingness to work towards enlisting the Union of BC Municipalities (UBCM) and other municipalities in righting current provincial-municipals inequities of authority and resources. Will they be proactive leaders or just followers?
Sure, asking this of Nanaimo Council candidates may feel a bit unusual. But if we’ve learned anything from the recent past, it should be that “extraordinary” is exactly what is now most needed. Nothing about the old way of doing things will change without extraordinary action.
Admittedly, changing the municipal-provincial relationship will be an uphill battle. Just because it will be difficult, however, doesn’t mean it isn’t what we need to do. Electing local candidates who possess the commitment and stamina to fight Victoria may be just the place to start the process. Doing so equates to exercising personal empowerment. In the end, that’s the way true democracies work.
June 12, 2022 at 9:56 am
Don,
I only agree partly with this article.
The MANY times I have been to City Council on issues to only be told…go to the Provincial Government! I always tell them…you are our first line of defense! Grow some and YOU go to the provincial government is what I say!
Many do not want to take on Victoria on anything…so while I agree there is off loading going on big time, there is also an unwillingness to take on the fights they need to take on with Victoria.
Elect those who believe in our democracy and that believe the citizens must be listened to and not be treated as sheep!
June 12, 2022 at 6:24 pm
I agree with electing individuals to Council who are willing to stand up and speak out to the powers that be in the Federal and Provincial governments but I am not sure how to make the whole process work. When I read news stories about things that are happening in other municipalities, like Victoria, I do start to wonder why they seem to have more influence than Nanaimo. Following are some things that I have noticed in the time that I have spent trying to advocate for pedestrians and people who are unhoused in Nanaimo:
1. We need candidates who are willing to ask pointed, relevant, and respectful questions to the bureaucrats who present choices to them. As an example, the Council was approached regarding a second Strengthening Communities’ Services Grant application (both Provincial and Federal money is used for this). One of the listed items for the grant was funding for a one year lease of a vehicle to be used by the First Nations homeless outreach team. Great idea but the cost was $80,000 and not one person questioned this. You could buy a Tesla with this amount of money but apparently the grant didn’t allow for purchase.
2. There needs to be a process in place that allows the three levels of government to truly and actually work together to achieve goals. Right now, when I ask questions of them (municipal and provincial) I get told to contact the other party. For example, the City did receive a grant, again through the Strengthening Communities” grant program and I wrote to both levels of government and still didn’t get a definitive answer. The Province also agreed that Nanaimo would get funding for a Navigation Centre, a few years ago now, and the last thing that I was told by my MLA’s office was that the City hadn’t approved any possible location suggestions yet. This would help 60 people in their need to get off the streets.
3. We need politicians at all levels who are willing to follow their values and goals without worrying about getting elected again. I have become very cynical about the election process for any level of government and although I do continue to vote I sometimes question the worth of doing so.
4. We need enough citizens to step forward and be a united voice for issues that are important to the functioning of a municipality. Social media does not seem to work to accomplish this, as the focus on a topic lasts for about 2 or 3 days and it is not always clear that real actions such as writing letters, etc. were taken. That is why I applaud Don for trying to take a different approach to those who are concerned enough to discuss these issues and perhaps figure out solutions.
June 12, 2022 at 9:08 pm
Here is an interesting update on this column – particularly for those who believe there will be no support for this action on Nanaimo City Council.
As I have learned, a motion for advancing exactly this reform, i.e. modernizing BC’s Local Government Act was passed unanimously by the Board Directors of the RDN (on which the majority of Nanaimo’s Councillors sit). That motion was then taken to last April’s AGM of the Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities (AVICC)and put before that body. That motion also passed with strong support at the AVICC and will now be tabled at this fall’s UBCM.
So it’s an appropriate time to get the word(s) out:
First: Kudos and full support to Nanaimo City Councillors who originated and advanced the action; the same to the BoD of the RDN who voted unanimously to pass it on; and likewise to the AVICC.
Second: Supporting information to friends, family, and acquaintances in other communities around BC so that they can urge their own councils and delegates to September’s UBCM to support this initiative. Make it easy on yourself. Just send them the link to this page and its discussion. https://visioningnanaimo.ca/how-about-we-elect-only-candidates-who-have-the-moxie-to-fight-victoria/
June 13, 2022 at 9:49 am
I hear you Darcy and I, like you, think that our votes mean very little these days.
I also hear you Don. The UBCM, however, does sweet boom all for their membership! I would like a list of things they have done out of all the resolutions passed to see what they have actually accomplished!
June 13, 2022 at 11:27 am
Good point, June. However, despite past defeats, surely we have to keep trying and keep trying to get more people supporting/demanding that the changes happen. To the AVICC’s credit, that is what they’re doing. As they acknowledged in the information they included with the resolution: “The Resolutions Committee notes that the UBCM membership has endorsed similar resolutions seeking a review of the Local Government Act as it relates to the legislative authority of regional districts (2018-B4, 2015-B1).” Obviously, these earlier attempts were unsuccessful at getting Victoria to change, but here they are again.