Bay Bulls council finds itself short

By Mark Squibb/October 21, 2021

Bay Bulls’ new council ran into an old problem right off the bat at its first meeting last week – a lack of quorum, because some councilors were in a conflict of interest.

The item on the agenda was an application for a utility shed.

Councilor Keith O’ Driscoll declared himself in conflict as he had an immediate family member adjacent to the property.

His wife and fellow councillor Shannon O’Driscoll declared herself in conflict for the same reason.

Thirdly, Mayor Neil O’Brien declared conflict, as he lives in close proximity to the property.

As three of the five councilors had declared conflict, quorum was lost, and a vote could not be taken.

The town’s chief administrative officer Jennifer Aspell said council can request ministerial approval for the remaining two members to vote on the matter.

Councillor Jason Sullivan asked if Mayor O’Brien could retract his declaration, but Aspell said he could not as he had already declared.

Sullivan joked that council ought to just let the applicant put the shed up, seeing as council couldn’t vote on the matter.

When Aspell asked if council wanted to go ahead and seek ministerial approval, Sullivan said that by the time approval was granted the shed would be built, so it didn’t matter.

“Well, that’s not really the case,” said Aspell after a pause. “There has to be a decision on this matter, so either you ask for ministerial approval for the remaining two to make a decision, or we can defer it until next month and see if it can be dealt with then.”

A recommendation was made to defer the motion, but Sullivan argued there was no point to deferring it as council will not be able to deal with it at the next meeting for the same reason.

The agenda item will be back on the agenda once ministerial approval is granted. The actual location of the property was never identified during the meeting.

Earlier in the meeting, council grappled with a similar challenge with conflict of interest. The town had received an application for a family home on Track Road Extension.

First, councilor Keith O’Driscoll inquired whether he would be in conflict, as an immediate family member lives on the same street.

Sullivan made the motion that O’Driscoll was not in conflict. He noted that if he was, his wife Shannon would be too, and council would not have a quorum to deal with the matter.

Put to a vote, council determined the couple were not in a conflict.

But then Mayor O’Brien declared himself in conflict, because he lives near the proposed construction site.

That led to Deputy Mayor Jason O’Brien assuming the chair.

After all the wrangling about who was or was not in a conflict, council denied the application due to a lack of information.

Following that motion, council unanimously approved construction of a commercial building on Winnonish Drive.

The previous council had, with permission from the provincial government, reduced the town’s complement of councilors from seven to five after numerous attempts to fill two vacancies fell short. This past election, 10 people ran for council, but the Town stuck with limiting the council complement to five positions.

Posted on October 28, 2021 .

Sullivan not on board with Joan for repairs to Lifestyle Centre

By Mark Squibb/October 21, 2021

During the first public meeting of the newly minted Bay Bulls council, held October 12, councilor Jason Sullivan made it known he was not impressed with the size of the cheque the town will have to cut to cover the cost of repairs to the Bay Bulls Regional Lifestyle Centre.

“The town was awarded funding back in late August, we’ve been unable to make an announcement, and still not making an official announcement, to complete upgrades to the Bay Bulls Regional Lifestyle Centre,” said Town CAO Jennifer Aspell.

She explained the funding was awarded on a 50/50 cost shared basis. The town’s contribution will be $346,765, and upgrades will include roof replacement, installation of a back-up generator, (Aspell noted there is currently no emergency warming centre in town, and that the back up generator would allow the town to offer such a centre), installation of air flow vents throughput the building and heat pumps for energy efficiency, and other upgrades.

Aspell said the Town has received approval from the Community Credit Union, and now just needs to make a resolution to sign the loan agreement.

Sullivan wished to discuss the matter before a motion was made, but Aspell pointed out that under the rules of order, a motion had to be made first in order to have a discussion.

Sullivan then made a motion to discuss the item, but quickly let council know that though he would vote in favour of the motion, he was not really for it.

“We kind of got blind-sided by this, as it is our first meeting,” said Sullivan. “I just want to make it very clear that I’m not really happy about how this building is only 10 years old and we’re pumping a million dollars into it now. So, I just want to make it clear that it’s a lot of money and we don’t take it lightly.”

