Rowdy council meeting cut short amid calls for Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum to resign - Action News
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British Columbia

Rowdy council meeting cut short amid calls for Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum to resign

Surrey city councillors are divided in their support of Mayor Doug McCallumafter a shouting crowd demanding for his resignation cut their Monday council meeting short.

Mayor halted meeting just minutes in after councillorsasked him to resign, audience members shouted approval

Monday's public meeting, pictured in this video screenshot, was cut short after members of the audience became vocal in calling on Mayor Doug McCallum to resign. (Jack Hundial/Twitter)

Surrey city councillors are divided in their support of Mayor Doug McCallumafter a shouting crowd demanding for his resignation cut their Monday council meeting short.

Citing safety concerns, McCallum recessed themeeting only seven minutes in after two councillorsasked him to resign and members of the audience supported their request.

While some councillors are calling on McCallum to resign until his disciplinary hearing in the fall, others remain in support of the mayor.

McCallum is set to go on trial on Oct. 31 for alleged public mischief over a police report he made last September.He accused a member of an advocacy group opposing the city's police transition of runningover his foot with her car in a Save-On-Foods parking lot.

News reports of a recently unsealed but not publicly available search warrant claimvideo surveillance contradicts some of the mayor's allegations.

The video recording from Monday's meeting showsthattwo minutes into the council meeting, Coun.Brenda LockedemandedMcCallumto take leave until his court datein light ofthe documents.

Locke will be running for mayor against McCallum in the 2022 municipal election,a little more than two weeks before McCallum's trial.

"At this stage I will not," McCallum responded.

Minutes later, Coun.Jack Hundialmade a similar demand followed by applause from the audience, to which McCallum again responded he would not.

People in the audience could then be heard shouting.

After McCallum called for a 48-hour recess, councillors were escorted to their cars by RCMP.

The public meeting will resume on Wednesday at 7 p.m.

'A tense moment'

"Utter chaos occurred," Coun.Linda Annis said to CBC.

Annissaid the meeting ended out of concern for the safety of everyone in the room.

"It was quite a tense moment in the Council Chambers, we left very quickly."

Annis said McCallum's scandal has taken the spotlight in city council recently, distracting from other important matters.

She echoed Locke's and Hundial's calls on the mayor to step aside.

"Our single focus in the city right now is the mayor's bad behaviour ...he needs to step aside so that we can get on with business," said Annis.

'They basically incited it to happen'

Coun.Laurie Guerra accused the two councillors of instigatingtherowdy scene at Monday's council meeting.

"They basically incited it to happen. How would the people know to show up?" Guerra said to CBC.

According to Guerra, many of the people in the audience were from the Keep the RCMP in Surreyadvocacy group.

"It's politically motivated, it's from certain councillors that are running against the mayor and that's what they're doing. They're inciting these people to show up, to be disruptive ...I find it disgraceful," said Guerra.

Guerra said McCallumhas been advised by his lawyersnot to speak about his charges.

"People are innocent until they're proven guilty."

The situation has sparked calls for a municipal integrity commissioner that would have the power to investigate and remove elected officials for wrongdoing.Other provinces, including Ontario and Quebec, already have such a position.

B.C.'s minister of municipal affairs Nathan Cullen told The Early Edition he is willing to work with municipal leaders on this at the Union of B.C. Municipalities annual convention this fall.

McCallum declined to comment to CBC aboutthe meeting and the calls for his resignation. He isdue to deliver his 2022 State of the City address Wednesday morning.

With files from Meera Bains, Jason Proctor, The Early Edition