Showing posts with label government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government. Show all posts

Sunday, May 23, 2021

Housing Grants for Seniors in BC

 The following was from COSCO BC

The latest report from the BC Seniors Advocate ‘Monitoring Seniors Services 2020’ states 94% of seniors live independently in private dwellings and 6% live in assisted living or long-term care. 81% of households maintained by seniors are owned, and an estimated 73% of these have no mortgage.

The Home Ownership grants are available to residents of BC to reduce property taxes on their principal residence.  An additional grant may be claimed for homeowners 65 years or older, persons with disabilities, veterans, or a spouse or relative of a deceased owner. For homes valued above $1.525 million, the additional homeowner grant is reduced incrementally as the assessed home value rises until the grant is $0 for homes valued over $1.694 million in most of BC and $1.734 million in northern and rural areas. Homeowners must still pay at least $100 in property tax annually to contribute to essential services. In 2019, there were 423,193 Seniors Homeowner Grants claimed.

Seniors with an annual income of $32,000 or less may qualify for the Low Income Grant Supplement for Seniors, in addition to the Home Owner Grant. Most seniors who qualify for this grant get $845 from the province, but this amount depends on the income level and the assessed value of the home. Applications must be made annually.

Property Tax Deferment allows eligible BC homeowners 55 and older, surviving spouses and persons with disabilities to defer paying their property taxes for a low simple interest charge that accrues until the account is paid in full. In 2019-20 there were 69,757 households  deferring their taxes, with an interest rate of 1.95%.

Senior renters in BC include 19% of senior households, but vary widely from Vancouver 23%, to Parksville 11%, Kamloops 14%, and Victoria 22%. The vacancy rate for one-bedroom apartments in BC in 2019 was 1.3% but would vary depending on the region of the province.

Shelter Aid for Elderly Renters (SAFER) provides a subsidy directly to BC renters aged 60 or older who have a low to moderate-income and pay more than 30% of the gross monthly income towards rent. As the average rent of a one-bedroom has increased but the rent ceiling used to calculate SAFER subsidies has not kept pace, causing the maximum rents used to calculate SAFER subsidies to remain behind current rents. In March 2020 there were 24,974 recipients of SAFER, with an average payment of $207.

Seniors’ Subsidized Housing is long-term housing funded by BC Housing, available to low-income BC residents aged 55 or older, or those who have a disability. Rents are based on income, tenants pay 30% of gross income. Applications are through the Housing Registry maintained by BC Housing, or directly with organizations maintaining their own databases. In BC there are approximately 31,000 units in 2020. The application list has an average wait time of 2.6 years, and a median wait time of 1.7 years.

Home Adaptations for Independence (HAFI) is available to BC residents of all ages, helping low-income homeowners and renters with a disability or diminished ability to pay for home adaptations that will allow them to continue to live independently in their home. There are specific eligibility requirements. Applications can be submitted in more than one year with a Lifetime maximum grant of $17,500.

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Financial Supports for citizens of BC.


If you live in BC and are worried about your financial situation, the following from Bowinn Ma, the MLA from North Vancouver should help. 

Below you will find a summary of financial supports that are available to support people and businesses during the COVID-19 crisis.
New and updated information is highlighted. (Current as of March 30, 2020)
HOUSING
SupportDescriptionHow to Access
⚡ BC HydroBill deferral, payment plans, as well as crisis funding is available.Call 1-800-BC-HYDRO or apply online.
๐Ÿฆ Freeze on rental ratesNo rent increases are allowed in BC, effective April 1.No action needed. Contact RTB with questions.
๐Ÿฆ Rental supplementProvides up to $500/month towards rent, paid directly to landlords.Check back for application instructions.
๐Ÿ˜️ Mortgages (CMHC-insured)Mortgage payment deferrals available for CMHC-insured loans.๐ŸCheck with your lender.
๐Ÿ˜️ Mortgages (non-CMHC)Check with your lender about payment deferral options.๐ŸCheck with your lender.
๐Ÿ›️ Emergency HousingExisting shelters still active and additional emergency options may be available.all 2-1-1  or search online.