The loan would be amortized over a 10-year period, with a locked in rate of 3.5 per cent over the first five years. It would be renewable after five years. Payments would by $3,400 per month during the five-year term.

 

Posted on October 28, 2021 .

Returning officer questions actions of new Witless Bay councillors

By Mark Squibb/October 14, 2021

Witless Bay returning officer Cathy Armstrong was none too impressed with an impromptu swearing-in ceremony that she says should never have taken place.

Armstrong says she was hired by the Town to work the advance polls, election, nomination process and swearing-in ceremony.

Unfortunately for Armstrong, she came aboard in the midst of a flurry of staff resignations that left the Town Hall empty.

“I guess you could say I was the last person working there,” said Armstrong.  She added that CAO Kevin Kelly, who she said was a very nice person, was the last employee to resign, leaving the job shortly after the advance poll. So, from September 14 onward, she was the town’s lone employee.

“Even simple things, like how to use the copier, I had to learn on my own,” said Armstrong.

She hired some help to count the ballots and help instruct voters on election day.

 “We had an enormous turnout of people, to the point where when we started counting the ballots, it took us right into 2 o’clock in the morning before we got them all done,” said Armstrong. “It was just a steady count.”

She said despite the long hours, election night went well, and that COVID protocols were followed and voters were patient and kind.

Wednesday morning, after not getting to bed until around 3 a.m., Armstrong said she went to the council building, called Municipal Affairs and sent in the appropriate paperwork.

Then came Thursday.

“Thursday was going to be a nice little holiday; I would finally have some time to breath — until all Hell broke lose,” said Armstrong. “On Thursday, I started getting hounded by some of the councillors, four of them, that wanted to be sworn in right away. But I was trying to explain to them that there was a window of three days that the other candidates have to decide if they want a recount. Even though there were no big margins, I still felt they had the right to have that three day (period) that was in the ruling.”

One candidate, Jacob Hayden, was out of the province, and Armstrong said she was being pressured by other members of council to swear him in through a virtual ceremony.

“They were telling me that I had to swear him in virtually,” said Armstrong. “You can’t swear someone in virtually, they have to sign that Oath of Office in front of me.”

She touched base with Municipal Affairs, which confirmed that a candidate cannot be sworn-in virtually.

Eventually, Armstrong decided to host the ceremony on Sunday, October 3, at 4 in the evening.

That was not soon enough however, for some councillors who wanted to be sworn in immediately.

She said one of them even came to her house.

“He came in very nasty, and in a shouting kind of way wanted to know where I was at,” said Armstrong. “He told me that, no way no how, that I had to swear him in right there and then.”

She said the councillor demanded to be sworn in right away because he was afraid the former council would spend all the town’s money before Sunday’s swearing in ceremony.

“He got very nasty about it, and very upset by it,” said Armstrong. “I couldn’t listen to him any more. So, I told him, ‘I am doing your swearing-in on Sunday at 4 o’ clock, and that’s it. I’m going to call all the rest of them and let them now the same thing.”

Armstrong said that the man told her he wouldn’t be home on Sunday, and insisted she do it before then.

“That night I got a message from someone, asking, “Did you know that Lorna Yard is planning a swearing-in ceremony in her living room at 1 o’clock?’” said Armstrong. “She can’t do that. She’s an elected councillor, she can’t override what I was put here to do. Who does that? I couldn’t believe it. So, then I called one of the council members, and apparently, they had been called and asked to be (there), because they were going to be swore in at Lorna Yard’s. And I said, ‘There’s something not right with this picture.’”

Armstrong said she then went to newly elected councillor Nancy Burke, and that Burke had heard of it, but wasn’t planning on attending.”

“Around 1:30 or 2 o’clock on Saturday afternoon, I got a call from a friend of mine saying that there were people entering the council building,” said Armstrong.

She said she was so disturbed, as she thought she was the only one who had a key to the building, that she phoned the RCMP.

