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British Columbia

City hall wages and downtown challenges dominate election discussion in Prince George, B.C.

More than 200 people showed up to hear council candidates in Prince George, B.C., debate hot button topics ahead of the Oct. 20 municipal election.

Mayoral challenger a no-show at crowded all-candidates forum hosted by CBC

More than 200 people attended an all-candidates forum for mayor and council in Prince George, B.C., hosted by CBC Radio. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

The sole person taking on incumbent Lyn Hall for the position of mayor in Prince George, B.C., was a no-show at an otherwise crowded all-candidates forum hosted by CBC Radio Tuesday night.

Instead, 65-year-old political newcomer Willy Ensleft the floor open to Hall to run on his record of the last four years.

Hall cited new developments downtown and the addition of seniors and affordable housing throughout the city as his top accomplishmentsand said he would continue to drive investment should he be re-elected.

Ens did not provide an explanation for his absence.

Overtime pay questioned

More than 230 people attended the forum at the downtown public library, prompting staff to open an overflow room where attendees could view a live video feed of the forum.

In addition to Hall, 11 of the 13 people running for council took part, answering questions on a variety of topics from community groups and audience members.

Multiple questions were asked about how much senior managers with the city are paid.

Theissue has become a hot topic since a freedom of information request from thePrince George Citizennewspaper revealed members of the city's nine-person senior management team werepaid up to $235.72 an hourfor working overtime during the 2017 wildfire season, when the city took in more than 10,000 evacuees from neighbouring communities.

The paper ran a series of wage comparisons between the management team in Prince George andmanagement teams inKelowna,Kamloopsand Nanaimo, finding Prince George frequently paid the highest or second-highest rates.

More than 10,000 wildfire evacuees came to Prince George during the summer of 2017. In 2018, a freedom of information request from the Prince George Citizen newspaper revealed city managers tasked with running emergency operations were being paid hourly overtime rates of between $178 and $235. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

CameronStolz, who previously sat on council but failed to be re-elected in 2014,said he believed pay brackets needto be reviewed, as do the city's overtime policies.

Stolz was also critical of having city staff run emergency operations in the city.

"In Calgary ... In Kelowna, predominantly what you see there is Canadian Red Cross and volunteers who step forward and manage the vast majority of the work being done," he said.

First-time candidate Christopher Wood said he didn't believe the city should be paying such high rates for management positions.

"We have a pool of qualified candidates in town who can do that job," he said.

Incumbents defend record

Incumbent Murry Krause said it was important to acknowledge the pay policy was set in a 2011 contractand pointed out the technical nature of high-level management jobs in a city with over 800 employees.

"It's not easy task," Krause said, adding that when he was president of the Union of B.C. Municipalities he often heard from communities unable to recruit managers because they couldn't afford them.

Eleven of the 13 people running for council participated in the forum, with Dave Fuller and Kyle Sampson unable to attend due to prior out of town commitments. The forum was moderated by CBC's Audrey McKinnon. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

Fellow incumbent Frank Everittechoed those commentsand defendedthe use of city managementto run emergency operations.

"We were in a state of emergency," he said. "You need to have qualified people in place and doing the job where they're familiar."

Brian Skakun, running for a sixth term on council, said he wants to see more frequent reviews of managers' pay and performance.

"It is a lot of money," he said.

Downtown, arts and backyard chickens also addressed

Several questions were asked about the city's downtown, which has seen an influx of new developmentbut also challenges with increased homelessness.

Candidates were also asked if they would revisit the decision to ban backyard chickens within city limits, and how they would support the arts community.

You can watch the entire forum online or listen to individual segments in the audio embedded below or through the CBCDaybreak Northpodcast.

Full forum:

Opening statements:

Senior management pay:

Downtown priorities and challenges:

Affordable housing and aging infrastructure:

Supporting new immigrants and young entrepreneurs:

Backyard chickens:

Arts and culture:

Read more from CBC British Columbia