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Promise betrayed

Posted: August 15, 2024 at 10:16 am   /   by   /   comments (6)

Shire Hall refuses to open up waterworks plans for reconsideration
COMMENT: RICK CONROY

It was a lie. From the outset. Shire Hall had no intention of ever opening up its spending plans to scrutiny. It was never going to allow Council, the public or its own Audit Committee to derail its plans for the largest infrastructure project in the County’s history. It would never allow others to examine the assumptions underpinning the massive expenditures.

The fix was in from the beginning. The deceit was exposed in full daylight last week.

To understand the extent of the lie, readers must cast their memories back to January. That is when Council awarded the tender for the trunk lines to carry water and wastewater from one side of Wellington to the other, under the Millennium Trail.

They did so against a wall of vocal objection from residents, community groups, a legal expert and a former council member. Council approved the trunk lines anyway—but, in a concession to existing water users, it agreed to a third-party review.

From the motion approved that January night: “that the Master Servicing Plan, Development Charges Background Study and Growth Forecast project scope and financing be reviewed against current economic and environmental assumptions.”

It was a small victory. By approving the trunk lines Council was committing about $42 million toward a plan already creaking under the weight of unanswered questions. But it was a win nonetheless.

The wild population growth assumptions relied upon in the Master Servicing Plan would finally undergo scrutiny. The bizarre expectations of commercial growth would be reviewed. The size of the expansion plans would be re-examined. By experts. Out in the open. Transparent. Accountable.

But in May, Council learned from senior leadership that this would not happen after all. Astonishingly, no firm was interested in undertaking this review. Twelve firms had looked at the assignment. Incredibly, none raised their hand to do the work. Magic.

There would be no third-party review after all.

But wait. Perhaps the County’s Audit Committee could do this review? Council consolidated around this fallback proposition.

But there was a catch. The Audit Committee was barred from recommending changes to existing plans or the massive regional water plant (already in the planning stages). It could not recommend changes to the scale of the works. Not the timing. Not the spending.

Shire Hall senior leadership and Audit Committee chair John Hirsch (councillor for South Marysburgh) wanted to ensure the independent members could not upset their plans. Instead of looking at the assumptions and growth projections to determine if the project still made sense, the Audit Committee was boxed in and permitted only to recommend how any mistakes or updated information would impact future water rates and development charges.

It was all a charade. Shire Hall was never going to allow a third-party review. They were never going to let outsiders look at their plans. Instead, they went through the motions. Pretending they were doing what Council had directed in January. And they hoped residents wouldn’t notice.

Then, the Audit Committee began asking uncomfortable questions during last month’s meeting. They learned that $30 million of proposed funding for the project had been conjured from thin air—that it was based on geography rather than any viable prospect or expectation. The consultants had simply filled a hole in their model.

The committee was getting too close for comfort.

So when the committee met again last week, senior leadership and Hirsch were ready. They weren’t going to let this group stray too far afield. They were asking too many questions.

Hirsch and Chief Administrative Officer Marcia Wallace met before Thursday’s Audit Committee meeting to figure out how to keep the meeting on track. They went so far as to prepare a motion in advance.

“Based on a conversation with the chair [Hirsch] and the nature of the questions raised in the last meeting, we tried to anticipate where a motion might go,” explained CAO Wallace. “To help get the conversation started.”

This point deserves emphasis: staff had prepared an outcome for the Audit Committee before the meeting occurred.

Staff don’t put motions on the floor. The CAO said so in the meeting. It is the sole discretion of the governing body. Staff are not members of the Audit Committee.

Nevertheless, there was Hirsch flailing around, looking for the committee to approve staff’s pre-ordained outcome.

CAO Wallace said she was only trying to be helpful. But the longer Hirsch asked for a committee member to take up staff’s motion, the more awkward— and revelatory—the shoehorning effort became.

Even Mayor Steve Ferguson didn’t know what to do with the smelly mess.

The staff’s motion didn’t make it to the committee table. Then, committee member Jane Lesslie tabled a motion. But before it arrived, it too had been altered by staff—to make clear that whatever the committee recommended would not impact current plans, tenders or spending.

The guardrails were highlighted in bright yellow highlighter to remind committee members of the limits of their consideration. It was not permitted to review the MSP or DC charges “against current economic and environmental assumptions” as directed by Council in January.

Instead, the committee’s input was limited to advising on how any mistakes it found would impact water rates and DCs in 2027. Its findings would only be used after the fact.

The Audit committee’s role, in this instance, was confined to merely measuring the impact of the errors and over-building and overspending to inform water rates and development charges in 2027 and beyond.

It was always a lie. Shire Hall waterworks expansion plans have never withstood scrutiny. It has never made sense. The numbers don’t add up. It has always been a fragile house of cards.

But here is the thing: Council promised a thorough review in January. Shire Hall reneged on this promise. Council must re-commit to this promise— before it spends another penny of ratepayers’ money.

Comments (6)

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  • August 21, 2024 at 8:22 am Teena

    TRAE was just the first, relatively small piece of a much larger faecal puzzle that now appears to be coming into focus throughout the County.

    If what I’m hearing does come to pass, this will be the result bearing down on Shire Hall; there are some very wealthy, very angry citizens now involved.

    Reply
  • August 19, 2024 at 1:41 pm Hal Jordan

    Keep up the great work at the wellington times. This is excellent local journalism that is rare to see anywhere else and is much appreciated!

    Reply
  • August 16, 2024 at 1:14 pm Disappointed But Not Surprised

    Teena, that’s actually a great question.

    The probability of any member of Council or Staff answering that question with a straight answer is low, if not zero.

    We can be pretty sure that neither existing water users, nor other PEC taxpayers, are driving the train.

    Have any of the existing ratepayers asked how much their water bill is projected to be, 1-2-3-4-5 years from now, if the project goes ahead?

    The County has all the data they need to be able to answer this question. However, it is likely not in their interest to answer the question. So they likely will not.

    It’s unfortunate that we cannot get media interest in this from outside the County, given that the impetus for this initiative seems to be driven by outside interests (or at least NOT ratepayers or taxpayers).

    Reply
    • August 16, 2024 at 6:04 pm Teena

      Media interest? I’ve been in touch with Todd Smith’s MPP office, as well as Paul Calandra’s Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, and neither will touch us, in any capacity, and our Councillors are declining to respond to emails from many of the Residents, and the Mayor won’t meet with people requesting to see him, and in some instances won’t even respond to their requests. What the hell are they there for?

      Reply
  • August 16, 2024 at 9:57 am Teena

    Perhaps a dumb question, however… are we being pushed into this waterworks fiasco in Wellington because of the potential problems with water quality due to Picton Terminals (who has prov en they are not a “good neighbour” by any stretch of the imagination, signed “Agreements” be damned!), as well as the growth of Base31 wanting to hook up to Picton water supply? Who is really driving the train in regards of our elected Council? Staff? The CAO? Developers? “Enquiring Minds Want to Know!”

    Reply
  • August 15, 2024 at 9:32 pm Gary

    Something stinks! When you have a bad smell you typically remove it!

    Reply