“If anything was stolen or broken, because you know yourself that the council building is a very sacred place, there’s so much personal information held there, and no one has any business in that building unless they have authority to be there, and there’s management (present),” said Armstrong. “But there wasn’t, they just walked in, apparently got sworn-in, and did whatever they liked. So, I called the RCMP and told them the story, and told them that I just wanted it on file that I was not near that building on Saturday.”

Four members of council were indeed sworn-in that Sunday — new Mayor Trevor Croft, new Deputy Mayor Lorna Yard, and councillors Gerard Dunne and Ralph Carey, who had served on the 2013 – 2017 council.

Armstrong immediately cancelled plans to hold the ceremony on Sunday.

“I could not do a swearing-in ceremony on Sunday for the simple fact that Lorna Yard and the other three council members were after going over my head and doing something that wasn’t ethical,” she said. “I can’t understand why they did what they did… They did it for power, not to help the people they said they were going to be council members for.”

Come Monday, she phoned Municipal Affairs and was told the ceremony was perfectly within the right of the councillors who had wished to be sworn-in. She said they then asked her to simply swear in the other three at a later date.

Come Tuesday evening, Armstrong did swear-in the remaining three members of council – Alex Troake, Jacob Hayden, and Nancy Bruke.

Croft came out on top of the municipal election, earning 520 votes. At council’s first public meeting, held at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, October 8, he introduced himself as the new mayor of Witless Bay.

“It’s a bit daunting at first,” said Croft. “But you get into the swing of things. We’re after having one meeting already, and it went fairly smoothly. We’ll have another meeting on the nineteenth. So, the more I get involved with it the more comfortable I feel.”

Croft was declared mayor, while Yard, who finished sixth in the vote count, was declared deputy mayor.

The actual election of those positions, however, happened in a private meeting before the public meeting via a secret ballot, according to Croft.

He admits several members of council, himself included, wanted to be sworn-in immediately.

“I respect Cathy, and she’s done an absolutely fantastic job this entire election, but there were some issues that arose,” said Croft.  “She didn’t want to swear us in when we wanted to, so we decided, in order to get things done and get things moving as quick as possible, we went a different route… There were some issues on council, and we needed to get in as quick as we can to make sure that we didn’t fall behind. And we learned there was a lot more fallen behind than we actually thought there was. But we had to get in as quick as possible to make sure that everything was going to be worked out as quickly as possible. So, the majority of us got sworn in as early as possible, and the others that didn’t get sworn in right away got sworn in at a later day.”

He said the swearing in ceremony held on Saturday was completely above board.

“Everything was done completely legally,” said Croft. “We went to Municipal Affairs to find out the proper way to do it. They knew the situation in Witless Bay has never been easy.”

He said a commissioner of oaths came by to swear-in the councillors. As to how they got inside the building, Croft said Armstrong was wrong in asserting she was the only one with a key.

“There’s five or six keys to that building, so I think she was a bit mistaken,” said Croft. “I got my key off a past councillor. Once we were sworn in, that’s when I got the key.”

He did not provide the name of that councillor, as he said they had asked not to be named.

“Once Cathy realized the rules and regulations weren’t what she thought the rules and regulations were, that’s when everything started to move smoothly again,” said Croft. “It went a little hairy there for a little while, but it was nothing we couldn’t handle for sure.”

As for the supposed idea of a swearing-in ceremony in Yard’s living room, Croft said he had never heard of it. Yard herself was unavailable for comment, Tuesday, citing a personal matter.

Croft said one of the major issues that needs to be addressed is staffing.

As Armstrong alluded to, the town hall was unstaffed for a period of at least aa couple of weeks. Council voted during its Friday night meeting to appoint former assistant town clerk Barbara Harrigan, who resigned a few months back, to a temporary clerk’s position.

“She came out of retirement to help us out for a couple of months,” said Croft. “We’re going to be hiring somebody here soon I assume to be her assistant and get trained in. So, we’re very thankful that Barb is back, she’s going to help us out a lot.”

Croft said getting the positions of CAO and Town Clerk filled are among the highest priorities of council.

