Ward six council member faces nine challengers with a spotty first term record.

council 100x100By Pepper Parr

October 21, 2014

BURLINGTON, ON

 

The Gazette is doing profiles of each member of Council. They are based on four years of observations and interviews with most Council members. An overview of the ward they serve is linked to the profile.

Walter Byj, a free lance writer who contributes to the Gazette regularly, was to do a part of this article but he was unable to reach Councillor Lancaster to do an interview. Byj called on:

July 21st -sent e-mail to her assistant requesting an interview for the Burlington Gazette. Assistant Julie advised that Blair was out of office and that she would follow up next week.
August. 22nd- sent follow up request to assistant Julie. Got reply back on August 25th. stating she was on vacation last week and that she would advise Blair.
Sept. 4th.- sent e-mail to assistant stating that I assumed that Blair did not want to be interviewed.
Sept. 9- sent e-mail to Blair asking for an interview, have never heard back.

Getting an appointment with Blair Lancaster has never been easy. While media savvy Ms Lancaster often avoids media or gets others to do the avoiding for her.

 

Ward 6 Councillor Blair Lancaster thinking through the answer to a question.  Tends to be cautious.

Ward 6 Councillor Blair Lancaster thinking through the answer to a question. Tends to be cautious.

The Gazette organized a debate of all ten candidates in ward six. We got an email from Brenda McKinley saying she was representing a candidate but did not want to say who and asked if there could be another moderator and if the questions asked of one candidate could be put to every candidate.

Ms McKinley said they did not want the publisher of the Gazette serving as moderator and suggested someone from the Chamber of Commerce. We declined the request. We later learned that Brenda McKinley, the person making the request, was Blair Lancaster’s sister. The sneakiness was seen on too many occasions.

One of our very first interactions with Blair Lancaster was during a break when the Strategic Plan was being developed back in 2010. While walking towards the table with the coffee urns Blair Lancaster asked if “there wasn’t something we could do about Marianne Meed Ward”. At that point in time council members were trying to get used to the Meed Ward style. We were never quite sure what Ms Lancaster wanted us to do.

Blair Lancaster led a large part of the public meeting at which the Niagara Greater Toronto Area (NGTA) highway was discussed at the Mainway Arena. It was a very large crowd and keeping the emotions in check was not a simple task. Lancaster showed that she could handle crowds that were at times unruly.

Lancaster was the first member of Council to declare a conflict of interest on a financial matter. The Downtown Core Vision was being discussed and Lancaster took the position that she had a commercial business and therefore stood to gain if the city did anything. She left her Council seat and sat in the public gallery. The Spa she owned was closed a few years later. There was no financial gain.

Several weeks later Councillor Dennison did the same thing – which shocked everyone at the media table.

The Phhoto Op - Artist Alex Pentek on the left, displays a portion of the Orchid to Councillors Sharman and Lancaster

The Photo Op – Artist Alex Pentek on the left, displays a portion of the Orchid to Councillors Sharman and Lancaster. Lancaster argues the art is not in her ward.

Lancaster has a pluckiness to her – she can be quick with a remark that you may not like and leaves you with the sense that she isn’t one to trifle with – and then she backs away from real issues.

There is a message when nine candidates file nomination papers for a seat held by a single term council member. A lot of people feel they can do a better job or do they smell blood in the water?

The ward has a large chunk of rural Burlington within its boundaries but the voting population is in the Alton, Headon and Millcroft communities.

This was home turf for Blair Lancaster the incumbent completing her first term. However Alton wasn’t a significant part of the population in 2010 – it was a community that was beginning to come together so it is an unknown as far as where the hearts of the voters lie.

Headon and Millcroft was a part of the city Lancaster split with Mark Carr who didn’t lose by all that much in 2010

Issues in the ward south of Dundas were the usual – parking, snow removal – nothing that would grab voters enough to get them to turn out in droves.

There was the renaming of South Hampton Blvd, a city street that runs west off Walker’s Line and has just the one address on it – the Burlington detachment of the Halton Regional Police. Police Association executives wanted the street name changed to Constable Henshaw Blvd., to commemorate Bill Henshaw who died while on duty in 2010.

It really wasn’t a major issue but one that riled one area resident enough for him to delegate and complain that is calls to Lancaster were never answered. “I did call you, on several occasions” said Lancaster. “Yes” responded the citizen – “you called me after the Standing Committee meeting took place and you had made your decision”.

Renaming the street wasn’t a big issue but the communication between the Council member and the constituent was the type of thing that would come up again and again with Lancaster.

Transit was an issue but it was not one that Lancaster had much to say about.

They had every reason to be smiling.  Councillors Meed Ward and Lancaster pose with five members of the Friends of Freeman Station after the Council meeting that approved the entering into of a Joint Venture that would have the Friends moving the station and taking on the task of renovating the building.

They had every reason to be smiling. Councillors Meed Ward and Lancaster pose with five members of the Friends of Freeman Station after the Council meeting that approved the entering into of a Joint Venture that would have the Friends moving the station and taking on the task of renovating the building.

She did have a lot to say about the Freeman Station and for that Lancaster deserves both merit points and a Brownie badge. She, along with Councillor Marianne Meed Ward, took the lead on this issue and managed to hold the rest of Council back. The two women don’t get along, have very little time for each other and deserve credit for being able to set aside differences and ensure that the Freeman project didn’t get trampled.

What Lancaster has not been able to do is establish strong working relationships with all too many of her constituents.

That dissension, particularly with those in rural Burlington who felt very strongly that there interests – and those of the city – were not being met.

