Opinion
leaders in Red Deer have taken a look at the city's growth, and are
suggesting city councillors ought to represent distinct parts of the
city, rather than the city as a whole.
So
in addition to casting your ballot for mayor, councillors and school
boards on Oct. 21, you will also be asked to vote Yes or No on
adopting a ward system for future councils.
For
my part, I'm skeptical the change would do us much good, at this
point in our city's development.
Electing
city councillors on the basis of two per ward, rather than eight in a
group, in my view, solves problems that we don't have yet. And
creating electoral divisions in the city could well create problems that we don't need.
This
current election has been a challenge for voters, sifting through
this record number of candidates. But if one pays attention, one can
still find four, six, or eight individuals you believe make a good
fit for the job.
After
all, a whole lot of people here manage to sort through the entire NHL
roster of players to construct their hockey pools, so asking people
to pay enough attention to their own homes and their own city over
the course of a month-long campaign is not asking too much.
Nor
is it asking too much of a city councillor to wrap one's mind around
the makeup of our city, over the course of four years.
I do
acknowledge that Red Deer has indeed evolved cultural and social
differences, based in part on our regions.
Our
central area is residentially and economically different than our
neighbourhoods around the perimeter. The northwest corner of our city
has a different feel than the southeast.
West
Park — Red Deer's first suburb — is evolving into a city centre
type of neighbourhood.
Different
regions, different ways that people live their lives.
But
no one area of Red Deer has as yet been so overlooked — or is so
fundamentally different from the others — that it needs specialized
representation on city council.
In
fact, the simple act of drawing lines on a map might make perceived
differences a concrete rule. Lines do divide.
This
leads to my major concern with a ward system, that we will not get
that any better representation on a city council, just more costly
representation.
One
ward gets a street upgrade, a rec centre or an outdoor rink, and the
representatives of the ward on the other side of the city will have
to get one, too. Not out of demonstrated need, but out of “fairness.”
Ward
seats will very quickly be determined by which candidate can
promise the most to their region, not for what's best for the city
as a whole. That's not the goal of a ward system, but in politics, it
is the result.
The
result is competition, winners and losers — and council
effectiveness based on who is able to negotiate for their re-election
in one zone of the city, not the city as a whole. For our size of
city, it's not the most cost-efficient way to conduct business.
Red
Deer will probably need ward divisions in the future, when stellar
growth in some zones creates an unfair advantage for services
that are also needed in zones that had built the fundamentals for
that growth. If an older neighbourhood doesn't get needed repairs, or
transit routes, a crime prevention program or recreation facilities,
it becomes what council makes it.
My
vote will ask our next city council to look forward to the day wards are needed, but
not to assume it has already arrived.
One
more short election comment on mayoral candidate Tara Veer's platform
of rebranding Red Deer as a “City of Choice.”
Red
Deer is certainly my choice already. But Veer knows that work to
rebrand the city has officially been under way for quite some time
now. Red Deer's identity is one of the pillars of our charter
program, and council has been working on that for years.
A
whole lot of staff hours and expenses have already been spent on
this charter, which is being made ready to present to council after
it is elected.
So,
just what are we doing here?
City
of Choice makes a great sound bite, but is Veer suggesting we throw
out work that's already been done, before we're even able to see a
report for our money? Or are we re-making the Identity Charter in a
particular image, to take credit for work that's already been done?
City
of Choice. I like it. But for my money, I want to see what the work
on the charter has produced, first.
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