“The most important thing is to get the town hall opened up so that people can get their taxes paid and get their permits and stuff like that,” said Croft. “If we don’t have anybody in the office, we can’t get anything done, and it’s been backing up for a while, so Barb has her work cut out for her over the next couple of weeks.”

Croft said he didn’t know whether folks on the payroll, such as maintenance workers or the fire chief, had gone without pay due to the lack of staff.

“We’re on damage control right now, which we really shouldn’t be, we should be concentrating on other issues, but we have to fix all these problems before we can start making things better,” Croft said.

The first public meeting of council was short, lasting 15 minutes, with more of a focus on hitting the brakes than the gas pedal. One of the first items of business was to rescind the motion of the previous council which had issued a contract for an extension to Mullowney’s Lane. That was followed by a motion to order law firm Stewart McKelvey, which represented the Town against groups such as Yard’s that opposed that work off, to cease all activities on behalf of the town. The new council also ordered O’Brien’s Contracting, which was constructing the extension, to cease all activities on behalf of the town pending a review.

All three motions passed unanimously with no debate.

Another motion that passed unanimously was that the locks on the town hall and Puffin Centre be changed, which effectively locks out community groups that use the Puffin Centre, at least for the time being.

Councillor Jacob Hayden said it was simply a matter of council wanting to get a grasp on how many keys have been distributed to community groups, and that those who should have keys will get new ones.

The next public meeting will take place October 19.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted on October 19, 2021 .

'No harm in applying' says Witless Bay fire chief

By Mark Squibb/October 7, 2021

Those interested in becoming a member of the Witless Bay Volunteer Fired Department ought to get their applications in sooner rather than later, as the Department is actively recruiting new members.

There are currently 27 members and Fire Chief Maria Churchill says the hope is to one day reach a complement of 40.

“I’m not sure at this point and time with a single recruitment drive that we’ll be able to reach that number, but 40 would be an optimal number,” said Churchill.

And if you’re on the fence about applying, Churchill says to just give it a try.

“If you’re not sure about applying, there’s no harm in applying,” said Churchill. “Once you go through the interview process and you understand what the department does and what the department focuses on, then you can decide whether or not you’re able to commit to the fire department or not. But I do encourage anybody who’s on the fence, wondering if they should or shouldn’t, to apply, because there really is no harm in trying.”

Applications are due October 7, although Churchill said that late applications will receive consideration.

The station just hosted a hazardous materials course which was attended by 13 folks representing seven fire departments across the Avalon, with some people driving from as far as Victoria.

“It shows that people are willing to travel to access the training when it’s available,” said Churchill.

Posted on October 19, 2021 .

Mullowney narrowly falls short of re-election

By Mark Squibb/October 7, 2021

For the first time in over three decades, Harold Mullowney will not have a seat at the Bay Bulls council table.

Mullowney earned 243 votes for himself. It was 21 votes less than he needed to land a seat.

He isn’t terribly disappointed by the outcome.

“It was a bit of a relief,” said Mullowney. “I’ve been there 31 years, and pumping in 25, sometimes 30 hours a week into council and other activities I’m involved with. So, I have a chance now to step back and rest and relax a bit and let someone else take the reins and see how they can do for a while.”

He looks back at his time on council with fondness.

“I’ve had 31 good years there,” said Mullowney. “I’ve been mayor and deputy mayor for most of it. I’ve seen a lot of things change in Bay Bulls over those years and in the region, and I’m proud of many of the accomplishments we’ve made, especially in the last four years. We had a good council, we worked very well together, and put in place a number of initiatives that helped the community a great deal. We did a lot of road work and a lot of other activities. It’s unfortunate that most people did not recognize how involved the council was, and how much had been accomplished. But I’m proud of what we’ve done collectively. We have a great staff and had a great council, and I just hope that those who are taking over have the time, and the energy, and the commitment to continue some of the initiatives that we’ve started.”

Residents voted out all five incumbent members of council who ran for re-election.

“Sometimes people just want change for change, and sometimes change is good,” said Mullowney. “Only time will tell.”