PERSONAL INCOME – WORKFORCE
SupportDescriptionHow to Access
๐Ÿ’ต Employment Insurance (EI)Existing EI benefit continues to be available. Provides up to $573/week to people who have lost income.๐ŸApply online.
๐Ÿ’ต EI Sickness BenefitOne-week waiting period has been waived.๐ŸCall 1-833-381-2725 or apply online.
๐Ÿ’ต Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB)Provides $2000/month to workers who lose income due to COVID-19, including contractors and self-employed people.
(Note: Previous description implied only those who do not qualify for EI are eligible for CERB. However, CERB may actually take the place of EI for new applicants when available. In the meantime, those who qualify for EI should continue to submit for EI, as it is a benefit that lasts up to 45 weeks and can continue after the CERB benefit ends on Oct 3.)
๐ŸCheck back early April for application instructions. More info here.
๐Ÿ’ต BC Emergency BenefitOne-time additional tax-free payment of $1000 to those on EI or CERB.Check back for application instructions.

INCOME SUPPLEMENTS FOR PEOPLE
SupportDescriptionHow to Access
๐Ÿ’ต GST-creditOne-time boost of up to $600 per eligible couple, $400 for eligible individuals in May.๐ŸBenefit is paid out according to your income tax return. More info here.
๐Ÿ’ต Climate Action Tax CreditOne-time boost of up to $564 for eligible families of 4 and $218 for eligible individuals in an enhanced payment in July.Children under 18 years old must be registered for the CCB to qualify. No other action is needed; benefit is paid out according to your income tax return. More info here.
๐Ÿ‘ช Canada Child Benefit (CCB)One-time boost of $300 per child in May.๐ŸNo action if you are already registered for CCB. Otherwise, apply online.
๐Ÿคธ Youth in CareYouth in care will not age out of services during the pandemic. Agreements with Young Adults (AYA) program payments will continue despite school closures and training interruptions.
๐Ÿง˜ Young Adults Program (AYA)Agreements with Young Adults (AYA) program payments will continue to former youth-in-care despite school closures and training interruptions.
๐Ÿ’ต Income AssistanceExisting Income Assistance program continues to be available for those in need with no other resources.Apply online, by phone at 1-866-866-0800, or visit your local office.
♿ People with DisabilitiesExisting Disability Assistance program continues to be available. See also full list of additional supports here.Apply online, by phone at 1-866-866-0800, or visit your local office.
๐Ÿ‘ต SeniorsExisting programs continue to be available, including:
—–Old Age Security (OAS): $614/mo (max)
—–Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS): $916/mo (max)
—–Allowance/Allowance for Survivor: $1389/mo (max)
๐Ÿ Eligible seniors are automatically enrolled, but applications can also be submitted online.
OTHER FINANCIAL SUPPORTS FOR PEOPLE
SupportDescriptionHow to Access
๐Ÿš˜ Hospital parkingParking is free of charge at all health authority owned/operated health care sites.
๐Ÿš— ICBCMonthly payment deferral for up to 90 days with no penalty.Call 1-800-665-6442 or apply online.
๐Ÿ‘ช Emergency Child Care FundingChild care providers receiving emergency government funding cannot charge parent fees for any periods of closure or for vacant spaces and must reserve spaces for families, starting April.Check with your provider to see if they are in this program.
๐Ÿซ BC Student LoansSix-month interest-free moratorium on repaymentstarting April.Repayment will be paused automatically.
๐Ÿซ Canada Student LoansSix-month interest-free moratorium on repaymentstarting April.๐ŸRepayment will be paused automatically.
๐ŸšŒ BC Transit & TransLinkFare-free boarding on all buses. Enter through rear of the bus, unless accessible loading is required.
๐Ÿ‘ต Registered Retirement Income Funds (RRIFs)Minimum withdrawals from Registered Retirement Income Funds (RRIFs) has been reduced by 25% for 2020.๐ŸLearn more here.
✈️ Emergency Travel LoanEmergency loan of $5000 available to Canadians travelling abroad.๐ŸDial +1 613-996-8885 or send an email.
๐Ÿงพ Income tax returnThe filing due date is deferred to June 1. Payments owed are deferred until after August 31.๐Ÿ
BUSINESSES (GENERAL)
SupportDescriptionHow to Access
⚡ BC HydroBill deferral and payment plans.Call 1-800-BC-HYDRO.
๐Ÿ’ต Canada Emergency Wage SubsidyCovers up to 75% of wages for businesses, charities, and non-profits that have lost more than 30% of their revenue. Max subsidy of $847 per week per employee, backdated to March 15.๐ŸCheck back for application instructions.
๐Ÿ’ต Business Credit Availability Program (BCAP)Financing support for small and medium-sized businesses. Available mid-April.
—–Canada Emergency Business Account: Loans of up to $40,000 for small businesses and not-for-profits, interest-free for one year. A portion may be forgivable. Available mid-April.
—– Loan Guarantee: Operating credit and cash flow term loans of up to $6.25 million to SMEs. Available mid-April.
—–Co-Lending Program: Co-lend term loans to SMEs for their operational cash flow requirements. Eligible businesses may obtain incremental credit amounts of up to $6.25 million through the program. Available mid-April.
๐ŸSpeak with your financial institution. Learn more.
๐Ÿงพ Federal income taxPayments owed are deferred until after August 31.๐Ÿ
๐Ÿงพ BC business taxesPayments for Employer health tax (EHT), provincial sales tax (PST), municipal and regional district tax, tobacco tax, motor fuel tax, and carbon tax are deferred until after Sept 30. Scheduled April 1 increases to provincial carbon tax and PST are deferred.
๐Ÿงพ School TaxCut of 50% for business and industry property classes, to be passed onto tenants on triple-net leases.
๐Ÿงพ GST/HSTPayments owed deferred to June 30.๐Ÿ
๐Ÿงพ Customs duties & taxesPayments owed deferred to June 30.๐Ÿ

