Building Permits Take Too Long

It can take years to get simple approvals done for renovations or to build a single family home in White Rock, or to get a business renovation approved. That’s costs builders and businesses tens of thousands of dollars in delays, and costs city taxpayers due to extended approval times. We can do better.

The Mayor promised to fix this but it appears nothing has been fixed. Taxpayers deserve to get value for their money and that includes creating a faster and more taxpayer friendly approach to help people and businesses get their projects done quickly. It take years to get approvals in White Rock for simple approvals that takes weeks in Surrey..

The Fieldstone Bakery on Russell took over three years to get approved. In any other city, it would takes weeks, not years. Three Dogs ran into similar problems and delays.

Many home builders frequently have run into similar delays and hassles. Our Engineering department has some great staff but the current corporate culture is not focused on getting things done for the builders of single family homes. Towers can get approved in months it seems, but renovating a business or building a single family homes takes years.

I don’t blame poor city corporate culture and high turnover rates on staff. The Mayor and City Council sets the standard and is responsible for creating the kind of culture that wants to help taxpayers get projects done, not delay them and get in the way.

On Columbia, as an example, the builder was given formal approval to build a home that included a double paved parking pad on Columbia. The building spent tens of thousands of dollars to build a beautifully built parking pad to code as approved by city planning.

However, according to the builder, after it was built at great expense, the city engineering department changed it’s mind and demanded that the parking pad be removed. Council was notified of this, but that same day the City Engineering department drove down to the builders new home with several employees and backhoe, and ripped up the cement pad and the blocked it off so the new owner could not use it.

That was in 2019. The parking pad is still blocked off by the city in 2025. We need a Council that knows how to work together with staff, using continuous improvement techniques for process review and improvement, and create a corporate culture that helps taxpayers succeed. I know how to get it done based on my 40 years of experience in businesses using these techniques. Vote for Scott Kristjanson and I will work with staff and council and taxpayers to create a Can-Do corporate culture that works for taxpayers instead of getting in their way.

I have improved project completion time in business using Continuous Improvement techniques developed by Dr. Deming to reduce project times while also saving money and customer and employee satisfaction. We can do that at City Hall too Let’s fix this together.

The North Bluff Study is bad for White Rock and needs to be rejected!

White Rock faces a new threat: proposals by the current council for over a dozen 30–40 storey high rises along 16th Ave in what they call the North Bluff Study, as well as other projects like the Community Hub. Once again, City Councilors are pushing for projects that will reshape our community forever. But with 2 seats up for election in this election, we can shift power back to the people of this community.

The North Bluff study has one goal: force hundreds of families out of affordable rentals so large out of town developers can build more million dollar condos.

The Area of the City Affected by the North Bluff Study to build 30 and 40 storey condos

The area highlighted by blue is included in the North Bluff study that hopes to replace the existing homes and rentals with condos and towers. Is this what you want for your city?

I talk about affordable housing and my first priority is to retain as much of the existing affordable rentals that we already have along North Bluff and the two blocks South of that.

On September 27, White Rock voters will decide: Do we stick to the Official Community Plan (4, 8, and 12 storeys) — or do we give developers the green light for more and higher towers?

I’m running for City Council to defend our community. If you live in White Rock, I ask for your vote. When I was on Council from 2018 to 2022, we spent three years in the public input process to find out was residents want and that was to reduce heights and density.

My motion in 2021, as supported by Council, reduced maximum heights from 24 stories down to 12. It can be done! Voters can have a say in the future of your city. I ask for your support once more so we can block the North Bluff Study and keep people in their homes.

Many candidates are funded by big money developers. Check out how many have large numbers of signs with many on newly developed building sites. They may not tell you that they are funded by developers, but many are.

Don’t be fooled.

Vote for someone with a long history of supporting our community, residents, and local businesses, not developers with deep pockets.

Vote for Scott Kristjanson.