Interestingly, the exact same scenario played out in Witless Bay, with residents voting in an entirely new slate of candidates.

Had Mullowney been running in Witless Bay — or pretty well any other council across the province — he would have actually been re-elected. Bay Bulls confirmed the week before the vote that only five candidates would be elected, rather than the typical seven.

For a number of years, council had tried fruitlessly to fill an empty council seat. Calls for candidates went unheeded. The resignation of Evelyn Tucker some time back left a council already struggling to meet quorum with a second vacancy.

The town applied for special permission from the provincial government to operate with a complement of five councillors. That permission was granted.

“It was getting tiresome to constantly go back to the minister to get permission to vote on things,” said Mullowney. “So, we had it reduced to five so that our quorum changed, and we could run the town more effectively. That being said, there will always be an issue around getting quorum in small towns.”

Even with the election approaching, Mullowney said council thought it best to keep things as they were. He said after discussions with council it was more or less taken for granted that council would stick with a complement of five.

“Seven was a good number to work with, but to go back to the minster and ask to go back to seven, when we had such difficulty getting anyone to step forward, and the minister’s first question I’m sure would have been, ‘Well, what’s the rationale for this?’ And before the election we had no concept of who was going to run, so we had no rationale for it,” Mullowney said.

Ten people ended up putting their names forward, including the five former members.

Mullowney said his fear was that had council opted to elect seven then they would soon be back to the minister to request another reduction to five.

“That being said, I will not be surprised if you see the complement reduced to five in much of the province as we move forward, because many towns are having that very same issue,” said Mullowney.

Former councilor Eric Maloney would also have made it to council, had a full complement been elected.

Mullowney thanked those in the community who have supported him over the years.

“I will still be very active in my role with the East Coast Trail,” said Mullowney. “And I might actually get a chance now to get out and walk some of that beautiful trail. We have a gem here on the east coast of Newfoundland.”

He hopes the new council will carry out the initiatives laid out in the town’s strategic plan, and noted upgrades to the Regional Lifestyle Centre and recreation fields have already been approved. He would like to see council continue to work on the hiking trail near Long Pond.

“Much of the planning has been done, and some of this work is ‘shovel-ready,’ so you can start it immediately,” said Mulloweny.

He added that he would like to see the next phase of Irish Town Road, along with other roads in the community, completed as well.

Posted on October 19, 2021 .

Witless Bay's top candidate excited about town's future

By Mark Squibb/October 7, 2021

When Trevor Croft saw the election results for the Town of Witless Bay, he admits he was just as much asleep as awake.

“I was half asleep, so I didn’t even know if I was awake or dreaming, or what exactly was going on,” he laughed.

Croft can hardly be blamed for feeling sleepy — it was well after 2 a.m. when the results were finally released.

“I’m pretty sure I aged 10 years in a couple of hours,” said Croft. “I’m pretty sure I went gray and everything. It was extremely stressful, just waiting and waiting and waiting… It’s like when you’re a kid trying to go to sleep on Christmas night — it doesn’t happen no matter how much you try.”

In the end, he commended staff for taking the time to make sure things were done right.

Out of the 13 candidates who put their names forward, Croft amassed 520 votes, the most of any of them.

According to the Town’s election document, 684 people cast ballots in Witless Bay, meaning that 76 per cent of residents ticked his name on their ballot.

“I was a bit shocked,” admitted Croft, who chalked up his success at the polls to good old fashioned legwork.

He knocked a number of doors on his own, and him and fellow candidate Alex Troake, who was also elected to council, teamed up to knock doors.

“Ninety percent of the people that we talked to wanted basic things — speedbumps, new stop signs, simple stuff like that,” said Croft. “Even the high tax base that we have in out town right now, a lot of people said they don’t care how high the taxes are as long as they can see their tax dollars going towards something good for the town. I think that really helped, just us going door to door asking people exactly what their issue was. Some people lived in town their whole lives and they never had somebody from council knock on their door.”

Residents in Witless Bay of course voted in a whole new slate of council members.

Croft said the group of seven collectively were amazed to have all gotten in.

