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British Columbia

Parks manager in Kimberley, B.C., quits after months of harassment over pandemic closures

The parks manager in Kimberley, B.C. has resigned following months of bullying after recreational facilities in the city were ordered closed due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, according to the city.

Brett Clark has been badgered, yelled at ever since 2 facilities closed in March

Kimberley, B.C., Mayor Don McCormick says city staff shouldn't be harassed for doing their jobs. (Colin Hall/CBC)

The parks manager in Kimberley, B.C. has resigned following months of bullying after recreational facilities in the city were ordered closed due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, according to the city.

Brett Clark worked as the city's manager of parks and facilities for more than three years until he quit last week.

Kimberley's Chief Administrative Officer Scott Sommervillesaid harassment against Clark and other city staff hasescalated since the Kimberley Aquatic Centre andMarysvilleArena ice hockey rink were closed indefinitely in March due to challenges with maintaining physical distance and not enough staff for contact tracing and sanitizing.

The former parks manager in the city, about 30 kilometres northwest of Cranbrook, was cursed at and hung up on by anonymous callers, yelled at by people who stopped by his office, and berated at restaurants and grocery stores, Sommerville said.

Mayor DonMcCormick said residents' frustration with the closings is not an excuse for them to bully Clark.

"Somebody was actually following him around the store to try and make their point again and again, and the store manager actually had to remove that individual from the store," McCormick told SarahPenton, host ofCBC'sRadio West, describing an incident when Clark was accosted in a supermarket.

"It's just incredibly selfish behaviour that defies logic."

McCormick said Clark's resignation was "somewhat under duress.

"He just decided he had had enough [harassment]."

In the city's announcement Nov. 2,SommervillepraisedClark for developing safety plans to reopen city hall in June and the Civic Centre Arena ice hockey rink in September.

Sommervillenoted that the city doesn't expect everyone to agree with its choices. "However, staff and council do not deserve constant abuse and bullying.

"Our employees have a right to enjoy being out in Kimberley and supporting our local businesses without being publicly berated."

Over the last two months, the city council voted to keep the doors of the aquatic centre andMarysvilleArena shut until the provincial public health orders change.

Kimberley's city council decided to keep the Kimberley Aquatic Centre closed due to challenges maintaining physical distance inside. (Submitted by the City of Kimberley)

McCormick says city staff shouldn't bear the brunt of public criticism for executing orders from politicians.

"We elected officials expect to get a little bit ofblowbackon decisions that are being made. We're kind of wired for that. But staff aren't."

There wasonly oneCOVID-19 case in the city of 7,000as of September, according to theB.C. Centre for Disease Control. Still, that doesn't justify residents demanding that unsafe facilities reopen,McCormick said.

"I appreciate that there's a lot ofCOVIDfatigue going on," he said. "But that's no excuse for selfish behaviour that says 'I need to keep things the way they always have been.'"

McCormick said the city doesn't want to take any action that could jeopardize the low number of cases.

Kimberley Aquatic Centre,MarysvilleArena andCentennial Hall are the only city facilities that remain closed.

With files from Radio West