What can we learn from the school board by-election results?

And our meme-able city

The preliminary results are in and Sarah Holland and Shar McCrory have been elected to school board, by a wide margin. The breakdown of votes looks like this:

  • Sarah Holland - 1,590

  • Shar McCrory - 1,384

  • Milton Mahoney – 672

  • David Low – 632

  • Lucy Duncan – 194

  • Bill Price – 154

  • Don Fitzpatrick – 101

  • Dusty Martin – 97

  • Heather McKenzie – 95

  • Josh Silva – 69 (pulled out of the race mid-campaign but was still on the ballot)

So what can we take away from this? A few stray observations:

  • 4,988 votes were cast in this by-election, compared to 1,137 in the last one, held January 2022. There was clearly far more interest in this campaign than there was in that one and for fairly obvious reason, given everything that has led up to now. Still, it’s far, far below the more than 15,000 votes in the regular election last fall — by-elections simply do not get the same number of people out. Sarah Holland’s 1,590 votes may be a landslide in this campaign, but they would have placed her dead last in October (it’s not apples to apples though, it’s just turnout — McCrory got far more votes in 2022, when she ran).

  • I think it’s a fair guess that two camps coalesced around the top four candidates. Holland and McCrory were endorsed by the teacher’s union, among others. They campaigned together at Pride. Their names came up together, quite a bit. Plus, they actually showed up to school board meetings and have worked in the system in the past. They seem to have been the consensus choice among people who have a sense of how school board works and, more broadly, reality.

  • In contrast, 3rd and 4th place finishers Milton Mahoney and David Low’s names also came up together — notably among people who want to see SOGI out of classrooms. Low appeared on a local podcast/video channel where he was urged to have the RCMP look into using the criminal code on teachers for what they are teaching in the classroom and later in that same podcast, after Low left, there was a panel discussion about how no one really has to pay taxes, which gives you a sense of where that support was coming from.

  • That said, if Josh Silva had continued to run we might be looking at a different story. I’m sure Holland would have still been elected, seeing the results now, but he was more successful than Mahoney in the last election and he was more prominent up to the moment he decided he wasn’t actually going to campaign so had he stayed in, things might have been tighter.

  • Most of the other candidates had more in common with Holland/McCrory but again, Holland/McCrory just seemed to show up more and actually campaign, so that’s where the support went.

  • It’s also worth noting that in a by-election, especially, it tends to be people who work in the school district who are going to go and vote and they are probably not that interested in voting for someone who takes seriously the notion that teachers need to be investigated by the RCMP for teaching provincial curriculums.

  • For all this, Holland and McCrory are still just two voices at a table of seven people. They are replacing two trustees who resigned because they didn’t feel like they would be able to productively work with the majority of people still at the reigns. That said, these two are going into it knowing what to expect and without the baggage of whatever prompted the previous two trustees to step down, so they may be able to have a more productive session moving forward, especially if the rest of the board is eager to be seen as moving forward, as well — which, I expect, they probably are.

So that’s that! Watch this space for developments, I guess.

Meme-able Prince George

Two big memes have been going around about the city lately. I’m not where the first one came from but it’s been everywhere.

May be an image of text that says 'I'm not in a good place right now You in PG? made with mematic'

The other is from the popular Vancouver-based Sea Bus Memes:

Quick news:

Since I’ve not been writing this newsletter with regularity, a lot to catch up on. These are the highlights:

Northern Capital News is a free, daily newsletter about life in Prince George. Please consider subscribing or, if you have, sharing with someone else.

Send feedback by replying to this email. Find me online at akurjata.ca.