“We were all shocked, every single one of us,” he said. “I’m still amazed that all seven of us got in like that. It’s crazy.”

He said that residents have long desired change in the council chambers, and that the election was proof of that.

“We’ve been waiting for change for a long time,” said Croft. “It’s nice to see people get out and support change.”

He said the 2022 budget and snow clearing contracts will likely be some of the new council’s first items.

Ragged Beach is also an issue that Croft said council should look into — eventually.

“It affects two percent of the population in town, and we really need to move away from Ragged Beach and bring the rest of the town into the light that it deserves as well. But we definitely need to address that issue,” said Croft.

Overall, Croft said he is excited for the future, and believes the town to be in good hands.

“We are a good group of people, with a lot of different backgrounds,” said Croft. “I think it’s going to work out phenomenal for the town, I really do.”

As to the six who ran but did not get elected, including four members of the previous council, Croft said there ought to be no bad blood between the two groups.

“There’s definitely no bad blood between us, and I’d like to keep us that way. I‘d like to be able to support everybody in this town and what they stand for.”

Posted on October 19, 2021 .

Pennell is back and fighting to keep second ambulance

By Mark Squibb/September 30, 2021

Like many folks in Trepassey and surrounding area, Rita Pennell heard that her community would be losing one of two ambulances not through an official government release or announcement, but from others in the town.

Pennell, who just last week was made mayor of Trepassey following her acclamation to council, said she first heard about the issue on June 29 and phoned into Open Line that same morning.

Pennell, and others, have been fighting to keep both ambulances in Trepassey ever since.

“We have written letters, probably four or five hundred, we have called, our MHA has sent texts and e-mails, (Avalon MP) Ken McDonald has sent e-mails, and up until this morning he hasn’t answered any of them,” said Pennell of Minister of Health and Community Services John Haggie.

The Health Department views the matter differently.

The Irish Loop Post inquired about the situation this past week and received an answer that was similar to a reply received back in June. The Department maintains that Trepassey is not losing an ambulance, but that the ambulance is simply being relocated.

That ambulance, says the Department, is being moved to Ferryland Emergency Services based in Cape Broyle, while the other will remain in Trepassey.

“This relocation was required due to changing demographics in the region,” read the government statement. “Over the past three decades, Trepassey has witnessed a significant decline in its population without an adjustment in ambulance coverage. Over the same time period the population in and around Cape Broyle/Ferryland has grown, again without an adjustment in ambulance resources. Emergency call volume in the Cape Broyle/Ferryland region is now twice that of the Trepassey region. “

The note from the Department concludes by saying officials will continue to monitor the demand for services in the region and, if the demand warrants it, consider moving the Ferryland ambulance to a community closer to Trepassey when the Trepassey ambulance is engaged on a call.

That explanation is not enough for Pennell, who for years drove an ambulance based in Trepassey prior to her retirement.

She said keeping the ambulance in Trepassey is a matter of common sense.

“If I had a heart attack or a stroke tomorrow, I would have to call Cape Broyle, and, providing there’s one there, it would take between an hour and fifteen minutes or an hour and thirty minutes on a good day,” said Pennell, who worked as a paramedic with Ryan’s Ambulance for 40 years.

“There’s nobody in Cape Broyle, going to come up through our country on a winter’s day,” said Pennell. “I know it, I was 40 years at it. People are going to be left to die. Or they’re going to die in the backset of a car. We’ve gone back one hundred years.”

Pennell said she is disappointed the community found out about the relocation not from government, but from ambulance workers.

Th official confirmation from Haggie did not come until July 7.

“They didn’t consult with us,” said Pennell. “Why didn’t they sit down with us?”

Pennell said that she, and others, will keep after them.

“I don’t know what will happen, but I hope they listen,” she said.

Pennell was first elected to council in 1985 and was elected mayor in 1989. Following her term as mayor, she stepped aside from municipal politics. She won a seat at the table during a by-election 1999, and has since served as councilor, deputy mayor, and mayor.

“I promised myself one time this would never happen again,” laughed Pennell when asked how it felt to be back in the chair. “But it happened.”

