Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. urban mayors release calls to action

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2020 10:18 PM
  • B.C. urban mayors release calls to action

The mayors of British Columbia's 13 largest cities are calling on all provincial parties to commit to further action related to mental health and substance use, affordable housing, public transit and municipal finance reform ahead of next month's election.

Members of the B.C. Urban Mayors' Caucus say municipalities are bearing the brunt of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and financial challenges are putting the long-term sustainability of some critical services at risk.

They want the parties to commit to immediately expanding the availability of substance use and mental health treatment options, and to make permanent the recent public health order expanding the range of health professionals allowed to prescribe safe pharmaceutical alternatives to toxic street drugs.

The group of mayors is also asking the parties to consider alternative approaches to responding to emergency calls related to mental health and substance use while reviewing changes to the Police Act.

They're asking for spending on affordable, supportive and social housing, and a new approach to funding public transit, arguing it relies too heavily on "regressive" fares and local property taxes.

Abbotsford Mayor Henry Braun says the cities are operating under a financial framework that was set up in 1867, which is inadequate because it primarily relies on property taxes.

"We need the next provincial government to work with municipalities to reform how we are financed and implement a broader range of funding tools that will give us the resources to address the increasingly complex problems we are facing," he said in a statement.

Photo courtesy of Instagram: Henry Braun, Mayor of Abbotsford.

MORE National ARTICLES

Closing Arguments Begin In Legal Case Over Private Health Care In B.C.

Closing Arguments Begin In Legal Case Over Private Health Care In B.C.
Peter Gall began his closing arguments Monday in a decade-long constitutional challenge of the Medicare Protection Act of B.C. as lead plaintiff Dr. Brian Day, CEO of Cambie Surgical Corp., looked on from the gallery.

Closing Arguments Begin In Legal Case Over Private Health Care In B.C.

Two Hurt, Four Others Rescued, As Flames Damage Vancouver Apartment Building

VANCOUVER - Firefighters had to work quickly to rescue six residents of a burning apartment building in south Vancouver.

Two Hurt, Four Others Rescued, As Flames Damage Vancouver Apartment Building

Trans Mountain Received $320M In Government Subsidies In First Half 2019: Report

The money included $135.8 million in direct subsidies and $183.8 million in indirect subsidies that were not clearly disclosed to taxpayers, says the report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.    

Trans Mountain Received $320M In Government Subsidies In First Half 2019: Report

B.C. Introduces Gas Price Transparency Law Forcing Companies To Reveal Data

It's time to reveal to drivers in British Columbia how the price of gasoline is set, says provincial cabinet minister Bruce Ralston.

B.C. Introduces Gas Price Transparency Law Forcing Companies To Reveal Data

Police Release Sketch Of Suspect Wanted In Brampton Sex Assault

Investigators from the Peel Regional Police Special Victims Unit are continuing to seek the public’s assistance in relation to a sexual assault investigation in the City of Brampton.

Police Release Sketch Of Suspect Wanted In Brampton Sex Assault

Are You A Taxi Driver? If You Are, It’s Time To Start Buckling Up.

Taxi drivers used to be exempt from wearing seatbelts under Section 32.02 of the Motor Vehicle Act, as long as they remained under 70km/h. 

Are You A Taxi Driver? If You Are, It’s Time To Start Buckling Up.