Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Five Races To Watch In British Columbia's Municipal Elections On Saturday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2018 01:10 PM
  • Five Races To Watch In British Columbia's Municipal Elections On Saturday
VANCOUVER — Local elections will be held across British Columbia on Saturday. Here are five races to watch:
 
 
SURREY: Public safety and policing has emerged as one of voters' prime concerns in Surrey, where a task force aimed a preventing gang violence recently recommended more police enforcement. Mayor Linda Hepner isn't running again.
 
 
VANCOUVER: The city has seen an influx of new parties and candidates in the race to fill a void left by outgoing Mayor Gregor Robertson, whose Vision Vancouver party doesn't have a candidate running to replace him. Among those leading the race for the top seat are NDP MP Kennedy Stewart, local business owner Ken Sim and independent candidate Shauna Sylvester.
 
 
BURNABY: Opposing the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project has dominated Mayor Derek Corrigan's five-term tenure in recent years. He's facing competition from former firefighter Mike Hurley and respondents to one recent poll put housing ahead of the pipeline as the city's top issue.
 
 
NANAIMO: The election could trigger a provincial byelection if Leonard Krog, a New Democrat member of the legislature, wins the race for mayor and gives up his seat at the legislature. It wouldn't be enough to tip the balance of power into the Liberals' favour against an NDP minority government that's propped up by the Greens, but it would bring it to the brink. The Liberals have 42 seats in the house, the New Democrats 41, the Greens have three seats and there is one Independent.
 
 
 
VICTORIA: Incumbent Lisa Helps has courted controversy through the campaign season, first with the decision to remove a sculpture of John A. Macdonald from city hall and later when the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner claimed she and Esquimalt Mayor Barb Desjardins rushed to conclude an internal investigation against former police chief Frank Elsner. 
 
 
Both have defended the approach they took in the Elsner case and disputed a section of the commissioner's report on their handling of harassment complaints. Helps is defending her record against challengers that include political consultant Mike Geoghegan and lawyer Stephen Hammond.

MORE National ARTICLES

Wet Weather Means All Types Of Burning, Forest Use, OK In Two B.C. Fire Centres

Wet Weather Means All Types Of Burning, Forest Use, OK In Two B.C. Fire Centres
All restrictions on fires or forest use are being lifted in two of British Columbia's six fire centres for the first time since early summer.

Wet Weather Means All Types Of Burning, Forest Use, OK In Two B.C. Fire Centres

Coquitlam RCMP Introduce Traffic 'Scarecrow' In Bid To Prevent Speeding

Coquitlam RCMP Introduce Traffic 'Scarecrow' In Bid To Prevent Speeding
The RCMP is borrowing an idea from the United Kingdom by using a cut-out of a police officer to try and slow down traffic in Coquitlam, B.C.

Coquitlam RCMP Introduce Traffic 'Scarecrow' In Bid To Prevent Speeding

Nova Scotia To Allow 'X' As Gender Option On Birth Certificates

Nova Scotia To Allow 'X' As Gender Option On Birth Certificates
HALIFAX — Nova Scotians who don't exclusively identify as male or female will have the option of choosing 'X' on their birth certificates under changes proposed by the province.

Nova Scotia To Allow 'X' As Gender Option On Birth Certificates

Erin Weir Asking For External Body To Review Harassment Investigation

Erin Weir Asking For External Body To Review Harassment Investigation
OTTAWA — Saskatchewan MP Erin Weir says he wants an external appeal of the harassment investigation about him earlier this year, arguing he was not afforded due process.

Erin Weir Asking For External Body To Review Harassment Investigation

Mother Of Baby Who Died At Vancouver Daycare Claims Negligence In Lawsuit

Mother Of Baby Who Died At Vancouver Daycare Claims Negligence In Lawsuit
VANCOUVER — The mother of a baby who died at a Vancouver daycare describes the details of what she experienced that day in a lawsuit filed in B.C. Supreme Court.

Mother Of Baby Who Died At Vancouver Daycare Claims Negligence In Lawsuit

Justin Trudeau Says Canada Wants To See 'Movement' Before Signing Revised NAFTA Deal

WASHINGTON — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau signalled today that Canada wants more from its negotiating partners before signing on to a revamped North American Free Trade Agreement.

Justin Trudeau Says Canada Wants To See 'Movement' Before Signing Revised NAFTA Deal