Joan Power, who served as mayor for the last seven years, did not run for re-election.

Pennell, however, has been busy since being named mayor last week. She arranged to have MHA O’ Driscoll and Avalon MP McDonald visit Trepassey to view breakwater damage sustained by Hurricane Larry, as well as meet with the Harbour Authority about funding.

“It was a really productive meeting,” said Pennell.

She also had the misfortune to have her town overrun with pirates over the weekend, but fortunately they turned out to be the fun kind of pirates who helped raise funds for the Trepassey Lion’s Club.

“And this weekend I got tied up because the pirates were here, and I had to welcome them,” she said. “So, I had supper with them and then had breakfast with them Sunday morning… We had a very fun filled weekend.”

Posted on October 6, 2021 .

Voters opt to sack incumbents in Witless Bay and Bay Bulls

By Mark Squibb/September 30, 2021

The wheels of change blew as firmly as fall hurricanes Tuesday in both Witless Bay and Bay Bulls, as residents in both communities voted out all previous members of their respective councils for entirely new slates of people.

The Town of Bay Bulls announced the week prior that only five candidates, and not the usual seven would be elected to council. The council has been operating as a complement of five for some time now, with ministerial approval.

The decision to not elect a full slate cost former mayor Harold Mullowney, who had been a member of council for the past two decades, and former councillor Eric Maloney their seats.

Both men placed sixth and seventh respectively. Mullowney collected 243 votes, while Maloney got 164.

Newly elected members in Bay Bulls, in order of votes from highest to lowest, are Keith O’Driscoll (402), Jason O’Brien (369), Neil O’Brien (359), Jason Sullivan (302), and Shannon O’Driscoll (264).

Former members Wendy O’Driscol l(147), Patrick Coady (135), and Joan Luby (128) were defeated.

Meanwhile, Residents in Witless Bay were left on tether hooks for most of the night as the hours ticked by with nary a word from town hall.

Witless Bay didn’t release its results until 3 a.m. Wednesday morning, hours after much larger communities including St. Johns, Mount Pearl, Paradise, and Conception Bay South had released their numbers.

All incumbent councillors who put their names forward for re-election, including Dale O’Driscoll (267), Vince Swain (187), David Ryan (186), and Fraser Paul (162) were defeated.

Former members of council who did not run for re-election include former mayor Derm Moran, former deputy mayor Maureen Murphy, and Colleen Hanrahan.

Elected to council in order of votes from greatest to least were Trevor Croft (520), Jacob Hayden (508), Nancy Burke (468), Alex Troake (449), Gerard Dunne (394), Lorna Yard (364) and Ralph Carey (323).

 

 

 

Posted on October 6, 2021 .

Town of Bay Bulls reduces council compliment to five ahead of election

By Mark Squibb/September 23, 2021

Exactly one week out from the municipal election, the Town of Bay Bulls publicly confirmed that only five, not seven, councilors will be elected to council.

A press released published to the town’s Facebook page Tuesday evening, September 21, pointed out that the reduction was made in 2020 due to concerns about quorum, and that no thought was given to increasing the complement in time for this election.

“Prior to the reduction in seats, seven seats meant that four councilors were required for quorum to vote on a matter. With only five of seven seats filled, there were many items that could not be dealt with because we lost quorum for reasons such as conflict of interest or when councilors were unable to attend meetings,” read the release. “These items include the approval of accessory buildings, cheque releases and awarding tenders for major projects. Having to request ministerial approval to have less than four councilors approve items frequently was problematic and caused unnecessary delays.”

The press release notes that for several years the town has been unable to fill a full complement of seven councilors, and that ministerial approval, following a request from council, had been granted in September 2020 to reduce the compliment to five, reducing the number needed for quorum to three.

The press release then ends by saying that council did not anticipate that so many folks would put their names forward for this election.

“On August 31, 2021, we had 10 candidates put themselves forward for election to council. The town did not request to have the number of seats increased, as we could not have foreseen this level of interest prior to nominations closing.”

Posted on September 29, 2021 .