Pat Pimm

Pat Pimm (born March 31, 1957) is a Canadian politician, who was elected as a BC Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in the 2009 provincial election, and represented the riding of Peace River North. He has lived in Fort St. John, British Columbia and has a business background working at an instrumentation company that specializes in the oil and gas sector. He spent 12 years on the Fort St. John city council before his election to the Legislative Assembly. In the 39th Parliament of BC Pimm served on several committees and first became involved with the Executive Council in October 2010 when former B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell appointed Pimm as the Parliamentary Secretary for the Natural Gas Initiative under the Ministry of Energy. When Christy Clark became Premier of British Columbia in March 2011, she retained Pimm at the same position.

Pat Pimm
Member of the British Columbia Legislative Assembly
for Peace River North
In office
May 12, 2009  May 9, 2017
Preceded byRichard Neufeld
Personal details
BornFort St. John, British Columbia, Canada
Political partyIndependent
(2016–)
BC Liberal
(2009-2016)
ResidenceFort St. John, British Columbia
OccupationInstrumentation (oil and gas)

Pimm was re-elected to his Peace River North riding in the 2013 provincial election and was appointed Minister of Agriculture on June 10, 2013 by Premier Clark. He previously served as Parliamentary Secretary for the Northeast and has served as chair of the Northern Caucus and two Select Standing Committees: Aboriginal Affairs and Finance and Government Services. Pimm has also served as a member of Treasury Board. A lifelong resident of the Peace River region, he served 12 years as councillor for the City of Fort St. John from 1993 to 2005. With 25 years experience in the oil and gas industry, he was co-chair of the BC Oil and Gas Conference in 2002 and 2005, bringing together industry stakeholders to identify further strategies and opportunities for economic development in British Columbia's northeast region. He has also served on a variety of other local community boards and committees.

Background

Pat Pimm was born and raised in Fort St. John. He married at the age of 21 and raised two daughters. In 2005 he remarried to another woman, Jody, who had two grown sons. He established a career at an instrumentation business, Alpha Controls Ltd., specializing in the oil and gas sector. He enjoys curling and golf and has been a volunteer coach for youth baseball and hockey.[1][2][3] He spent 12 years on the Fort St. John city council, from 1993 to 2005. While on council he advocated for the regionalization of services and the creation of a regional municipality.[4][5] During a 2001 municipal referendum concerning a Fort St. John boundary expansion around a proposed manufacturing plant (oriented strand board), Pimm threatened to resign his council seat if the referendum failed.[6][7] While on council Pimm worked with the province and other municipalities in establishing the Fairshare grant program which redirected some oil and gas revenue to local governments in northeastern BC for use on infrastructure projects.[8] He also supported the BC Lottery Corporation locating a gaming centre (bingo, off-track betting, slots and other electronic games) in Fort St. John.[9]

Provincial politics

The appointment of MLA Richard Neufeld to the federal Senate of Canada in December 2008 by Prime Minister Stephen Harper created an opening in the BC provincial Peace River North riding. Such an opening was rare as Neufeld had represented the riding since 1991 and by Tony Brummet for the 12 years prior to Neufeld. There were five candidates in the race for the BC Liberal Party nomination: Chetwynd mayor Evan Saugstad, Fort St. John councillors Lori Ackerman and Dan Davies, School District trustee Linda Sewell, and Pat Pimm.[10] With 1,200 BC Liberal members eligible to vote, Pimm won in the third round of preferential voting in March.[11] He was soon thrust into the provincial election where he faced Fort Nelson town councilor and NDP candidate Jackie Allen, former chief of the Fort Nelson First Nation and Green Party candidate Liz Logan, and others. Pimm oriented his campaign around economic issues stating "The economy is the number one issue and everything else falls around the economy. You have to have a strong economy to have good health care, good education...."[12] Pimm won the Peace River North riding with 43% of the vote and his party formed a majority government.

