Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Appointment of new Surrey Ethics Commissioner Peter Johnson

Darpan News Desk City of Surrey, 07 Mar, 2023 04:45 PM
  • Appointment of new Surrey Ethics Commissioner Peter Johnson

Surrey, B.C. - Following an extensive search performed by the Surrey Ethics Commissioner Selection Committee, Surrey Council has unanimously appointed Peter Johnson as the City’s new Ethics Commissioner. Mr. Johnson is a partner with B.C. law firm, Stewart McDannold Stuart, and possesses more than 30 years of knowledge and experience providing legal advice and assistance to local governments throughout the province on a wide variety of matters. 

“Restoring the Ethics Commissioner has been a top priority of mine to bring back transparency and accountability to Council,” said Mayor Brenda Locke. “With his extensive experience on municipal matters, Peter Johnson is the ideal candidate to fulfill the duties of the Office of the Ethics Commissioner. I would also like to thank the Ethics Commissioner Selection Committee for their exceptional work in finding a highly qualified candidate for such an important position.”

Mr. Johnson had previously served as the City of Surrey’s interim ethics commissioner in 2020 when Surrey became the first municipality in British Columbia to establish such a  position.

As an independent officer, the role of the Ethics Commissioner role is to advise and assist Council on how to best enhance open, transparent, and accountable governance. The mandate of the Ethics Commissioner’s also includes the authority to investigate complaints and make disciplinary recommendations to Council.

The Surrey Ethics Selection Commissioner Committee was chaired by Councillor Harry Bains and the following members:

  • Mayor Locke (co- chair)
  • Marisa Cruickshank
  • Joseph Cuenca
  • Baljit Dhaliwal
  • Jasroop Gosal

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Tourism spending may recover sooner than expected

Tourism spending may recover sooner than expected
The government organization says that Canada's domestic travel market spending is recovering at an even faster pace and is expected to reach 92 per cent of 2019 levels in 2022 and fully recover in 2023.

Tourism spending may recover sooner than expected

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital
RCMP is still investigating the circumstances, however there are early indications the shooting was targeted and may have involved several suspects who fled the area. Investigators are still gathering details from witnesses who were at the home at the time of the shooting.

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse
The Canada Border Services Agency says the two countries are exploring "shorter-term measures" to shrink a backlog of applications. At the Thousand Islands crossing between Ontario and New York, in-person Nexus interviews are being conducted separately by U.S. and Canadian agents on opposite sides of the border.

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses
The idea, which is expected to cost a total of $20 million a year, has already received significant criticism from more than two dozen people speaking against the motion at an earlier meeting.

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses

Prince Rupert, B.C., shooting suspect dies

Prince Rupert, B.C., shooting suspect dies
A statement from the Prince Rupert detachment says the 44-year-old man had been in critical condition following the attack on the unnamed woman at a local mall early Monday. The 52-year-old victim died before she could be taken to hospital.

Prince Rupert, B.C., shooting suspect dies

Seven B.C. commercial poultry flocks have bird flu

Seven B.C. commercial poultry flocks have bird flu
Six of the farms are in Abbotsford and one is in Chilliwack, in the Fraser Valley, the same area where more than 17 million birds were culled in 2004 when avian flu swept through numerous farms. The ministry says producers within a 10-kilometre radius have been notified and all infected farms have been placed under quarantine by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

Seven B.C. commercial poultry flocks have bird flu