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Should ӣƵhave its own court?

District demands feasibility study on court services
Submitted photo District of ӣƵofficials are asking for a feasibility study on returning courthouse services to Squamish.

ӣƵofficials are hunting for money for a study on the feasibility of providing court services closer to home.

The Sea to Sky Corridor’s court service was moved from ӣƵto North Vancouver in 2002. The facility served the community for 24 years before it was locked up along with a slew of other provincial courts.

At the time, the attorney general, Geoff Plant, said the court must be closed because the building did not meet provincial structural standards. Renovations for the facility were estimated to cost $4 million, money provincial officials later stated they didn’t have in their coffers.

The closing marked the loss of an important asset, ӣƵMayor Rob Kirkham said, noting the courthouse services were being fully utilized. At the time that the courthouse closed, it was occupied 106 per cent of the time, stated a report on the facility. 

“This is a valuable community asset and we miss it,” he told The ӣƵ.

Sea to Sky residents are now forced to drive to North Vancouver to attend any court business. It’s a hardship to residents and represents a major hurdle to those without transportation, Kirkham noted. 

With the backing of Pemberton and Whistler officials, District of ӣƵcouncil has been pushing to get the court services relocated to Squamish. 

The mounting number of developments in ӣƵhas moved this agenda to the forefront, Kirkham said. 

“The rapid growth of our community will eliminate the possibilities for [courthouse] locations, but also generate more demand and more need for the services.”

Given the country’s economic decline and the decreased demand in courts over the past few years, the province “is not generally looking at opening new court facilities,” B.C.’s Attorney General Suzanne Anton wrote in a letter to Kirkham. 

“We will continue to pursue initiatives such as enhanced online courts presence and videoconferencing to better serve communities such as yours,” she wrote. 

However, Anton stopped short of ruling out a feasibility study. 

Instead the Attorney General encouraged district officials to meet with assistant deputy minister Kevin Jardine. A meeting date has not yet been set, Kirkham told The ӣƵ.

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