B.C. Liberals refuse to look at alternatives to putting Hydro customers on $800 million hook

May 12, 2014

VICTORIA – Today, the B.C. Liberal government shut the door on independent expert review of the Site C project proposal, leaving B.C. Hydro customers on the hook for a loss of $800 million should the project go forward on the government’s timeline.

According to the panel’s report “B.C. Hydro projects losing $800 million in the first 4 years of operation,” under the government’s project timelines.

“Families are already facing a 28 per cent rate hike because of the B.C. Liberals’ complete mismanagement of B.C. Hydro,” said B.C. New Democrat leader John Horgan. “Now families will be on the hook for an $800 million loss because the B.C. Liberals are steamrolling ahead before the demand is there.”

The Joint Review Panel for the Site C project released its report last Thursday, recommending that the B.C. Liberal government “refer the load forecast and demand side management plan details to the B.C. Utilities Commission,” and have the BCUC review the proposed project’s costs.

Today in Question Period, B.C. Liberal Minister of Energy & Mines, Bill Bennett refused to refer the project to the BCUC to independently investigate alternatives that would limit ratepayers’ liabilities.

“Right now, we have Liberals telling Liberals what Liberals want to hear,” said Horgan. “That’s a reckless and irresponsible approach to such a massive project. We need an independent expert review to protect the ratepaying public.”

B.C. NDP’s new president faces ‘daunting’ task

Rob Shaw / Times Colonist
November 23, 2013 10:29 PM

Craig Keating.jpg

Newly appointed President of the BC NDP party Craig Keating addresses a crowd at the British Columbia NDP Convention in Vancouver, B.C. Sunday, Nov.17, 2013.  Photograph by: JONATHAN HAYWARD, The Canadian Press

The B.C. NDP’s new president admits he’s facing a daunting task in regrouping his party after a devastating loss in the May provincial election.

Craig Keating, a North Vancouver councillor who was elected president at the party’s convention last weekend, said he’s got a clear mandate from New Democrats to modernize party organization and reach out to ridings where the NDP didn’t win to help craft a strategy for success in 2017.

“I’d be lying if I didn’t think it was daunting,” Keating said in an interview. “It’s not because the party is in disorder. There’s no doubt about it, we lost the election and we have debt to deal with, but there’s lots of positives. We have identified tons of supporters, we identified lots of volunteers … but nonetheless, the project here is: How do we win? And that’s my focus.”

Keating took over the presidency from Moe Sihota, the former NDP cabinet minister and Victoria-area MLA.

One of Keating’s first challenges will be to set up the leadership race to replace Adrian Dix, who announced his intention to resign after the NDP blew a perceived lead in the election and lost to Christy Clark’s B.C. Liberals.

The NDP’s provincial council has set the vote for fall 2014, and Keating said the NDP needs to find a facility, set entry fees and finalize race rules. “People aren’t going to get into the race until they know what the rules are,” he said.

The NDP still has $1.7 million in debt left from its election campaign, and Keating said he will need to creatively tackle fundraising to retire the loans and begin building a new war chest.

The party also needs to modernize the computer system it uses to contact voters, and keep organizers active in ridings where it lacks MLAs but thinks it can win, he said. The NDP must “build up a stock of goodwill” among volunteers and party members who have expressed unhappiness at how their involvement has been reduced to cutting donation cheques, he said.

“We need to start getting in touch with some people in communities across this province where we’re not elected, and start talking about what their realities are and how do we get a vision that’s going to get people out of their seats and voting for us in the next election,” he said.

There’s also the matter of messy internal grudges.

Documents at the NDP convention revealed the party still has four outstanding formal complaints against MLAs who helped overthrow former leader Carole James. An oversight committee recommended Keating deal with the situation quickly.

However, Keating said he has other priorities. “The file, in a literal sense, has not been handed to me,” he said. “It’s not on my immediate radar screen.”

There’s also a push to take a recent report into how the NDP blew the election and turn it into some sort of concrete action, Keating said.

“I encourage people to continue to reflect on what went wrong, but in the way of constructive criticism of what we do next,” he said.

rshaw@timescolonist.com

© Copyright 2013

Keith Baldrey: The NDP sharks are circling

By Keith Baldrey       Global News     August 29, 2013 8:23 pm

When then-premier Mike Harcourt’s government was engulfed in scandal and controversy in the mid-1990s, speculation began to build on whether he could hang on as leader.

