Three city councillors are not in favour of giving themselves a pay raise, at least not all at once.
At its Mar. 25 meeting, council heard that Kelowna91Ƶs remuneration has fallen significantly behind comparable municipalities.
A recent review of 12 municipalities by the City of Victoria identified Kelowna mayor91Ƶs remuneration to be lower than all municipalities except Kamloops.
Councillor remuneration, as a base percentage (35 per cent) of the mayor91Ƶs remuneration and in dollars, was last.
A staff report recommends the mayor91Ƶs salary be increased from $126,497 to $145,200, and councillor salaries be hiked from $42,991 to $58,080.
Those salaries are the 60th percentile of the 12 communities in the City of Victoria study.
91ƵGiving ourselves such a substantial raise doesn91Ƶt seem right,91Ƶ said Coun. Rick Webber.
While supporting the mayor91Ƶs increase, and agreeing that salaries were falling behind, Webber suggested there may be a better process for the taxpayer than approving the hike all at once.
91ƵI91Ƶm against the motion as it is right now.91Ƶ
Coun. Mohini Singh agreed.
91ƵI would be in support of a modest increase and then let the next council make a decision on how much of an increase would be appropriate.91Ƶ
Previous councils, in their last year of a term, have appointed a community task force to research remuneration increases for incoming councils after an election.
The last time that was done was in 2011.
91ƵOur experience with a number of them prior to that had not been overly positive,91Ƶ noted Stephen Fleming with the city clerk91Ƶs office.
He said subsequent councils decided against a task force and remuneration was tied to the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for Vancouver.
91ƵWe became aware early last year, or late 2022, that the gap was starting to widen with that formula.91Ƶ
Mayor Tom Dyas said it is not an easy decision to make.
91ƵIf we want the best individuals in these chairs in the future91Ƶit91Ƶs something that we need to do so that at least we91Ƶre on par with regards to communities throughout the province.91Ƶ
Several councillors noted that residents were shocked to find out how little they are paid compared to the work they do.
Coun. Maxine DeHart pointed out that councillors are away from their families, or those who are still working, their jobs, on a regular basis to attend to their duties.
91ƵClearly council puts in more than 30 per cent time compared with a mayor,91Ƶ Coun. Luke Stack agreed. 91ƵAs our city has grown, become more complex, much larger population, the job91Ƶs bigger.91Ƶ
Coun. Gord Lovegrove said mayor and councillor positions need to be paid fairly, and suggested an amendment that the remuneration increase become effective for the next council, however, it went no further.
Council voted in favour of the remuneration increases recommended by staff with Lovegrove, Singh and Webber opposed.
Coun. Loyal Wooldridge was not present for the meeting.
Council still needs to pass a bylaw for the increase to take effect, which will be done at a future council meeting.
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