BUSINESSES (BY SECTOR)
SupportDescriptionHow to Access
๐Ÿงธ Child care sectorEmergency funding is available for child care providers that stay open and that close.Learn more.
๐ŸŽญ Arts & Culture sector$3-million Arts and Culture Resilience Supplement to give operating and eligible project clients a supplement of up to $15,000. Clients will receive a 50% advance on 2020-21 funding.Via BC Arts Council.
๐Ÿ“ฐ Publishing and news sectorsSimplified process for Canada Book Fund and Canada Periodical Fund. Journalism Tax Measures.๐Ÿ
๐ŸŽฅ Broadcasting sectorCRTC Part I licence fees waived.๐Ÿ
๐Ÿž️ Tourism businesses in national parks and historic sitesTourism operators in national parks, historic sites, and marine conservation areas will have payments on commercial leases and licences of occupation deferred without interest until September 1.๐ŸWait to be contacted by Parks Canada.
๐Ÿš Seafood sectorSeafood growers, shellfish farmers, and processors, will have access to the $5 billion Farm Credit Canada loan program.๐ŸVia FCC.
๐Ÿšœ Farmers and Agri-Food sectorAccess to the $5 billion Farm Credit Canada loan program.๐ŸVia FCC.
✈️AirportsRents paid on ground leases waived.๐Ÿ

FUNDING BOOSTS TO CHARITIES FOR PROGRAM DELIVERY
SupportDescription
๐Ÿฅซ Food Banks BCFunding boost to Food Banks British Columbia, who will distribute the money among food banks province wide.
๐Ÿง’๐Ÿผ Kids Help PhoneFunding boost to Kids Help Phone, which provides young people with mental health support. ๐Ÿ
๐Ÿ‘ต United Way CanadaFunding boost to United Way Canada for local organizations to support practical services to Canadian seniors, such as: Delivery of groceries, medications, or other needed items, or personal outreach to assess individuals’ needs and connect them to community supports. ๐Ÿ

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Taxes and Lifestyle, there is a connection

