Oakville North News (Oakville, Ontario: Oakville Beaver, Ian Oliver - Publisher), 4 Nov 1994, p. 6

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professional > [§ Letthe P'tofsk Parkhine with t/z'z fpazg[:ms y + * ug/z’ our mary 9[/4 ideas /0" ths ":"vou'z:farzc{waybi â€"Anchitscts. »In Sunlzght ~ In the Moonlight ... «In the Gard The Imagination Set Free! ‘94 Integra LS Coupe * Auto e A/C e Dual Airbags e Spoiler « Power Group * Power Sunroof a place to relax 155 Lakeshore E. Oakville 905 â€" 845â€"5175 artists at 'Lsa.ting fz’nz En EUE’ZH Jay EXCE.} P A RKZ A NE f[nz ULE sidential ga'u{eru foz over thiee decades Jay sxcspt %Jnsu[ays. Dupiuc[ at Parklane. ‘94 Integra LS Sedan *« Auto * A/C * Dual Airbags e Power Group * Power Sunroof Battling against complacency "People and governments have both been complacent. If we want to ever fix things, we have to do it now," says Pope a married father of two. "We can shape our lives to a point." While Tom Pope‘s platform heading into the Ward 6 local race is one of business smarts balanced by family values, it is also one of a battle against complacency. The Ontario sales manager for a subsidiary of a Canadian Fortune 500 company, Pope is adamant about infusing government with the entrepreneurial spirit of the private sector. After all, a company that runs on debt won‘t be around for the long run, so why shouldn‘t the same yfl/a/@, Movenber 19h, 10 am. â€" 3 pm. %%mmzfi%fi/owa 1160 Od Lane, Orhvile ADMISSION IS FREE principle apply to the public sector. In going doorâ€"toâ€"door, Pope says people have made it clear they are fed up with governments‘ shortâ€" term symptom solving and are being forced to try and solve issues on their own. As a result, Pope sees a councilor as the quarterback for their ward, a team leader who directs and helps constituents. One example of solving sympâ€" toms without getting to the root of the problem, says Pope, is taxes. By raising taxes when it is running short of money, a government mereâ€" ly deflects the issue with a quick fix instead of figuring out what hapâ€" pened to the funds in the first place. It‘s not so much a question of the quantity of cash in governments‘ Pope â€" who says voters should start electing more people from the business community â€" believes resiâ€" dents want value from their elected officials the same as they would from private firms. Streamlining procedures in business, like those Pope has been a part for the past several years, must be applied at Town Hall. hands, he adds, but how it is spent. Equally important to Pope are people â€" the families, friends and neighbors who form the engine at the core of the town. To combat drugs, violent crime and sexual assault, Pope believes communities must invest as much as possible into education, the arts, athletics and family time. The candidate is a proâ€" ponent of zero tolerance as a deterâ€" rent to the concerns "creeping into Ward 6." "As adults we cannot accept complacent or routine responses from our government and police. It is our responsibility to provide a safe, nurturing environment for our family and ourselves." Ward 6 has its share of issues which need immediate attention, says Pope. They include a resoluâ€" tion to the Grand Boulevard Plaza issue, Iroquois Ridge Arena, improvements to townâ€"owned propâ€" erty, traffic and pedestrian safety and long term development (includâ€" ing the Eighth Line overpass on the QEW, and the Uptown Core). have to do it want to fix Wolfeâ€"WOSS adrmmstratlve lmk proposal

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