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Setup: 17-Jun-2012 by Belinda Cole [1229]
• Who gets to make the rules for our public amenities? Why does it matter? Our elected officials must account to constituents for their decisions. What about government officials who make more and more decisions in our public commons?
In our experiences, bureaucracies take on rule-making roles in a number of different circumstances. Sometimes, our elected representatives - at the municipal, provincial and federal levels - grant decision-making powers to government staff.
Other times, staff act on the mistaken or possibly mistaken understanding that they have rule-making powers.
A shift of decision-making powers from our elected officials to bureaucracies often has significant and far-reaching effects on civic life, democracy and public spending. With one's elected official, we, as citizens, have immediate, ongoing access to express both our appreciation and our dissatisfaction with his or her decisions. At election time, we can choose to support our representative, or, seek someone who better represents our views and priorities .
Staff are often influenced, courted and lobbied by industry advocates with a direct interest in the rules and requirements of running public facilities.
Other “remedies” or avenues of complaint often require time-consuming and onerous steps, often with little response or change. For example, a city staff member of an occupational health and safety who makes a fundamental, last minute change to a community rink design in the name of "safety" has no obligation to explain or account for his decision....
"Public safety" was also the motivation behind one city staff member's new rule forbidding the long-time practice of fishing on the waterfront. One public official - reacting to "about half a dozen complaints ... in recent years" has the power to make a new rule affecting an estimated 10,000 anglers, all across the city City council rescinded the fishing ban, but has not addressed the underlying problem - that city staff seem not to have the legal authority to make these kinds of far-reaching rules, in the first place.
Setup: 17-Jun-2012 by Belinda Cole [1229]
• Who gets to make the rules for our public amenities? Why does it matter? Our elected officials must account to constituents for their decisions. What about government officials who make more and more decisions in our public commons?
Description: A fundamental, 11th-hour design change was made to Wallace Rink - based on city staff's reading of the Occupational Health and Safety Act. Neighbhours, involved in the design asked for an explanation, but none was ever provided.
Part of: OHSA Who makes the rules?
Date: 19-Jun-2010 [114]
·2· City approves reduced fees for sports fields The Star article, June 12, 2012
Part of: Permits Who makes the rules?
Date: 17-Jun-2012 direct link (StarCityApprovesReducedFeesForSportsFields120612.pdf) [1231]
·3· Sudden fishing ban on waterfront The Star article, June 11, 2012
Part of: Who makes the rules?
Date: 17-Jun-2012 direct link (StarSuddenFishingBanOnWaterfront110612.pdf) [1230]
Description: Offers various courses
Part of: First Aid City Staff Training Requirements Wading pool safety Who makes the rules?
Date: 15-Jul-2012 direct link [1567]
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