My thanks to Wally and John for this information and insight
If you hate paying taxes, please do the following.
1. Do not use Medicare
2. Do not use Social Security
3. Do not become a member of the US military, who are paid with tax dollars.
4. Do not ask the National Guard to help you after a disaster.
5. Do not call 911 when you get hurt.
6. Do not call the police to stop intruders in your home.
7. Do not summon the fire department to save your burning home.
8. Do not drive on any paved road, highway, and interstate or drive on any bridge.
9. Do not use public restrooms.
10. Do not send your kids to public schools.
11. Do not put your trash out for city garbage collectors.
12. Do not live in areas with clean air.
13. Do not drink clean water.
14. Do not visit National Parks.
15. Do not visit public museums, zoos, and monuments.
16. Do not eat or use FDA inspected food and medicines.
17. Do not bring your kids to public playgrounds.
18. Do not walk or run on sidewalks.
19. Do not use public recreational facilities such as basketball and tennis courts.
20. Do not seek shelter facilities or food in soup kitchens when you are homeless and hungry.
21. Do not apply for educational or job training assistance when you lose your job.
22. Do not apply for food stamps when you can’t feed your children.
23. Do not use the judiciary system for any reason.
24. Do not ask for an attorney when you are arrested and do not ask for one to be assigned to you by the court.
25. Do not apply for any Pell Grants.
26. Do not use cures that were discovered by labs using federal dollars.
27. Do not fly on federally regulated airplanes.
28. Do not use any product that can trace its development back to NASA.
29. Do not watch the weather provided by the National Weather Service.
30. Do not listen to severe weather warnings from the National Weather Service.
31. Do not listen to tsunami, hurricane, or earthquake alert systems.
32. Do not apply for federal housing.
33. Do not use the internet, which was developed by the military.
34. Do not swim in clean rivers.
35. Do not allow your child to eat school lunches or breakfasts.
36. Do not ask for FEMA assistance when everything you own gets wiped out by disaster.
37. Do not ask the military to defend your life and home in the event of a foreign invasion.
38. Do not use your cell phone or home telephone.
39. Do not buy firearms that wouldn’t have been developed without the support of the US Government and military. That includes most of them.
40. Do not eat USDA inspected produce and meat.
41. Do not apply for government grants to start your own business.
42. Do not apply to win a government contract.
43. Do not buy any vehicle that has been inspected by government safety agencies.
44. Do not buy any product that is protected from poisons, toxins, etc…by the Consumer Protection Agency.
45. Do not save your money in a bank that is FDIC insured.
46. Do not use Veterans benefits or military health care.
47. Do not use the G.I. Bill to go to college.
48. Do not apply for unemployment benefits.
49. Do not use any electricity from companies regulated by the Department of Energy.
50. Do not live in homes that are built to code.
51. Do not run for public office. Politicians are paid with taxpayer dollars.
52. Do not ask for help from the FBI, S.W.A.T, the bomb squad, Homeland Security, State troopers, etc…
53. Do not apply for any government job whatsoever as all state and federal employees are paid with tax dollars.
54. Do not use public libraries.
55. Do not use the US Postal Service.
56. Do not visit the National Archives.
57. Do not visit Presidential Libraries.
58. Do not use airports that are secured by the federal government.
59. Do not apply for loans from any bank that is FDIC insured.
60. Do not ask the government to help you clean up after a tornado.
61. Do not ask the Department of Agriculture to provide a subsidy to help you run your farm.
62. Do not take walks in National Forests.
63. Do not ask for taxpayer dollars for your oil company.
64. Do not ask the federal government to bail your company out during recessions.
65. Do not seek medical care from places that use federal dollars.
66. Do not use Medicaid.
67. Do not use WIC.
68. Do not use electricity generated by Hoover Dam.
69. Do not use electricity or any service provided by the Tennessee Valley Authority.
70. Do not ask the Army Corps of Engineers to rebuild levees when they break.
71. Do not let the Coast Guard save you from drowning when your boat capsizes at sea.
72. Do not ask the government to help evacuate you when all hell breaks loose in the country you are in.
73. Do not visit historic landmarks.
74. Do not visit fisheries.
75. Do not expect to see animals that are federally protected because of the Endangered Species List.
76. Do not expect plows to clear roads of snow and ice so your kids can go to school and so you can get to work.
77. Do not hunt or camp on federal land.
78. Do not work anywhere that has a safe workplace because of government regulations.
79. Do not use public transportation.
80. Do not drink water from public water fountains.
81. Do not whine when someone copies your work and sells it as their own. Government enforces copyright laws.
82. Do not expect to own your home, car, or boat. Government organizes and keeps all titles.
83. Do not expect convicted felons to remain off the streets.
84. Do not eat in restaurants that are regulated by food quality and safety standards.
85. Do not seek help from the US Embassy if you need assistance in a foreign nation.
86. Do not apply for a passport to travel outside of the United States.
87. Do not apply for a patent when you invent something.
88. Do not adopt a child through your local, state, or federal governments.
89.Do not use elevators that have been inspected by federal or state safety regulators.
90. Do not use any resource that was discovered by the USGS.
91. Do not ask for energy assistance from the government.
92. Do not move to any other developed nation, because the taxes are much higher.
93. Do not go to a beach that is kept clean by the state.
94. Do not use money printed by the US Treasury.
95. Do not complain when millions more illegal immigrants cross the border because there are no more border patrol agents.
96. Do not attend a state university.
97. Do not see any doctor that is licensed through the state.
98. Do not use any water from municipal water systems.
99. Do not complain when diseases and viruses, that were once fought around the globe by the US government and CDC, reach your house.
100. Do not work for any company that is required to pay its workers a livable wage, provide them sick days, vacation days, and benefits.
101. Do not expect to be able to vote on election days. Government provides voting booths, election day officials, and voting machines which are paid for with taxes.
102. Do not ride trains. The railroad was built with government financial assistance.
The fact is, we pay for the lifestyle we expect. 

