As
I watched Springwater Council in action twice this week, including the
notorious Special Public Meeting on the 17th, these iconic words
came to mind. At the Council meeting on
the 16th, Rick Webster suddenly withdrew his petty motion to chill public
dissent, camouflaged by the proposed naming and shaming, via taxpayer-funded
legal action, of anyone indulging in so-called slanderous or libelous
innuendo. Perhaps he read Gary French’s
masterful dissection of this motion in the last issue of the Springwater News,
and didn’t like his portrayal. A more
alarming and sinister theory is that he lost one of his 4 votes; and thus had
no choice but to withdraw his motion to avoid an embarrassing defeat. Should we believe that’s the end of Council
trying to stop commentary they don’t like?
That
brings me to Question Period, a 10 minute sop to the long-suffering residents
in which 5 members of the audience [I use this word literally] have 2 minutes
each to ask Council about something that’s on their mind. And to which they expect an answer right then
or no later than necessary. Do those
public questions get answered? Usually
not. Regular attendees, like myself,
seriously wonder if our questions drop into a black hole, never to see the
light of day again. Then, there’s
Council’s latest attempt at ham-stringing voters: they want us to ask questions
relating only to that night’s agenda.
That certainly keeps the topics narrow, doesn’t it? What if your burning interest is not on the
agenda or you didn’t have a chance to read the agenda beforehand because you’re
busy with real life and it was published late?
On
Tuesday, there was the sideshow of the Special Meeting, advertised to residents
online and in the mail as an opportunity for Council to discuss and debate the
Township lawyer’s report on the legal issues associated with the Midhurst
Secondary Plan and determine next steps.
Right after the lawyer finished, Councillor Hanna asked Council to
permit a Question Period. All-knowing
Mayor Collins said this wasn’t required at a Special Meeting and said no. Clearly, in her opinion, the overflow crowd
was just expected to sit there like dumb animals and let Council’s
pontificating wash over them unimpeded.
After some testy discussion, it was grudgingly allowed. Of course, the public had more questions than
10 minutes could accommodate and, therefore, wanted more time. Well, you’d think Council had been asked to
open the vaults! More wrangling ensued
among the Councillors, most vocally Councillor McConkey who said she’d okay a
measly 2 additional questions because how much time did we want [read that as
deserve] anyway.
The
icing on the cake was Council’s sudden introduction and quick passing – 5 to 2
[Hanna and Ritchie voted no] - of a
motion that could only have been written, let alone understood, by a lawyer [it
was] to cut off any further review of past events leading to the MSP as it is
today. One reason given was that staff
resources are “finite”. They can’t be expected to keep on finding answers to
the many serious questions and concerns the community has about this utter
travesty of good planning, can they? And
who pays their wages, again? Well, talk
about being blind-sided! This infamous motion was not listed on the agenda, the
public was shocked, and word has it that not every councillor even knew about
it beforehand! Some knowledgeable folks
are wondering if this motion is even legal, given the apparent lack of due
process. Whatever the facts, it was not
“open and transparent”, as Council likes to describe itself.
Yes,
“deceive, inveigle and obfuscate” live on in Springwater Council. Welcome to your local government.
Sandy Buxton