Monday, November 25, 2019

Prince Rupert City Council settles on 2020 schedule



Prince Rupert City Council Members have consulted their day timers and concluded as to the best dates ahead for 2020 releasing the Schedule of Council Sessions last week, charting the course for the year ahead.

As it has been for a few years now, the schedule is heavy in two a month sessions for the first six months of the year, with the summer season of July through September making for but one meeting for each month.

The return to the twice a month public gatherings in October and November and like this year, Council members will put their bow on the Christmas season with a final Council session in the first week of December 2020.

All told, the announced public gatherings for Prince Rupert Council totals twenty for the year ahead, just as 2019 has featured.

While Prince Rupert Council may be the best compensated of the region, they have a lighter schedule when it comes to the public council sessions of the Northwest.

By comparison, Terrace had 23 Public Council sessions this year.

Kitimat hosted the most Public sessions at 35 mainly owing to the division of Regular and Committee of the Whole sessions into different weeks.

For the third of the large Northwest communities,  Smithers  was closer to the Prince Rupert mark at 22.

Looking towards the New Year, the Prince Rupert schedule for 2020 looks as follows:

January

Monday January 13
Monday January 27

February

Monday February 10
Monday February 24

March

Monday March 9
Monday March 23

April

Monday April 6
Monday April 27

May

Monday May 11
Monday May 25

June

Monday June 8th
Monday June 22

July

Monday July 20

August

Monday August 24

September

Monday September 14

October

Monday October 5
Monday October 26

November

Monday November 9
Monday November 23

December

Monday December 7

Notes on City Council Agendas for those public meetings can be explored from the City's Website here.

For more items of note on Prince Rupert City Council see our archive page here.

Cross posted from the North Coast Review.


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