Fellow Council members would comment on how little time Lancaster spent at city hall and there wasn’t a lot of positive feedback from city hall staff. A problem over a parking ticket was memorable.

Vanessa Warren, one of the best delegators we’ve seen in some time and an excellent researcher as well was seen as THE leader in this race for the Council when she declared her candidacy.

Rossi and Lancaster in Warren barn

Rural Burlington residents could not understand why there Council member chose to sit beside Vince Rossi – owner of the Air Park and the man responsible for dumping tonnes of fill without the required permits

For the rural population of the ward the Air Park issue has been major. They see the landfill dumping done as a major affront to the environmental integrity of their part of the city and they feel the ward councillor is just a little too cozy with Vince Rossi, president of Burlington Air Park Inc.

Lancaster held many of her ward events at the Air Park – a nice location – what many didn’t fully appreciate was that the occasion was also an Air Park Open House that Lancaster was piggy backing on.
During the early days of the land fill being trucked onto the air park site a number of residents wondered who Lancaster was working for. There was some vicious email between Lancaster and several of her residents who became suspicious and wary of her actions.

During a community meeting at the Warren farm on Bell school line Lancaster sat beside Vince Rossi; during the trial over the landfill and site plan argument Lancaster sat in the row behind Rossi.

Lancaster sign near runway

Lancaster election signs appear beside the Air Park runway.

The rural residents stopped trusting their Council member and formed a coalition of interests to keep the community informed. It was that coalition, Rural Burlington Greenbelt Coalition that did much of the early research on the financial organization of the Air Park and the $4.5 million mortgages that were on the property.

Vanessa Warren, the founding chair of that organization, delegated to the city and the Region very effectively. As 2013 became 2014 Warren decided that here had to be a candidate that would run against Lancaster and filed her nomination papers.

To the surprise of many, candidates then began to come out of the bushes until there were nine candidates running against the incumbent.

Lancaster appears to be betting that the nine will split the vote very widely and that her core vote will hold and she will manage to come up the middle.

During the 2010-14 term Lancaster served on the Burlington Museums Board, Burlington Public Library Board, Burlington Inclusivity Advisory Committee, Burlington Mundialization Committee and the Burlington Accessibility Advisory Committee.

 

From left to right: Carm Bozzo, development manager, Halton Women’s Place; Councillor Blair Lancaster; Mayor Rick Goldring; Ed Dorr, Chair, Burlington Mundialization Committee.

From left to right: Carm Bozzo, development manager, Halton Women’s Place; Councillor Blair Lancaster; Mayor Rick Goldring; Ed Dorr, Chair, Burlington Mundialization Committee.

Perhaps her best work was done on the Mundialization committee where she represented Burlington with our sister cities Apeldoorn in Holland and Itabashi in Japan. It is in those almost semi-diplomatic roles that Lancaster shines.

There were three new council members in 2010 –Blair Lancaster, Paul Sharman and Marianne Meed Ward. Sharman created a name for himself with the way he handled the 2010 budget debates; Meed Ward brought a reputation with her – Lancaster struggled to learn the job and find her own niche.

She is currently chair of a Standing Committee; fortunately she has Councillor Craven as her deputy and he can guide her.

Background links:

Ward six: what has it got going for it?

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4 comments to Ward six council member faces nine challengers with a spotty first term record.

  • David Parkes

    Seems to me someone is upset that the fact he went with his wife is public knowledge.
    Sadly, its the optics here that matter. Seems then that 50% of the trip was paid for (hers was covered and his wasnt), but he still had the benefit of accompanying his wife on a working holiday. A nice perk that not all of us in the private world get to enjoy. Makes me wonder if the room service bills are available to see if his food was paid for since thats a hotel expense (and since her stay in the hotel would have been funded).

    Editor’s note: This is uncalled for. Blair Lancaster would have been scrupulously correct on the accounting. These are cheap shots and there is nothing wrong with the optics. This kind of thing happens all the time in the private sector. The city treasurer would have ensured that the travel policies were fully adhered to.

  • Brian Bourne

    Well Now!

    I have read enough crazy things on this blog. Most of what I find totally untrue in majority of the posts (including the writers articles). Now you are crossing the line with me. Stacie where do you think you have the right to make an untrue statement about first class flights for city councilors and paid trips for spouses. I can assure you that the city did not pay for my expenditures. I am quite capable of paying my own way, which is exactly what took place. How dare make false statements. I would caution any future statements that you do not have validity to back up.

    Editor’s note: Brian Bourne is married to Blair Lancaster.

  • Trinity

    At a meeting last night, The Ward 5 and 6 councilors congratulated themselves on an easy reelection. They toasted their success!

    Not sure what punch they were drinking.

    At another meeting the Ward 6 councilor applauded the use of yet another consultant to tell her what to do. (Transit)

    If you need a consultant whether contracted, other councilors, or the Mayor and you don’t listen to your constituents…… There is a problem!

    I am also a citizen of Ward 6 whom had emails ignored or responses sent with non logical responses.

    I am hoping and praying that Ward 6 can gain a councilor who works for the people of Ward 6. Ward 6 deserves NOT to be ignored by our councilor, the City, or the Region.

    *********I am a citizen of Ward 6,,,,, I am not running for office**********

  • Stacie Dunlop

    Again – I would comment on the huge cost of her first class flight and how she took her hubby with her – but you pick and chose.
    Ive tried to tip you off before, and could have been a great source, but you protect those you like and attack those you dont.
    Hope you get sued again.

    Editor’s note:
    If Blair Lancaster travelled first class she paid for the upgrade. The city does not pay for first class flights
    She paid for her husband’s ticket and the ticket for one of her daughters. She stayed an extra week and paid all those additional expenses.