May 3rd, 2024

Feelings are raw regarding the Regionalization Working Group

By medicinehatnews on August 15, 2019.

Striding up to the Rainier Community Hall, it was difficult to find a parking spot relatively close to the building.

Normally a place for many family and community celebrations, the building was especially packed Aug. 7. 

The meeting  was called by some citizens who wanting to express their opinions about the Regionalization Working Group, which was looking into the possibility on how regionalization of services or the possibility of amalgamation of all the local Newell region governments would work.

The RWG made its first announcement and official press release in December 2018. 

In it, the RWG stated that “Regionalization is the co-operative effort among neighbouring communities to pool resources to create service capabilities that can be shared amongst regional members. These members include the County of Newell, Town of Bassano, City of Brooks and the Villages of Rosemary and Duchess.”

The thought was to save costs amongst the different municipalities as government funding will get tighter and the MSI (Municipal Sustainability Initiative) funding from the province ends in 2022. 

In an April Prairie Post story, Brooks mayor and Alberta Urban Municipalities president Barry Morishita said, “There are agreements to cost-share for services … and the city has only one and that is with the county. It occurred to us that it was going to be a transfer of taxes where the receiving municipality would gain and the other would lose. We thought there has to be a better way where money could be saved overall. We have a very unique situation here with five municipalities that are all part of one geographical area- the County of Newell. 

“But, there are also three other entities -the Newell Foundation (seniors’ housing), Newell Regional Solid Waste Management Authority (landfill), and Newell Regional Services Corporation (water treatment) all within the same boundaries. So, we have eight entities serving 25,000 people and have 32 elected officials representing five councils. Surely, there’s some better, more efficient way of doing things.”

That all sounds very forward-thinking and responsible. 

One slight problem — those who live outside of Brooks and Bassano (apparently) aren’t buying it. 

In fact, Rosemary and Duchess don’t want anything to do with this plan and officially pulled out of discussions back in April. Judging the feelings displayed by those at the Rainier meeting, they are staunchly against combining into this type of agreement with Brooks.

Shouts of “no!” or “we don’t want it,” could be heard many times during the Aug. 7 meeting.

There is so much distrust that a group called the Concerned Taxpayers Against Amalgamation Regionalization Working Group has formed. 

There is a complete lack of trust from those against this that any rural concerns or needs will be addressed. Everything will be about Brooks. 

Considering the relatively quick timelines (with an end agreement by April 2020) the City of Brooks and the RWG have, whether the RWG actually have numbers and don’t want to say or they actually don’t know. Regardless, it is disconcerting to say the least. 

As a taxpayer, the uncertainty with taxes would go up substantially while perhaps losing services is scary.

There are a number of questions which more than just linger: for those communities, divisions, etc., that want no part of this like Duchess or Rosemary, what happens to them if it goes through? Has there been an agriculture impact study done? It was stated by the RWG reps there hadn’t. 

What about debt? Who is incurring what and how do they ensure that the current County of Newell coffers isn’t siphoned by the City of Brooks? What happens to all of the current County of Newell staff? 

The meetings that RWG seem to have been attended by, well, the RWG members. There have been nine press releases from December 2018 to Aug. 14, a website, plus some public information meetings telling people what the RWG have decided. 

The Rainier meeting (and one in Tilley Aug. 12) expressed what the people living wanted. With Brooks and Bassano’s population being bigger and the RWG desire that they want five new council reps from rural areas, five from Brooks and one from Bassano, one can see how votes will unfold (see Page 7 in the Aug. 16 Prairie Post for more). 

RWG’s message at Rainier’s meeting was: nothing has been finalized, the RWG reps are looking into way to streamline operations. Trust us.

Message back: No trust, just anger and uncertainty. 

(Ryan Dahlman is the managing editor of both Prairie Post East and Prairie Post West)

Share this story:

24
-23
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments