2023 Citizen Survey Results with Verbatim Comments

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2023 Citizen Survey Report

Verbatim Comments

The following are the verbatim comments provided in response to the open-ended questions in the 2023 Citizen Survey organized by the three main sections of the survey.

SECTION 1 – QUALITY OF LIFE

1. There are a number of reasons why people choose to live in one city or area over another. Assuming family and weather are not factors, what qualities or characteristics make a city a good place to live? That is, what qualities or characteristics would you use to describe your ideal city?

• Abundant recreational and social opportunities.

• Small , vibrant,safe, affordable , clean,good amenities and facilities and entertainment venues and a small city..

• No pollution

• Things to do for all ages/young adults specifically,

• Having many/most amenities within walking or cycling distance. I love not having to drive everywhere.

• Good shopping, no homeless drug addicts in the streets

• access to nature, recreational activites, sense of community, schools

• Progressive, Lively with activities, Young demographic, affluent, access to amenities

• Outdoor activities and recreation eg rock climbing skiing kayaking

• Friendly, locally owned businesses, basic amenities,

• Access to recreation, ability to bike in town safely with a child, feeling safe, feeling welcome, access to good food

• Safety, security, greenery, recreation opportunities, active job market, local shopping and entertainment opportunities

• affordability. friendly people

• recreation opportunities(pickleball!), proximity to nature, health care, fun social groups, great condo for seniors, airport, services for seniors, well run city council who listens to majority.

• low crime, liveable city, bike paths, good walkways, resturatns and bars on the beach. clean

• low crime rate, few homeless crowding busy areas, good schools, recreation close by, hospital within the city

• Penticton residents are warm and welcoming. Our community is highly walkable and bike -able. The number of local and independent shops and restaurants alongside historic landmarks makes Penticton unique and beautiful.

• Activities and events that take place for entertainment. Cleanliness and a sense of safety while going out

• City planning that uses Smart Growth Principles and keeps sustainability in mind in all planning and decision making.

• Walkable

• affordable housing, health care, amenities (gym, indoor pool, movie theatre, performing arts centre, sports teams, concerts), public transportation, parks/recreation

• Weather, local festivals and activities, quality of community members

• The ease to travel around and the access to recreation facilities.

• safety, connected community, work, good schools, housing, amenities (library, pool, theatre, music)

• Vibrancy - public arts and culture

• A sense of community. A city that has focus on services and events for all groups of citizens. Strong Arts, Culture and recreation programs and events. Health, safety and police programs to maintain a safe environment.

• Small-town feel with a thriving craft- and home-brewing community.

• Born and raised here, beaches, weather, schools

• Safe, welcoming, clean, affordable, diverse, resourced

• New younger council, updated hospital, walkability every where, excellent policing, convenient airport and city is not too large like Kelowna.

• Access to basic amenities. Safety. Affordability.

• Proximity to amenities

• Safe, affordable, amenities (grocery stores, festivities, and activities)

• Affordability, employment opportunity, entertainment for children, safety

• outdoor access, walkability, thriving local businesses, trees and parks

• beautiful parks, many places to enjoy music (inside AND outside), sports to play and watch and all of the amenities needed to enjoy everyday living (good stores for groceries, clothing, etc.).

• smsmall city feeling(not as small as when I moved here in 1973), trees, hills, way of life, all very close by, appreciate the small city feel.

• Gorgeous landscape, functioning and growing amenities, beautiful public parks, proper public transit infrastructure allowing for a thriving small business economy, dense population with options to live in downtown apartments.

• Family Fun, Good job opportunities, work-life balance, safety

• Penticton offers exactly what we were looking for when I retired in 2004, small city lots of things to do both summer and winter. Wineries great restaurants. and spectacular view.... I like the changes they are doing in town to accomodate more people

• Geography, community spirit, medical facilities as you age, shops, low crime

• Penticton is a vibrate community that offers a vast array of recreational and l leisure activities. I am delighted with the numerous fsitvals and other events that draw trourists to our city and how locals turn out and support these events.

• less cutting back on services our taxes pay for, Restorative Practices for Homeless ,15 min city, it's fairly obvious that many

small business will fail, only large corporate stores will manage all our needs

• An ideal city would care about natural spaces, wildlife, climate change, science, innovation, creativity, accessible services, affordable housing, excellent health/veterinary care, clean water/air, walking/biking spaces, and sustainable waste disposal

• safety, activities (hiking,biking,swim,ski), cost of living

• Community events that bring people together. Having access to a variety of outdoor exercise options, includign walkability. Feeling safe in your neighborhood is also imortant.

• Safety, low level of crime, city council and staff's rapid responsiveness to vagrants, drug use and crime, cleanliness (particularly in downtown area), number of parks and trails, many restaurants and cafes.

• Medium sized - big enough to have some amenities, but not so big as to be polluted, crowded and far from outdoor recreation.

• Small with limited urban sprawl potential. Ideally everything within Walking/biking distance, essential services walking/biking distance, job availability

• Small City with everything you need

• Safety ,shopping, employment and senior services as well as good schools

• safety, abundant public spaces, ease of access to amenities

• good healthcare, good ammenities, good roads,bike lanes, good schools, good recreation opportunities, nice people here...

• Job Infrastructure, affordability of housing. Those both need to be present for both to succeed. Vibrant life after 430pm...

• We like the size of Penticton, in that it is not too big, easy to get around and has all the amenities

• Clean, well taken care of, safe and inviting to guests

• We have lived in Vancouver for decades only to watch the city decay. We have enjoyed the slower lifestyle with less traffic but happy to enjoy the lifestyle that the wine community in Penticton affords.

• Things to do, job opportunities, affordable housing

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• Recreation

• Restaurants and amenities that are open late. Affordable rental properties for one to three people.

• The city Council spends money at a rate like no other.

• Smaller city feel but with lots of great restaurants, proximity to attractions

• Chose Penticton over Summerland because of the bus routes. Nearby airport. Need more flights! Pro bike lanes, especially around and in school, college zones to make it safe for the younger generations

• Employment & amenities

• Clean, safe from crime, amenities and can make a living

• lots of free activities to promote health and fitness

• Friendly, walkable, cyclable, good schools, good local businesses (restaurants / breweries / wineries), community programming, green space

• Availability of outdoor activities; water sports, golf, cycling, walking, hiking. Beauty of nature. Uncrowded access to these things. Light traffic.

• Sense of community, safety, easy to get around, affordability, easy to find a career

• Access to services; security; amenities; recreational opportunities such as a tennis club, boat launch, curling club; beach; social life

• A quiet friendly town, one that is safe and local focused

• It’s a community, being a local of Penticton gives you a sense of community

• Sense of community

• Easy to access amenities, clean and family focused

• Safe, affordable, lots of amenities

• Safe, small, having opportunities for outdoor recreation.

• Not to crowded and where densification has limited impact on single homes.

• safe, low crime, good transit, walkability throughout the city, lots of parks/green spaces

• Strong sense of community, opportunities for career growth, affordable housing, activities geared towards families, recreation opportunities

• Population health, livability, low homeless rate, low crime rate, plentiful jobs, good weather, access to arts and culture

• Safe and clean with cultural activities

• Safe, family-friendly, diverse, well-maintained, green spaces, good recycling/compost programs, safe place to lock up bikes near beaches and downtown, bike friendly

• safety, having a visible presence of police, bylaw or other angels 24/7 ... no car racing on city streets, no open use of drugs, bylaws like no smoking in parks and beaches enforced, police walking the beat instilling law and order

• Great Amenities/awesome beaches/grew up here

• Job opportunities, good schools, availability of CHILDCARE, green space/nature nearby, vibrant and diverse independent restaurant scene, local businesses/retail shops, arts and culture

• Somewhere safe and where there are activities for people of all ages.

• Everything in walking distance (groceries etc) and safe

• Proximity and access to services, housing affordability and availability

• Natural beauty: being so close to nature; being able to enjoy beautiful views. Safety: safe properties; feeling safe around town. Small town feel. A council and city staff that listen. Free parking, especially near parks and beaches. Living wages.

• Safety, family oriented, small 30,000 to 70,000, ease of access to city staff and council (which we do not have in Penticton - staff does not answer their phones!). Green space, good traffic flow (which we no longer have ). A feeling of belonging.

• We chose to live in Penticton because it was smaller. Not the sprawling Kelowna nearby. Without the traffic & traffic jams at the bridge. Penticton is still a close enough drive to access Kelowna's "big box stores" such as Costco & Home Depot.

• Beaches, weather, activities are all reasons to live in Penticton.

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• Safe, walkable, diverse, parks, public art/beautification, activities, wide range of businesses and restaurants, tolerance of all people and lifestyles

• outdoor recreation opportunities, reasonable cost of living, strong community

• Most things needed are a short drive away.

• My ideal city would have

• safe with good extracurricular activities for kids and adults

• Size easy to get about. Easy access to shopping and out door activities entertainment. Good local governments

• Clean, safe communities within the city. Affordable and available housing options Family friendly activities Access to after hours medical care

• Small City with benefits of hospital, airport and lakes. Close proximity to large centres like Kelowna and Vancouver. Close to US border.

• A good infrastructure providing diverse opportunities for leisure. A thriving economy with many employment opportunities.

• Attractive environment, character areas. Apparent safety. Small and compact.

• Safety, nature/parks, lack of traffic, job opportunities, good restaurants, a lake, mountains nearby, nice place for hikes, playgrounds

• Ease of access to outdoor activities, community pride in city, strong citizen safety support, community wide celebrations, wide range of entertainment opportunities.

• Safety, good infrastructure. Big box stores and chain supermarkets within easy reach. Not too far from airports.

• Friendly, welcoming, safe, easy to get around, access to nature, natural beauty

• walkability, "pocket communities", access to outdoor recreation, protecting urban interface areas from developers and rather focusing on densification where infrastructure already exists.

• Availability of services and stores, easily accessible health care, high standard of living at a reasonable cost of living, stability from change and input to influence change in my favor.

• Sports, arts, entertainment, safe downtown, education, employment opportunities.

• Affordability, safety, amenities, activities, entertainment options, availability of services - stores, health providers, etc..

• Liveable, walkable community with a clean environment

• Clean, available work, car culture, parks and green spaces. Affordability.

• Walkability, local small businesses, parks, recreation trails, range of housing options, sense of heritage, community events, safe clean streets, reliable public transit, city gardens, pride in home ownership, museums, library

• Plenty of family friendly activities, low cost options for childcare.

• walkability/cycling, variety of restaurants/coffee shops/parks and outdoor areas/access to health care/safety

• Having a hospital and urgent care was important when selecting Penticton to live in. Good size of city, opportunity to grow but will not be the size of Kelowna. Wonderful beach access and views of lakes.

• Lots of amenities, safe for families.

• Community feel, good services but still small, ability to bike across town easily.

• Safety, green space, affordable, outdoor activities, cultural activities, social events.

• I like that im in a walkable area, I can walk to coffee shops, the farmers market etc. I would love to live somewhere with a yard but can't afford it, i love the access to nature trails are only a few minutes away

• Good public transport

• Safe, clean, community, variety.

• A well planned safe city, with accommodation for all income levels. This would include plenty of rental housing and no stand alone Air BnBs!

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• ' - prioritizes diversity & inclusion; connectedness; environmental sustainability; affordable housing and housing-first approach; natural spaces in and around community; programs for all ages; access for everyone; art and culture; and good food!

• Walkable with sidewalks separated from traffic, minimal traffic in the core; compact distances. Varied well used parks, low ceime rate

• arts and culture provided within the city

• arts and culture within the city, diversity, care for seniors and challenged citizens, cleanliness, variety of businesses, sports activities

• Small town mixed with some city amenities.

• Affordability of outdoor recreational facilities

• Safe, caring, considerate of environment, amenties, good schools

• lots of trees, great parks open for all users, or good options (dogowners)

• Accessibility, activities, food, greenery, transport, price!

• Safe, clean, areas to walk/relax without traffic,

• I likek

• A smaller and more welcoming community, walkability and bikeability to not rely on cars, parks, beaches, hiking trails, family oriented events, music and things to do on a Friday night

• Culturally diverse & safe. Availability of healthcare needs. Events for entire family. Day care availability, jobs that can cover the cost of living

• Safety, inclusion.

• Pace, safety, fun

• Outdoor activities, good food, things to do, safe and clean

• Access to amenities and services. Low congestion and traffic. The city is well maintained and safe.

• Small town feel with some city amenities. Awesome beer and wine scene. Somewhat conservative population.

• I like the size and beauty of penticton. the ease of getting around and sporting facilities.

• Livability for it's residents.

• Accessible outdoor spaces, robust social programs and community supports. Affordable housing.

• Walkability, bikeability, safe communities, things to do

• safe for children to enjoy public spaces, access to variety ogoods and services, community activities to engage the citizens, supportive programs, different cultural activities, well maintained inferstructure, governing body that offers policies on a vari

• Safe and secure (crime reduction, no open drug use), community events, supports for families, can trust city council and rcmp, easy to navigate, affordable housing

• A community that supports an active and healthy lifestyle. Opportunities for children and adults to safely travel to work, school, shop, and go about about life through active transport such and walking,biking, scooting. Engaging cultural institutions.

• Small but with all the amenities

• Safe, good quality of life

• Ambience, public green spaces and city parks, treed streets, easy access to lakes and trails, easy local transportation options and parking, year round calendar of festivals and events, wide array of public service (recreational and health )and stores,

• Walkable, well maintained, friendly, compact downtown and similar retail clusters, services readily available without having to travel, safety (which includes walking my dog without being attacked by deer April through September)

• Smaller population, with cultural institutions and surrounded with beautiful vine gardens.

• Peaceful, Safe. A government that is responsive to its citizens needs.

• I like the size of Penticton, not too big and congested. We have an active community of volunteers, plenty of activities for all levels of mobility.

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• Public Safety on our streets, in our parks, downtown day and night. Freedom from hasels of homeless drug addicts and street criminals

• Vibrant, Balanced demographic mix, well maintained/safe/multiple recreational paths, excellent recreational/community centers; arts/culture/athletic/educational events supported/encouraged, growth encouraged, unique n'hoods, upscale restaurant/food scene

• Access to amenities, decent paying jobs, events

• Safe, variety of activities (outdoor) and music/arts. Affordable. Friendly people. Clean.

• We moved to Penticton because it is a small town meaning less traffic and affordable housing. The town offers lake and lots of other outdoor opportunities for all seasons.

• Clean, affordable living, activities for families, childcare availability

• Clean safe community with access to recreation arts music athlectic interests. Hospital and emergent care good quality education abundance of affordable family housing and employment opportunities for paraprofessionals, and trades people

• walkability, restaurant options, size of city, transit, parking, low crime rates.low homeless population

• I have gained many friends over the 43 years in Penticton. When I thought of moving I changed my mind because I would miss my friends.

• Affordable housing, safety, inclusivity, community events and programs easily accessible

• I had always thought Penticton was a great little city. Lake for swimmnig, places to park, nice restaurants, beautiful views of the mountains, good shopping and generally pretty nice people.

• Small town vibe with all amenities

• The ability to get around town with relative ease and efficiency (time/distance). Additionally, the quality of the school districts at

all grade levels. As well as the available activities year round (skiing, hiking, swimming, biking, climbing, etc.)