As the 39th Parliament of British Columbia began, Pimm was not selected for the Executive Council by Premier Gordon Campbell. In the first two sessions Pimm was assigned to three parliamentary committees: the Select Standing Committee on Crown Corporations (which did not meet), the Select Standing Committee on Parliamentary Reform, Ethical Conduct, Standing Orders and Private Bills (which met once), and the Select Standing Committee on Legislative Initiatives (which only met in September 2010 to deal with a petition against Harmonized Sales Tax). Once the Harmonized Sales Tax was introduced, Pimm became very supportive of it, arguing that it would make BC business more competitive with Alberta,[13] and stating, "I personally think it's probably the strongest single thing for the economy of our area and the province in general."[14] Pimm lobbied on behalf of the Peace River North to secure infrastructure grants for road construction and paving, recreation centre upgrades, and Fort St. John sewerage expansion.[15][16][17] Pimm made headlines across the province in November 2009 when he criticized the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms during a speech in the Legislature.[18][19][20] He questioned "who needs that Charter of Rights?" and stated "I just don’t think it’s a good document whatsoever myself." [21][22] He called for a "Bill of Responsibilities" to be established.

In 2010, as the petition to repeal the HST was very successful in his riding, Pimm became one of 24 MLAs targeted for recall by Bill Vander Zalm's FightHST group.[23][24] However, several months later, his name was removed from the list as the group prioritized candidates for recall campaigns.[25] In October, during Campbell's final cabinet shuffle before resigning, the post of Parliamentary Secretary for the Natural Gas Initiative was created for Pimm under the Ministry of Energy.[26] In January 2011, with community opposition to a transfer move Oil and Gas Commission engineering jobs, from Fort St. John to Kelowna, Pimm intervened by arranging a public meeting with the Minister of Natural Resource Operations Steve Thomson, the CEO of the Commission, as well as industry and public representatives, which resulted in several positions staying in Fort St. John. During the BC Liberal Party leadership electionto replace Campbell, Pimm endorsed Kevin Falcon in mid-December citing Falcon's performance as Minister of Transportation where he directed significant funding to improving oil and gas resource roads and the Alaska Highway.[27] In March 2011, after Christy Clark won the leadership election and was named Premier, she kept Pimm as Parliamentary Secretary for Natural Gas to the Minister of Energy and Mines. On June 27, 2011, he resigned from his Parliamentary Secretary position and from the BC Liberal caucus following a domestic dispute involving his wife which resulted in the RCMP detaining him overnight.[28] A special prosecutor was assigned to his case given his status as an elected official.[29][30][31] On July 13, the special prosecutor announced they would not be pressing charges and the BC Liberal caucus allowed Pimm to re-join.[32] Pimm returned to his role as Parliamentary Secretary for Natural Gas and spent the summer consulting with stakeholders for what would become BC's Natural Gas Strategy and BC's Liquefied Natural Gas Strategy. In September 2012, he was made deputy whip, replacing Eric Foster who became whip.

In April 2013 at an all-candidates forum in Fort Nelson Pimm suggested that "grief" in the classroom caused by special needs children has caused public school enrolment to decline. He was quoted as saying "It's causing the teachers extra time and trouble and it's certainly, I think, is causing some students to move into other areas in the private sector as well,"[33][34]

In November 2015, Pimm stated he would not run for reelection in the coming provincial election in 2017.[35]

On August 15, 2016, Pimm left his caucus and became an independent following his arrest. A special prosecutor has been appointed to the case to avoid a conflict of interest. An assault charge against B.C. MLA Pat Pimm has been stayed following his appearance Monday in a Dawson Creek courtroom.

Pimm agreed to be bound by a peace bond for eight months, said Daniel McLaughlin, communications counsel for the Criminal Justice Branch.[36]

Electoral history

2013 British Columbia general election: Peace River North
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalPat Pimm7,90558.94+15.79$115,737
IndependentArthur Austin Hadland3,28724.51–6.82$40,752
New DemocraticJudy Ann Fox-McGuire1,3199.84–4.14$36,341
ConservativeWyeth Sigurdson9006.71$882
Total valid votes 13,411100.00
Total rejected ballots 440.33
Turnout 13,45551.47
Liberal hold Swing +11.30
Source: Elections BC[37]
B.C. General Election 2009: Peace River North
Party Candidate Votes % ± Expenditures
LiberalPat Pimm3,99243.15n/a$55,563
     Independent Arthur Hadland 2,899 31.33 n/a $17,962
     New Democrat Jackie Allen 1,293 13.98 n/a $17,855
GreenLiz Logan1,01010.92n/a$26,218
RefederationSue Arntson580.62n/a$260
Total Valid Votes 9,252 100.00
Total Rejected Ballots 52 0.6%
Turnout 9,304 40%
gollark: Indeed!
gollark: 3π ± 5%.
gollark: It's can be "it has" too.
gollark: (Yes, this is grammatically valid)
gollark: It's even concurrency.