Without taxes, our lifestyles would be totally different and much harder. The less we pay, the less we get in return.  By attacking taxes we really only reward corporations and the wealthy. Low taxes weaken our infrastructure and way of life. 
So next time you object to paying taxes or fight to abolish taxes for corporations and the wealthy, keep this quote in mind…
“I like to pay taxes. With them, I buy civilization.” ~Oliver Wendell Holme

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Invasive Bureaucracy

SOME BROAD STRATEGIES TO SHIELD PEOPLE FROM INVASIVE BUREAUCRACY
by Michael J. Kendrick
Thanks to our Australian friends at CRU for making innovative and thoughtful articles like this one available.   “Some Examples Of Broad Strategies To Shield Consumers And Families From Invasive Bureaucracy” was first published in Crucial Times, Edition 24, Brisbane, Australia, July 2002
CRU Editor:  ”Recognising that services themselves struggle with Technocratic Managerialism,Michael Kendrick offers some broad strategies to organisations and workers who can become effective buffers against impersonal bureaucratic processes that intrude into the lives of the people they support. Michael is a regular contributor to CRUcial Times.”
The growth of formal systems for providing services to millions of people in affluent societies has produced a rapid growth of organisations, systems, and bureaucracies. These vary in size from small to large and take on both governmental and non-governmental forms. The character and operating ethics of these systems vary widely as do the effects of their functioning on the people who are served. The processes of bureaucracy formation and growth have drawn the people served, and the people doing the serving, into endless encounters with bureaucracy that many believe to be fruitless and unnecessary for the actual conduct of services.
Often, the organisations involved act as if such encounters are benign or of no great consequence to the net quality of consumer or family experience, quite apart from that of their own staff. Nonetheless, many people are quite distressed by this phenomenon and have consciously been trying to discover ways of having services exist in such a way that the people served will have minimal bureaucratic encounters and a different kind of relationship with them. In other words, they want to create low-bureaucracy service models in which an ethic of ‘right relationship’ prevails.
Bureaucracy Minimisation. This goal can be accomplished by some rather obvious strategies. The first is simply that of devising ways of delivering services that minimise the total amount of bureaucracy that is required to operate the actual service. This approach does not equate to the entire elimination of bureaucracy, as desirable as that may be for some people. It simply means that the design of any bureaucratic functions are done in such a way that they go from ‘greater’ to ‘lesser’ bureaucracy in terms of the amount of bureaucracy. A simple example of this would be a reduction of paperwork, meetings, and other time involvements, particularly as they relate to the service user.
Reducing The Overall Invasiveness of Bureaucracy. This approach refers to the designing of bureaucracy so that it does not invade the life of consumers and families. In other words, the bureaucratic functions might still exist but they function outside the orbit of the people being served. This non-intrusive approach would require the recognition that there are domains which are best left untouched by bureaucracy if at all possible; domains such as one’s home, dreams, personal relationships, family life and so on. Nonetheless, the reduction of invasiveness does not necessarily mean that bureaucratic control over one’s life has ended or diminished, as its presence may be felt at other levels.
Challenging Bureaucratic Control and Domination Of People’s Lives. If bureaucracy were less controlling and imperial in its orientation to the lives of people, then it might even be possible to imagine bureaucracies acting in ways that were enabling, empowering, or even liberating to somedegree. However, this polarity from greater to lesser levels of control over decisions affecting people’s lives is worthy of close examination. It may well be possible for many services to operate in a manner in which control is given back to people, both structurally and attitudinally, with all the advantages that may come with this new, right kind of relationship between the bureaucracy and the people that it ought to support. A good deal of this will hinge on how decisions are taken and how authority is shared with the people, or whether that authority is held exclusively by those in bureaucracies.
Constructing Intentional Bureaucratic Shields, Buffers And Filters. This strategy refers to designing bureaucracy so that various firewalls or shields exist, or are specifically created to prevent the assertion of elements of bureaucracy over the lives of people. Shielding people from bureaucracy requires that there is a recognition of the type of bureaucratic influences that must be blocked, neutralised, or otherwise rendered to be less of a factor in the life of a person.
