Metro Vancouver declines to vote on paid-meetings cap for chair - Action News
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British Columbia

Metro Vancouver declines to vote on paid-meetings cap for chair

A proposal to raise the number of meetings for which the chair and vice-chair of Metro Vancouver get paid has been filed for further consideration.

Vote would have allowed chair, vice-chair to be paid for attending almost 4 times as many committee meetings

people sit at desks in a large meeting room
A Metro Vancouver board of directors meeting in Burnaby, B.C., in November 2022. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Metro Vancouver's chair and vice-chair will not be receiving a pay bump for attending meetings after the regional government voted not to act on aproposal that, if passed,would have costtaxpayers anadditional $50,000 per year.

At issue in the May 31 vote was changingthe cap on the number of standingcommittee meetings the chair and vice-chair can receivebonuses for from 18 to 67 annually.

Metro Vancouver board members are paid $525 for attending meetings under four hours, anddouble that $1,050 for meetings that last more thanfour hours.

Speaking against the change, City of North Vancouver Mayor Linda Buchanan said she was "mystified" by theproposal which was buried in a larger bylaw amendment and calledit"insensitive" and "tone deaf."

"We are currently facing a financial crisis of escalating capital project costs," said Buchanan, referencing Metro Vancouver's management of theNorth Shore Waste Water Plantproject, where the price tag has grown from $700 million to $3.86 billion.

"Moving forward on this would send the wrong message to the people we represent ... and the issues of affordability the many, many people in the region face, and the many who work full time at minimum wage and barely make this amount of money," she said.

The meeting payments are in addition to salaries paid to the chair and vice-chair.

Currentchair George Harvie is paid $105,000 annually by Metro Vancouver and another $174,000 per year as mayor of Delta.

AnmoreMayor John McEwen, vice-chair of Metro Vancouver, receives a salary of $46,000 from the regionin addition to his mayor's salary of $53,000.

Metro Vancouver is the regional government for 21 municipalities, one electoral area and one treaty First Nation. It manages utilities like drinking water, liquid and solid waste, and emergency management.

With files from Chad Pawson