There was very little snow. The earth in Spring was hard packed and cracked with drought.
An early heatwave followed the dry winter and water restrictions were imposed in May.
I heard equipment at the Family Leisure Complex was flushing out thousands of gallons of clean warm water a day from the ice making equipment.
I went to Council and challenged former Mayor Jones to justify the contradiction between extravagant water use by the town and restrictions on water use by homeowners.I speculated the same foolishness was going on elsewhere in the Region and I poked and prodded and demanded an explanation.
He responded water usage was less since the construction of a new, insulated roof at the arena.
Imagine an ice arena in a heat wave in a hot box of aluminum with an uninsulated roof .
There was no denial by anyone at the table, that hundreds of thousands of gallons were used and disposed daily to make ice in a summer heat wave.
Aurora Family Leisure Complex has had a chequered history.
The first thing I noticed on completion, was the concrete floor covered with fume-laden industrial carpet in the fitness centre.
The jacuzzi pool in the swimming area was regularly closed for repairs.
The swimming pool literally fell into a hole and had to be completely re-constructed.
The gymnasium was seldom used and ended up becoming the fitness centre.
The fitness centre became a child care centre.
As noted, in 2002 , I discovered the ice making equipment was horrendously extravagant with water and the roof of the arena had to be re-built for ice even to harden.In July 2011, we learned the facility still has soft ice not suitable for hockey but perfect for figure skating.
Heavy water use is aggravated by the fact the clean warm water is being released into the sewers. So we were not only paying for water we were paying for clean, warm water to go through the sewage system,
When the Stronach Centre was being planned ,I argued for three ice surfaces in one place for economy in management and equipment and to decommission the ice surface at the complex. My argument carried no weight.
Now we are contemplating providing a youth centre.
In early July, Council had an all day session to consider various items. One was a recommendation for hundreds of thousands of dollars to refurbish the ice making equipment. A second was to replace an accessibility elevator that shifts half a floor. At a cost of $170,000.
The debate was fulsome. The decision was not to proceed with refurbishment of the ice making equipment. To do repairs as required. Until a decision is made about a youth centre.
Replace the existing elevator was nixed. The accessibility advisory committee made the recommendation because they do not think people who need it, should have to wait for someone to open it with a key.
The desk and attendant in the facility are alongside the elevator.
The decision of council was to get keys cut and distribute them to those who needed them.
During the discussion, a comment was made the ice making equipment doesn't use much water.
During the re-organisation of staff, management of facilities was transferred from the Director whose programs use the facilities to the Director of Environment and Infrastructure.
The Director currently in charge regularly must refer questions to the Director previously in charge.
It was a long day. Council had one business meeting to follow in mid July. Minutes from the day long session noted the report on the Family Leisure Complex had been received. It had not. Part of the recommendation was approved. Two major items were decided in the negative.
Further to that, a second staff report reversing Council's decision was approved.
I am one of nine council members. A lowly third down the table at that. When I have participated fully in a debate and a decision is made, I do not anticipate having to track the report to ensure the direction of Council is carried out.
It's the job of the Mayor and the Clerk of the Municipality.
When I discovered what happened , I needed to confirm my recollection . I learned the Mayor was aware of the contradictory reports but made no effort to ensure Council's direction was followed. He had waited for someone else to make the point and was surprised that didn't happen.
At the August meeting , with an agenda of over thirty items and half a dozen delegations, awards and recognitions, I brought the issue forward for correction.
It was no go. The Mayor responded. "The issue wasn't called for discussion Councillor. It's too late now."
The Chief Administrative Officer commented the all day meeting was for the purpose of allowing Council to have "input"
The explanation appeared to satisfy Council. No support came forward to reverse the misdirection that went through unnoticed by all except apparently the presiding member.
I hesitate to suggest the mix-up was anything but inadvertent. Yet the CAO's comment that Council's role is nothing more than "input" is a concern. Staff have input. Council is the decision-maker.
Over the years, I have developed a number of small maxims to guide me in certain situations.
One of them is to trust and expect the best from everyone until and unless they give me reason not to. Then the trust can never be the same again
It must be a very low pressure system that is influencing the function of both Council and staff last month and this.
ReplyDeleteYour description of the decision-making process makes one wonder whether all these peoples' marbles are properly aligned, or whether they are, in fact, all there.
This does not seem like good government. It is more akin to outright stupidity.
Are we really expected to believe that a former Director is being constantly questioned for his opinion and advice by a present Director. Surely something is amiss - like intelligence.
Why do we go through the expense and aggravation of having elections every so often when staff members end up making decisions that go contrary to Council's expressed wishes?
How is it that the town's CEO apparently does not point out an anomaly or two, rather hoping, waiting, to have a question raised, and when no one does is not surprised that it has not occurred.
By the sound of things it might be prudent to dispense with Council meetings altogether during the two months of summer, when the atmospheric pressure so obviously invades and renders impotent the minds of our elected representatives.