Gerry Zimmermann doesn’t endorse any Kelowna mayoral candidate

KELOWNA – Gerry Zimmermann may have issues with some things Mayor Colin Basran has done but that doesn’t mean he endorses Tom Dyas.

“I don’t want to be dragged into it,” Zimmermann told iNFOnews.ca. “Voting should be something people make up their own minds on about how they think a politician represents their point of view.”

Zimmermann is a former city councillor and was a national hero as fire chief during the 2003 Okanagan Mountain Park forest fire.

Other media today said he endorsed Dyas.

“I just want to make it very clear that I wasn’t endorsing anybody,” Zimmermann said. “Because of the fire, people know who I was. I don’t want that to influence how anybody votes.”

Zimmermann was mentioned in a Dyas press release in late September over concerns about how Basran handled issues with irrigation districts that resulted in the take over of the South East Kelowna Irrigation District earlier this year. He sat on the board of directors for Black Mountain Irrigation District and was a city councillor in 2012 when a plan for water improvements was signed by the city and the four major irrigation districts.

The press release from Dyas blamed Basran for abandoning that plan.

Zimmermann doesn’t like what Basran did on that file but that doesn’t mean he’s any happier with Dyas.

“I really don’t know who I’m going to vote for,” Zimmermann said.

He said a voter can’t judge the value of a candidate because of a single issue.

But he disagrees with a lot that Dyas has said, especially his comments about relocating city hall and building a convention centre in its place, moving the downtown fire station, possibly switching to a municipal police force and setting up a farm to treat addicts. He calls those statements “outlandish.”

“I’m not endorsing Colin either,” Zimmermann said. “I’m not endorsing anybody."


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Rob Munro

Rob Munro has a long history in journalism after starting an underground newspaper in Whitehorse called the Yukon Howl in 1980. He spent five years at the 100 Mile Free Press, starting in the darkroom, moving on to sports and news reporting before becoming the advertising manager. He came to Kelowna in 1989 as a reporter for the Kelowna Daily Courier, and spent the 1990s mostly covering city hall. For most of the past 20 years he worked full time for the union representing newspaper workers throughout B.C. He’s returned to his true love of being a reporter with a special focus on civic politics

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