• Safe, picturesque, friendly, walkable, vibrant, good economy, outdoor adventure, lots of cultural and entertainment opportunities good place to raise a family, waterfront access, good hospital/Healthcare,

• beauty, safety, ease of traffic, easily accessible health care, variety of activities for all age groups, good variety of shopping, not too crowded, lots of trees

• Cleanliness, low crime rate,lots of recreational activities

• Safe,clean,accesible,,employment opportunities,recreation

• Safe, friendly, lots of fun things to do for different age groups. Family & pet friendly.

• The Churches, libraries, a good selection of shops, small town atmosphere, not too crowded, few if any high rises, Parks and green spaces, for families schools and also hospitals, seniors' centres, clean streets, affordable housing.

• The atmosphere/vibe of the town is one of vibrancy, cleanliness, safety, friendliness and healthy nature within and without.

• Walkable, bicycle routes, stores downtown, parks and beaches, housing and services for people of all income ranges, family doctors, lots of trees and natural spaces, safety, welcoming to all people, limited urban sprawl, rethinking of parking lots

• a place to live.

• Access to various amenities, health care, restaurants, hiking, walking, biking areas.

• Safe, clean, walkable, bike-friendly, good schools, family activities

• A safe and caring community, with affordable housing, full amenities such as activity centres, variety of grocery stores, fast foods plus restaruants, good accessibility to airport and highways.

• Clean and tidy safe recreational opportunities inside and out greenspace

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• A place to earn a living for you and your family.. If you are able to choose your city. Parka, playgrounds - free for all. Friendly people.

• Access to non-urban areas, e.g.wildlife parks/sanctuaries; variety of recreation options for all age-groups; cost of recreation within budgets of families; bus service, including schedules for early & late shifts

• affordable option for housing, recreation; access to non-urban areas; balancing needs of tourists and Penticton residents

• Our idea of an ideal city is sadly what Penticton used to be. To live, work, raise a family, retire without fear of crime

• Small city charm but big city amenities. Opportunities for younger entrepreneurs. Love seeing all the new breweries, restaurants opening. Would love to see the downtown core densify, more ppl = more thriving downtown centre. A parkade downtown.

• Our ideal city is sadly what Penticton used to be. Where you could live, work, retire and raise a family without fear.

• Easy walkabilty and access to recreation. A good hospital. Options for shopping.

• '-size-

• Size, entertainment, good infrastructure, forward thinking council, diversification in ages,

• I chose to live here because it was a nice little town. But it no longer is. The way Penticton is handling things

• High quality of life including easy access to recreation, progressive community ideals, vibrant and creative culture from culinary to arts

• Personal safety. Lots of green spaces. Areas with trees.

• amenities, green space, activities for families, arts/culture, safety

• Safety, accessible quality education, employment opportunities, people that care about their community (inclusive), affordable housing.

• Transit between work and home, bike accessibility, airport accessibility, restaurants/stores, access to outdoor activities.

• It needs to have significant contact with nature, maintain access to the setting and the man made landscape. I believe in biophilic design principles at both architectural and planning scales.

• Housing costs, job prospects, recreation options, services available (ie. health care, schools), crime levels

• Parks, public spaces, restaurants and bars, shopping, ease of access by walking, bike, driving. Diversity of grocers and food; affordable real estate/housing and business -friendly council/environment

• Outdoor recreation - cycling, hiking, running in the area, local sporting events - Interesting Restaurants, Brew pubs for social gatherings with friends - 10 minutes to get across town - Lazy lifestyle

• Safe, affordable, pretty, friendly, reasonable taxes.

• Functional city which prioritizes modern urban design features and livable, walkable communities with a selection of diverse amenities.

• Safe, inclusive, clean, environmentally conscious, well laid out, business friendly

• Safe, community minded, opportunities for various hobbies and interests and supporting local businesses, non profits, and service groups. Housing and equality for all with supportive services.

