Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Councillors OK hefty pay hike for themselves for Fort McMurray recovery work

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2016 11:09 AM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Councillors from a northeastern Alberta municipality severely damaged by a huge forest fire have voted themselves a hefty raise.
     
    The Rural Municipality of Wood Buffalo includes the city of Fort McMurray, which saw more than 80,000 residents flee from the wildfire that destroyed several neighbourhoods seven weeks ago.
     
    Council voted Tuesday night to pay three of its members and Mayor Melissa Blake $150,000 a year to work full time on a recovery committee.
     
    The other seven councillors, whose positions are considered part time, will see their pay rise to $75,000 a year from $36,000.
     
    Councillors on the recovery committee are Keith McGrath, Sheldon Germain, Allan Vinni and the mayor.
     
    The bylaw passed 7-4, with Blake and councillors Jane Stroud, Phil Meagher and Tyran Ault opposed.
     
    Blake, Stroud and Ault said after the council meeting they will not take the salary increase.
     
    The bylaw states committee members who are also councillors "shall devote their effort and attention to the work of the committee as they would to a full-time job, and thus shall take steps to reduce their time commitment to their other business interests or employment as may be required in order to devote such level of effort and attention to their committee duties for so long as the post-wildfire recovery period lasts.”
     
    It says the other councillors “will be required to devote an increased level of effort and attention to their council duties and activities since the normal council and council committee work will continue.”
     
    The committee begins work Wednesday and six members of the public are to be appointed following a selection process.
     
    Once all members have been chosen, a chair and vice-chair will be selected.
     
    Coun. Colleen Tatum explained in a Facebook post why she is accepting the pay raise.
     
    "Child care, lost time in my business, lost opportunities elsewhere, do cost me much more than I ever earn," she said. "It does seem obscene on face value, to ask for a raise in these extreme and very hard times, but the justification I do feel is there."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Evening Shooting On Vancouver Island Critically Injures Two People

    Evening Shooting On Vancouver Island Critically Injures Two People
    SOOKE, B.C. — A shooting has prompted a manhunt in Sooke, B.C.,about 40 kilometres west of Victoria.

    Evening Shooting On Vancouver Island Critically Injures Two People

    Investigation Planned After Salmon Arm, B.C. Student Severely Hurt In Shop Accident

    Investigation Planned After Salmon Arm, B.C. Student Severely Hurt In Shop Accident
    Superintendent Glenn Borthistle says it happened Tuesday afternoon in one of the shops at the Jackson campus of Salmon Arm Secondary in Salmon Arm, B.C.

    Investigation Planned After Salmon Arm, B.C. Student Severely Hurt In Shop Accident

    Vancouver Brothers Get Four Years In Prison For $4.9 Million Charity Tax Fraud Scheme

    Vancouver Brothers Get Four Years In Prison For $4.9 Million Charity Tax Fraud Scheme
    Vancouver residents Fareed Raza and Saheem Raza were both found guilty of fraud over $5,000 in December 2015 for issuing fake donation receipts in exchange for cash donations that were not passed on to charity.

    Vancouver Brothers Get Four Years In Prison For $4.9 Million Charity Tax Fraud Scheme

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Romantic Rival Says Ex-Girlfriend Hatched Plot

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Romantic Rival Says Ex-Girlfriend Hatched Plot
    Tyler Myers, 22, was shot to death in a Salmon Arm schoolyard on Nov. 21, 2008.

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Romantic Rival Says Ex-Girlfriend Hatched Plot

    Independent Investigation Launched After Man Fatally Shot By Nanaimo RCMP

    The IIO says police fired shots and the man was transported to hospital but did not survive.

    Independent Investigation Launched After Man Fatally Shot By Nanaimo RCMP

    Former Victoria Seniors Home To House 140 Homeless, Including Tent City Camp

    Former Victoria Seniors Home To House 140 Homeless, Including Tent City Camp
    B.C. paid $11.2 million for the former care facility which will be ready for tenants next month.

    Former Victoria Seniors Home To House 140 Homeless, Including Tent City Camp