๐‚๐ข๐ญ๐ฒ ๐‚๐จ๐ฎ๐ง๐œ๐ข๐ฅ, ๐ญ๐ก๐ž ๐๐ฎ๐›๐ฅ๐ข๐œ ๐ˆ๐ฌ ๐†๐ž๐ญ๐ญ๐ข๐ง๐  ๐ƒ๐ข๐ณ๐ณ๐ฒ ๐Ÿ๐ซ๐จ๐ฆ ๐ญ๐ก๐ž ๐’๐ฉ๐ข๐ง

by | Sep 13, 2025 | City Hall | 0 comments

Interior Health is cutting 91 administrative positions after a financial reviewโ€”sending the message that public institutions must tighten up, prioritize front-line services, and trim bureaucracy.

By contrast, since October 2020, the City of Kamloops has quietly added 19.5 permanent management positions at an average salary of over $100,000 per year.

Right on cue, city council members rushed to defend their management growthโ€”before anyone asked.

-Coun. Bill Sarai dismissed a previous concern as a โ€œconspiracy theory,โ€ and insisted that more managers are simply part of a growing city.

-Coun. Katie Neustaeter cited the city auditorโ€™s comfort with staff ratios.

โ€“Coun. Mike Oโ€™Reilly pointed to $100 million in capital projects, claiming the city will โ€œconsistently need more engineersโ€.

The talking points are an attempt to obscure the truth: management has far outpaced service delivery. In 2024 alone, management payroll jumped a whopping 13%โ€”from $13.5 million to $15.6 million.

Thatโ€™s a $2.1 million spike in a single yearโ€”nearly 5x the rate of inflation and 7x the rate of Kamloopsโ€™ population growth.

While the cost of living continues to climb for Kamloops residents, and 1 in 4 Canadians are now using a food bankโ€”City Hall is increasing exempt payroll at a record paceโ€”not due to union contracts or retroactive pay, but by deliberate choices made by council and senior administration.

The excuse council falls back on is always the same defensive line: โ€œWeโ€™re growing.โ€

Growth should sharpen efficiencyโ€”not excuse a top-heavy City Hall.

More residents should mean smarter systems, better service, and leaner operationsโ€”not ballooning overhead and growing employee organizational charts. As population climbs, per-capita costs should stabilize or decline.

Capital projects are temporary. Project managers, engineers, and coordinator roles should also be temporary or contract-based. Future hires should be tied to clear performance metrics and published deliverables.

Kamloops, however, is folding them into permanent managementโ€”using short-term projects to justify long-term bureaucracy, dressed up as development needs.

Instead of interrogating City Hall on behalf of taxpayers and residents, this Councilโ€™s first instinct was to defendโ€”rushing to justify growth with vague comparisons and claims of โ€œcomfort,โ€ while other institutions tighten their belts and rethink staffing models.

Kamloops residents are paying more than ever. Council should be cutting the bloatโ€”not defending it.

When will City Hall decide to value efficiency over spinโ€”and residents over bureaucratic self-interest?

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