In rare snub, Langley city councillors vote their mayor off board of Metro Vancouver - Action News
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British Columbia

In rare snub, Langley city councillors vote their mayor off board of Metro Vancouver

Councillorsin Langley, B.C., have voted their own mayor out ofher seat with the senior regional board, an exceedingly raredemotionthe mayor claims was fuelled by years ofpolitical infighting and personal vendettas.

Val van den Broek now the only mayor in region not representing her municipality

City of Langley Mayor Val van den Broek pictured in 2019. City councillors voted to remove van den Broek as the city's representative on the board of Metro Vancouver on Monday. (Christian Amundson/CBC)

Councillorsin Langley, B.C., have voted their own mayor out ofher seat with the senior regional board, an exceedingly raredemotionthe mayor claims was fuelled by years ofpolitical infighting and personal vendettas.

The City of Langley councillors chose during an annual election last Monday to have Coun. Gayle Martin take the mayor's place as their representative at the Metro Vancouver boardmoving forward.

It meansMayor Val van den Broek is now one of the only regional mayors who will not represent her municipality when the board meets to make key policy decisions.

The mayor said the vote was a personal rebuke.

"There was no reason to remove me ...Monday night was just another vote in 'anti-Mayor Val,'" van den Broek said.

The Metro Vancouverboard votes on how to deliverregional-scale services like parks, transportation and waste management tothe area's 21 municipalities.

Three council members were nominated for theboard seat on Monday: van den Broek, Martin and Coun. Rosemary Wallace. Wallace said the vote went 4-3 in Martin's favour.

Van den Broekhad beensitting on the board for two years, havingtakenthe seat after winning election in October 2018. Her key priority was a SkyTrain extension to Langley, but she will no longer be able to vote on such issuesat board meetings without her seat.

"My current council keeps trying to stop me from being mayor," van den Broek said.

"[Council has]never accepted the results of the municipalelection since Day 1," she added. "Ihear some council members say to me, 'You need to be taught a lesson ... You can't use your mayor title while you're not in council ... Women shouldn't be mayor ... you don't deserve to be mayor.'

"I feel citizens need to know what's actually going on."

Langley City council, from left: Coun. Rudy Storteboom, Coun. Rosemary Wallace, Coun. Gayle Martin, Mayor Val van den Broek, Coun. Teri James, Coun. Nathan Pachal and Coun. Paul Albrecht. Martin will replace van den Broek as the city's representative on the board of Metro Vancouver. (Langley City)

Wallace said council long agodiscussed revisiting who to have as board representative every year.She declined to comment about van den Broek's claims aroundconflict at city hall, and said she could not speak for other councillors.

"Whether I have a view on it or not, I'm not going to answer that becauseIdon't want to throw my council under the bus ... I don't know what the motivation was with council [to vote for Martin]," Wallace said.

"Democratic process, be what it may, Coun. Martin was elected ... as a council, we're all just trying to work on a lot of things that are happening in our community."

Martin the mayor's replacement on the board and Coun. Paul Albrecht said in emails theycould not comment on Monday'sboard vote because the meeting was "in camera," or behind closed doors.

The four remainingcouncillors have not responded.

Van den Broek said there is little she can do to regain her seat on the board.She said she will continue to attend Metro Vancouver board meetings, even though she will not be paid to do so.

"That's my job," she said.

With files from Justin McElroy