Burnaby Mayor Mike Hurley elected as chair of Metro Vancouver - Action News
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British Columbia

Burnaby Mayor Mike Hurley elected as chair of Metro Vancouver

The board of directors for Metro Vancouver haselected Burnaby Mayor Mike Hurley as its new chair. The election comes at a tense time for the regional district, which is responsible for the area's drinking water, sewage, regional parks and some housing.

Replacement for George Harvie vows to tackle backlash over wastewater plant costs

A man in a suit sits at a desk with a Metro Vancouver sign behind him.
Burnaby Mayor Mike Hurley pictured after being elected Metro Vancouver chair at a directors' meeting in Burnaby, B.C., on Friday. (Ben Nelms/CBC News)

The board of directors for Metro Vancouver haselected Burnaby Mayor Mike Hurley as its new chair.

The election to replaceDelta Mayor George Harviecomes at a tense time for the Metro Vancouver Regional District, which is responsible for drinking water, sewage, regional parks and some housing.

It faces public backlash over vast cost overruns for a new wastewater treatment plant in North Vancouver, plus questions over spending on international travel.

"This is a big and serious job," said Hurley to his fellow directors after being elected on Friday at a board meeting in Burnaby.

"Make no mistake this is a critical time for Metro Vancouver, we have to build and maintain public confidence for the essential services that we provide.That means we respect our taxpayers through careful management of their dollars."

People in a room put ballots into white boxes.
Directors for Metro Vancouver vote for a new chair on Friday. (Ben Nelms/CBC News)

After getting the nod from his peersover the only other candidate, Vancouver Coun. Lisa Dominato, he vowed to correct the "mistakes of the past."

The chair of Metro Vancouver is paid $105,039 a year and is responsible for being the organization's chief spokesperson, presiding over board meetings and establishing standing committees, which includes appointing members.

The 41 directors represent 21 municipalities, one electoral area, and one treaty First Nation within the Metro Vancovuer area.

Harvie was removed as his city's regional representative by his own council in early May, meaning he could not continue as board chaireffective July 1. Harvie was not present at Friday's meeting.

Several councillors around Metro Vancouver were critical of Harvie and others for taxpayer-funded travel budget to far-flung locations, billed as opportunities to learn about best practices from other jurisdictions.

Hurley, as chair of Metro Vancouver's liquid waste committee, went to Amsterdam this year to learn about wastewater and diking technology. Harvie was also due to travel but pulled out, saying he didn't want to be a "distraction" due to the public scrutiny he was facing.

On Friday, Hurley defended travelling to Amsterdam, saying it was a "tremendous" learning opportunity he could not have gotten anywhere else.

"It helps me be a better representative," he said.

Hurley vowed to uphold and potentially improve on one of Harvie's last initiatives as chair calling for an independent review of the wastewater treatment plant, whose cost soared from $700 million in 2018 to $3.86 billion now and whose completion date has been set back from 2020 to 2030.

Hurley said he would bring in a "truly independent" outside party to work with Metro Vancouver to conduct the review.

New Westminster Coun. Daniel Fontaine, who is not a director, attended Friday's meeting to observe.

He said Hurley is the wrong person for the job, adding the Burnaby mayor'sinvolvement in the liquid waste portfolio and his trip to Amsterdama trip of questionable value totaxpayers,Fontaine says illustrated that the board is not serious in improving transparency, accountability and good governance.

"It's all smoke and mirrors. I don't have any confidence," said Fontaine.

Board discord

In addition to the vote for a new chair on Friday, directors referred a motion that would have staff review travel expenditure policies and whether they need to be tightened.

It pushed aside a motion from Bowen Island Mayor Andrew Leonard and New Westminster Mayor Patrick Johnstone that would require more direct board oversight for committee member travel expenses.

Dominatoand her Vancouver councillor colleagues, who supported Leonard and Johnstone's motion,said in the lead-up to the vote that whoever becamechair will need to make an effort to align the board.

There was discord among directors in May when they disagreed over how much municipalities outside of the North Shore should pay to cover the cost overruns of the wastewater treatment plant a facility they will not directly benefit from.