Surrey First
Surrey First is a civic political organization in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. Surrey First is a non-partisan civic organization, members of which were elected to a majority on Surrey City Council in 2008.
Formation
Surrey First was founded in 2007 by former Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts, who was first elected to a Councillor position on Surrey City Council in 1996 when she was a member of the Surrey Electors Team (SET).
In 2005, after ongoing philosophical disagreements between SET Mayor Doug McCallum, known to be progressive on social issues and fiscally conservative on economic and tax issues, Watts left SET and challenged Doug McCallum as an independent candidate for Mayor.[1] Watts won a convincing victory and became the first woman to be elected Mayor of Surrey, the second largest city in the Province of British Columbia.[1]
Watts embarked upon implementing a series of novel approaches and new ideas to the challenges facing Surrey, including the Surrey Crime Reduction Strategy, which has become a model for cities throughout the world. Under Watts’ leadership, Surrey also became one of the first cities in Canada to implement a Whistleblower Policy aimed at protecting employees who report fraud, waste or abuse of tax dollars at City Hall. Watts also launched The Homelessness and Housing Foundation with a $9 million endowment, making it the first city in British Columbia to undertake such an initiative.
Other innovative initiatives launched by Watts in her first term include a Respectful Workplace Policy, a Lobbyist Registry and a Livability Accord, an agreement signed between Surrey, Abbotsford, Coquitlam and Langley to collaborate on initiatives related to crime, transportation and growth. These four cities are likely to absorb seventy percent (70%) of the growth in Metro Vancouver over the next 20 years.
Surrey also became the first City in Canada to establish economic investment zones to attract investment and create jobs as part of Watts’ Economic Investment Action Plan. The Action Plan was rolled-out in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis and was designed to foster strong economic growth through capital investment and strategic partnerships, and support the expansion of clean technology industries.
Soon after the founding of Surrey First, sitting Councillors Linda Hepner, Mary Martin and Barbara Steele resigned from SET to join Watts’ slate. Independent Councillor Judy Villeneuve followed suit and thereafter Councillor Tom Gill.[1]
Members
• Mayor Linda Hepner • Councillor Tom Gill • Councillor Mary Martin • Councillor Barbara Steele • Councillor Judy Villeneuve • Councillor Marvin Hunt • Councillor Bruce Hayne[2]
Elections
The 2008 Municipal Elections was the first election for the Surrey First slate. On November 15, 2008, Mayor Dianne Watts defeated her lone challenger for the mayor's chair by almost 43,000 votes and all six members of her Surrey First slate—Judy Villeneuve, Tom Gill, Barbara Steele, Linda Hepner, Mary Martin and then newcomer Barinder Rasode—won seats on Surrey City Council.[3]
References
- 1 2 3 Cooley, T. "Marvin Hunt joins Dianne Watts' Surrey First team". Vancouver Sun.
- ↑ "Meet the Team". Surrey First.
- ↑ "Official City of Surrey November 2008 Election Results". City of Surrey.