Paradoxically, the bureaucracy that is seen as being a danger may also play a role in limiting itself by agreeing to, or even pioneering, special features of itself that shield consumers from harmful or unhelpful aspects of its own functioning. For instance, it may establish rights and protocols for consumers that enable consumers to independently deny or thwart the bureaucracy when they feel in peril from it. In many jurisdictions, this ‘shielding’ is facilitated by the bureaucracy, ensuring that its users have a right to an advocate, and to the resources for challenging the bureaucracy. To some degree, such changes will help to more thoroughly balance the needs of the user against the assertions and claims of the bureaucracy.
Defining Social Ethics That Could Help Reduce The Toxicity Of Bureaucratic Functioning. It has already been indicated that there must be a search for, and upholding of, ‘right relationship’ ethics that serve as a kind of template or discipline for designing solutions and evaluating how things are working. This suggests that a kind of triage may be needed, particularly at the level of actually guiding values and principles (and the beliefs and assumptions that justify these), to help identify where the interests of service users are being most injured. When setting things right, the most toxic and damaging ‘false ethics’ that can be discerned should be given the most attention. For instance, the classic, kindly, self-congratulatory paternalistic attitude of many top-down organisations may be comparatively less noxious than would be the practice of inflicting brutal, punitive and abusive staff on vulnerable and defenceless clients. Both are detrimental and odious, but perhaps not entirely comparable in the harm that they cause.
In any case, all such instances of degradation of consumers would eventually need to be met by another orientation that fully remedies the underlying moral or ethical deficiency that produced the toxicity in the first place. For instance, the relief that is needed to free people from abusive staff tormenters would necessarily need to include bureaucratic measures that had the effect of creating the means to detect, filter out, reorient, or remove staff who might be unsuitable. A key ethic needed to achieve this would be that of the bureaucracy not designing services for people or on behalf of them, but rather designing services with people, in a manner in which every important decision would be jointly taken between the organisation and the consumer. With-ness, as a guiding social ethic, would be a far less dangerous approach than would be an uncritical reliance on the good judgement of the organisation when it came to the design of services.
Conclusion. The strategies presented here are not intended to be a detailed plan for tackling the issue of invasive bureaucracy, but they do represent a seminal basis for the consideration of theory and practice that might help to tame and re-align morally feral, unresponsive, and dysfunctional bureaucracy. They also hold out the hope that we might one day get much better at what it takes to have bureaucracy that is subordinate to, and enabling of, human well-being. Hence, the problem ought not to be construed as being the existence of bureaucracies, as these are both a necessary evil and an aid to our lives, rather, the question is the kind of bureaucracies that we allow to flourish. We most certainly need a different vision of the kind of bureaucracy that is the most compatible with service to people.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Follow-up to Chicken Manure for the homeless

In an earlier post I talked about the issue of homelessness in my hometown and how the by-law officers had over reacted to he situation. I sent the following email to the Mayor. To his credit after an initial email response from his assistance, he phoned me to explain what actions had been taken by him and the senior management in Poco, to prevent further actions of this type. We had an interesting conversation, and I was convinced that this type of action would not happen again in my city. 

The Mayor and the city senior management should be ashamed of the actions taken, and they are and they have taken steps to make sure this will not happen again. I hope they are correct.

Port Coquitalm (Poco) was in the news this morning for the actions of two by-law officers who spread chicken manure where the homeless camp out in our city.

The by-law manager has apparently apologized. An apology in my mind is not good enough for such a terrible action. My question for you and the manager is what disciplinary action was taken against the officers, and their supervisor and manager for this action?

I do not believe that the officers would take such an action without approval of their supervisor and managers So what steps have you has mayor taken to make sure that city staff is disciplined and that this type of action does not happen again?

Makes me ashamed to live in this community