There was mounting tension within the NDP caucus over his leadership, but no one was speaking out publicly about that elephant in the room. At the time, an NDP cabinet minister told me: “There’s blood in the water, but so far no sharks.”

Well, there is blood in the water once again when it comes to an NDP leader’s hold on the job and there are indeed sharks in the party who smell that blood. Ironically, Harcourt is now one of those sharks.

Harcourt has become the latest in a growing crowd of NDP notables calling on embattled NDP leader Adrian Dix to step down. He told the Globe and Mail’s Gary Mason it was time for him to go, and his public criticism puts even more pressure on Dix to throw in the towel.

Former NDP cabinet ministers Ian Waddell and Bob Williams (both once close to Dix), ex-party president Sav Dhaliwal, and former MLAs David Schreck and Guy Gentner preceded Harcourt in calling on Dix to quit.

Interestingly and perhaps more telling is that no NDP notable, past or present, has publicly called on Dix to stay on as leader. His own caucus has offered only tepid support for him, with members saying they are confident Dix will “reflect” on his situation and “come to a decision.”

Even one of his closest associates, MLA John Horgan, would not say out loud that Dix should stay as leader in a lengthy scrum with reporters at the end of the recent legislature session. While Horgan didn’t exactly throw Dix under

the bus, he parked it close by. And now Harcourt has moved that bus even nearer. Unless key people in the party start issuing public calls for Dix to continue, it won’t be long before he pulls the plug himself. Dix’s leadership is bleeding, and sharks like Harcourt and others are starting to fill up the NDP pool.

The board of directors at BC Ferries has once again displayed a key flaw in the model the B.C. Liberals came up with to govern the company soon after the 2001 election.

The board has approved large salary hikes and bonuses for senior executives, even though the provincial government is about to reduce service levels on many of its routes while at the same time increasing the taxpayer subsidy to the company.

The strange private/public hybrid that is BC Ferries is trying to have it both ways: insisting on operating as a private entity, yet sticking its hand into the public trough, looking for more cash. The board has long argued it models the company on private sector companies, and not Crown corporations. Yet no other “private” company gets a subsidy of close to $200 million a year from the provincial government. Without that subsidy, the company would have to make massive service cuts or it would, on paper, suffer a huge monetary loss. So the board’s directors (who also created controversy a few years ago for paying themselves much higher fees than any other Crown’s board) have made a politically tone-deaf decision, which many frustrated ferry users will undoubtedly unfavourably contrast with constantly rising fares and looming service cuts.

The company’s private/public model has made Transportation Minister Todd Stone look weak, as he’s expressed dissatisfaction with the bonuses yet appears powerless to do anything about it (which is a bizarre situation for a cabinet minister to be in when you consider how much money his government gives to that company each year).

If the BC Ferries’ board keeps making decisions that blow back politically on the provincial government, don’t be surprised if that government changes the model for the company yet again.

The current model was created on Gordon Campbell’s watch. Premier Christy Clark has shown a willingness to revisit other Campbell legacies (raising both the minimum wage and corporate taxes, for example) and she may take another look at this one as well.

Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC.

NDP delegates to zero in on leadership

by Carlito Pablo on Aug 28, 2013   http://www.straight.com

Adrian Dix is facing a leadership review in November.    Picture: Yolande Cole

Some New Democrats are getting an early start on their fall convention.

On the weekend following Labour Day, three of the four B.C. NDP constituency associations on the North Shore will elect delegates to the November convention at which Adrian Dix will face a leadership review.

Members from North Vancouver–Seymour, North Vancouver–Lonsdale, and West Vancouver–Capilano will hold a joint meeting on September 7 and choose their respective delegates, according to David Schreck.

The former B.C. NDP representative for North Vancouver–Lonsdale expects talk during the gathering to zero in on the fates of Dix, who failed to lead New Democrats to victory in this year’s provincial election, and party president Moe Sihota.

“People know that the leadership of the party screwed up, and somebody has to pay for that,” Schreck told the Straight by phone.

A panel is holding a review of the B.C. NDP’s loss, and its report will be taken up at the convention. “People don’t want to be told that really everything is okay, that voters made a mistake,” Schreck said.

Dix has taken the summer off to ponder his future.