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ROTHENBURGER – Mayor’s latest gambit aims straight at the ballot box

(Image: Mel Rothenburger)

TWO NOTICES of motion submitted by Mayor Reid Hamer-Jackson stand no chance of being approved, and he’ll be lucky to even get a seconder for discussion.

One is that paid meals for councillors on meeting days be terminated; the other is that the future hiring of close family members of council members be stopped.

Both will likely find some broad public support but councillors won’t be able to go along. Let’s talk about meal allowances first. There’s some history of abuse of spending on meals by local government members, particularly while they’re travelling on the taxpayers’ dime.

Meal allowances have to be tightly controlled. For example, the TNRD totally revamped its meal allowance policy in the wake of that financial audit a few years ago and has a rigorous policy on it.

On meeting days — when the board meets in the morning and carries through the lunch hour into the afternoons — directors used to go across the street to a restaurant, where they were expected to spend within specified limits. Nevertheless, the board began having sandwiches and coffee brought into the board room instead.

(I was on the board when the audit took place and explained in detail on my Area P Post website my own concerns and actions with respect to responsible spending. I’m happy to reprise it at any time.)

I don’t think our elected reps should be expected to bring their own brown bags every time they have long meetings, as long as there’s a close accounting with strict limits.

Kamloops councillors will find it hard to give up the meals. Hamer-Jackson tried the same thing two years ago, when he moved to ban paid meals on meeting days not just for council but for senior staff as well.

Of course, it went nowhere, just as it will on his second try, and just as his attempt at a policy on the hiring of close family will go nowhere. The fact that some of the councillors have close family members who work for the City has long bothered Hamer-Jackson. He believes it opens up the potential for nepotism, and points out that several other local governments have policies on it: Vancouver, Richmond, Sechelt, Central Coast Regional District, Port Alberni and Logan Lake.

Those places have policies touching on the hiring of relatives of councillors or administrators but generally deal with it through conflict of interest rules rather than bans. Richmond, for example, does not “unduly restrict or enhance employment opportunities within the City based on family relationships” but adds, “the City will not employ, appoint, transfer or promote a Relative of a current employee where the action will result in the risk of real or potential conflict of interest.”

That seems fair. Obviously, no council member should be in the room when decisions are being made that involve that person’s close family members employed by the City, but Hamer-Jackson’s motion goes further. He wants a policy “that prohibits the hiring or employment of immediate family members of Council members while that Council member is in office.”

So, if you are a close relative of somebody who’s on the council, forget any hopes you might have had of getting a job with the City, should Hamer-Jackson’s happen to be adopted. (His motion specifically excludes those already working for the City and applies only to future hiring.)

Nonetheless, the motion might prove embarrassing or even annoying to councillors.

Just as annoying to them is a third proposal from the mayor, that a thorough review of staff numbers and pay be done with a view to cutting several percentage points off this year’s budget increase. He claims the increase to administration numbers and pay in recent years has been disproportionate to what’s been happening with CUPE employees.

Needless to say, the idea of slashing administration has gone over like a fart in church. Cuts to the extent proposed by Hamer-Jackson have already been deemed impractical and unpalatable. In an email circulated among council members, Coun. Stephen Karpuk called it “irresponsible misguide fiscal engineering” and concluded, “Just resign please.”

Impractical and unlikely as Hamer-Jackson’s proposals are, if he’s crazy he’s crazy like a fox. By rejecting them, the councillors risk looking like they want to live high off the taxpayer’s dollar while the mayor looks like the guardian of responsible fiscal control.

The mayor knows he won’t win these battles; he has his eye on the war.

Mel Rothenburger is a former regular contributor to CFJC-TV and CBC radio, publishes the ArmchairMayor.ca opinion website, and is a recipient of the Jack Webster Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award, and a Webster Foundation Commentator of the Year finalist. He has served as mayor of Kamloops, school board chair and TNRD director, and is a retired daily newspaper editor.  He can be reached at mrothenburger@armchairmayor.ca.

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About Mel Rothenburger (11717 Articles)
ArmchairMayor.ca is a forum about Kamloops and the world. It has more than one million views. Mel Rothenburger is the former Editor of The Daily News in Kamloops, B.C. (retiring in 2012), and past mayor of Kamloops (1999-2005). At ArmchairMayor.ca he is the publisher, editor, news editor, city editor, reporter, webmaster, and just about anything else you can think of. He is grateful for the contributions of several local columnists. This blog doesn't require a subscription but gratefully accepts donations to help defray costs.

7 Comments on ROTHENBURGER – Mayor’s latest gambit aims straight at the ballot box

  1. Pierre – what proof do you have other than assertion that “CoK hires people based on personal connections?”

    “That the CoK wastes money on questionable projects details and questionable guidelines is also a fact.” – No…that is an opinion…and one not shared by all voters.

    You personally don’t like the new skating oval. You personally don’t like the Performing Arts Centre. You personally don’t like the Ice Multiplex or the AAP that allowed these projects to proceed. Fair enough – but that is your opinion. Vote for what you want – and accept election results. I see you on here with nothing but complaints. Always complaints. You have all the answers all of the time…or so you tell yourself.

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  2. that is exactly what it is about. Please don’t let the citizens of Kamloops be stupid enough to fall for it.

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  3. This is the same mayor who wanted to hire one of his friends into a position at city hall without even posting the job. I smell hypocrisy and political opportunism in an election year. This is the last budget before the election next fall. If the mayor really wanted to make these changes, why didn’t he do it last year or the year before that?

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    • Are you new to the city? He’s tried to make these changes multiple times in the past and I share the belief that this attempt will have the similar results as the past. The 8th paragraph reads, “Hamer-Jackson tried the same thing two years ago, when he moved to ban paid meals on meeting days not just for council but for senior staff as well.”

      With regards to the hiring of a supporter, this is equivalent to hiring a chief of staff, which has some merit in my view and at least worthy of discussion. Think of this position as one which would help shoulder some of the workload and act as an intermediary with staff. If this were the case wouldn’t you want a mayor to hand pick this position?

      Hypocrisy, no, it’s definitely not hypocrisy ! Political opportunism in an election year, maybe. Desperation, absolutely! He’s easily the most disliked mayor since Gaglardi, his path to victory is narrow, very very narrow.

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    • Unknown's avatar Bronwen Scott // January 30, 2026 at 8:15 PM // Reply

      As far as I am aware, previous mayors have been able to appoint their own EAs.

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      • Unknown's avatar Mel Rothenburger // January 30, 2026 at 9:11 PM //

        Recommended by the mayor, formally approved by council. (The EA officially works for both mayor and councillors, though in normal times is basically EA to the mayor.)

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  4. Unknown's avatar Pierre Filisetti // January 30, 2026 at 6:11 AM // Reply

    That the CoK hires people based on personal connections is well known and should stop. That everyone working for the CoK is well paid and generally well looked after is an indisputable fact. That the CoK wastes money on questionable projects details and questionable guidelines is also a fact. That there is plenty of room to save money, yes there is. Ample room.

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