References

  1. "Alpha Controls wins Oilmen's first time out". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. November 20, 2000. p. 7.
  2. Andrews, Graham (May 18, 2000). "Bantams make a game of it against Dawson Creek". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A6.
  3. Macedo, Richard (May 23, 2003). "Golf event a boost for local sport". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A6.
  4. Purvis, Michael (June 18, 2002). "Regional taxation No. 1". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  5. Purvis, Michael (November 14, 2002). "The bottom line is cash". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  6. Sloychuk, Jeff (March 16, 2001). "Vote will decide boundary expansion". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  7. Heintzman, Michael (April 23, 2001). "Citizens vote 81.6 per cent for expansion". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  8. Walker, Dustin (May 25, 2005). "Pimm says he won't run in upcoming election". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  9. Lennard, Sonya (February 22, 2005). "Council OK's gaming proposal: City goes ahead with re-zoning approval despite public opposition". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  10. Amos, Greg (February 9, 2009). "May election landscape taking shape". Dawson Creek Daily News. p. A1.
  11. Holloway, Tessa (March 23, 2009). "Pimm wins MLA nomination". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  12. Holloway, Tessa (April 15, 2009). "Provincial election campaign has officially begun". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  13. Pimm, Pat (March 16, 2010). "2010 budget highlights". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A3.
  14. Irvine, Hiedi (July 29, 2009). "Two sides to the HST coin". Dawson Creek Daily News. p. A2.
  15. Pimm, Pat (October 23, 2009). "Off to a good start". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A3.
  16. Bell, David (March 23, 2010). "Road construction funding announced for Peace Region". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  17. Burnett, Stewart (August 23, 2010). "Five million received for rural road paving". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  18. "Pat Pimm says we don't need the Charter". energeticcity.
  19. Willcocks, Paul (November 12, 2009). "Why it's good an MLA bashed the Charter". Times-Colonist. Victoria, B.C. p. A12.
  20. Pimm, Pat (November 17, 2009). "Pimm defends Charter comments". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A7.
  21. "Peace River North MLA Pat Pimm on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms". energeticcity.
  22. "Official Report of Debates of the Legislative Assembly(hansard)Thursday, October 29, 2009". Hansard.
  23. Bell, David (June 24, 2010). "MLA addresses possible recall: Pat Pimm on Anti-HST campaign's recall hit list". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  24. Smyth, Michael (June 24, 2010). "From anti-HST petition to 'hit list'". The Province. Vancouver. p. A6.
  25. Lux, Ryan (November 19, 2010). "Peace River North escapes recall campaign". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A2.
  26. Hendry, Aleisha (October 27, 2010). "New job title for Pat Pimm". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A5.
  27. Lux, Ryan (December 15, 2010). "Liberal leadership comes to town". Alaska Highway News. Fort St. John, B.C. p. A1.
  28. Hunter, Justine (June 28, 2011). "Pimm resigns from B.C. Liberal caucus after domestic dispute". The Globe and Mail.
  29. Hunter, Justine (Jun 28, 2011). "Pimm resigns from B.C. Liberal caucus after domestic dispute". The Globe and Mail.
  30. Reid, Ian (July 7, 2011). "B.C. Liberal MLA Pat Pimm's special prosecutor and B.C.'s broken protections of women". The Vancouver Observer.
  31. Hui, Stephen. "Special prosecutor to review case of Peace River North MLA Pat Pimm". Straight.com.
  32. Fowlie, Jonathan (July 14, 2011). "Peace River North MLA Pimm won't face charges, returns to party caucus". Vancouver Sun.
  33. "Teachers condemn candidate's stance on special needs". CBC. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  34. "special needs Pat Pimm MLA Peace River North Open Forum Fort Nelson". youtube. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  35. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/pat-pimm-mla-retire-peace-river-north-1.3338621
  36. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/mla-pat-pimm-leaving-liberal-caucus-peace-river-north-1.3725663
  37. "Statement of Votes - 40th Provincial General Election" (PDF). Elections BC. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.