• Safety for everyone

• easy and pleasant to walk/bike to shopping/recreation; lots of trees, green space; steady traffic flow, sufficient parking; traffic noise is mitigated in residential areas; easy access to nature from anywhere; attractive buildings, incl heritage

• Well maintained roads, parks, grasslands

• Well maintained roads, parks, and facilities ie library, hospitals, health care

• It has all the services, retail and transportation needs I desire.

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• Safety comes first, our most vulnerable housed and cared for, small businesses thriving, maintenance of our roads, parks, schools, facilities,

• Job availability, maintenance of public areas, diversity of landscape, access to shopping, local events,

• Walkable, pedestrian friendly, inexpensive community activities, good green spaces, accessible services, affordable housing for all, health care, city council who is there to support Penticton and ALL the residents, not advance personal interests.

• Hospital

• Hospital. Small size city with easy recreational access.

• Hospital. Small size city. Recreational access easy.

• Abundance of amenities health, cultural, retail, and gastronomic/beverage 2. Proximity to outdoor areas frequented by few people 3. Ease of access and proximity to large metropolitan area

• Mild winter weather, hot summer weather, outdoor recreation activities, good choice of restaurants, walkable downtown

• Shaded walking and biking paths, cafe's and small bakery's spread throughout the city and not in one section, large playgrounds with lots of shaded sections

• small physical size, safety, access to natural ameneties

• Large enough to have adequate services, small enough to retain small town character.

• Close to beaches and outdoor activities

• Decent paying jobs - restaurants/coffee shops - beaches/parksdecent shopping - adequate medical carel care

• Inclusive. Environmental proximity & public access. Local governments respect for land and local indigenous communities. Green space incorporated into urban environments. Large number of community focused events, thriving arts community & food security.

• Fresh air. Friendly people Fresh food, lots of green space and outdoor recreation, reasonable cost of living, safe streets

• The amenities that are in the city - shopping, medical, hospital close by, dinning out

• Quite, convience, enviro friendly.

• We have lots of amenities and beautiful surroundings.

• Walkable/bikeable, affordable, friendly, accepting, diverse, progressive

• Amenities, outdoor activities, small town feel

• SAFE number one priority, infrastructure/amenities, accessibility, welcoming, Location, weather,

• Safe, Welcoming, Frequent Community Activities/Events

• Community events, feeling of safety and lower crime

• affordability and access to service. Good jobs are crucial. My ideal city would have lots of options for housing work and all services for every age group equally regardless of financi

• I look for a city with a value for nature- lots of parks, walking trails and trees throughout the city. I do not like when a city overdevelops and crams lots of small buildings onto small lots. A sense of community and good neighbours. Easy to drive in.

• A smaller city like Penticton is generally more community minded. Most quieter, lots of green spaces and parks. Good balance between homes and apartments and less condos.

• parks, green spaces, good balance of homes and apartments as opposed to condos, good variety of shopping choices, medical centres.

• Friendly, easy to get around, safe, well managed city.

• Access to outdoor recreation and green spaces, both wild and tended. Hiking and Mtn biking trails are super important to myself and my family

• Scenically attractive. Manageable traffic. Pleasant parks. An airport. Hospital. Community centre with an indoor swimming pool. Theatre/Concert venue. Useful range of shops and supermarkets. Cinema complex.

• A sense of community, activities for all ages, opportunities to connect with others, the lakes and beaches are a destination for

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friends and family, lots of amenities, but not too busy and easy to get around town

• Safe. Clean. Lots of resources and community

• Strong and diverse economy, affordability, safety, activities year round

• beautiful parks, hip downtown and restaurants, public art, sufficient schools and healthcare

• Culturally vibrant, indigenous lens, clean beaches, kid friendly events, sports and recreration opportunities

• Community, low crime, low homelessness, a mayor and council working with residents not serving personal goals. This mayor and council not ideal for Penticton, many have gone back on their pre election promises.this should mean that they should resign so m

• Easy access to outdoor pursuits, green space in the city well protected and accessible, single family homes not being pushed out by a mad rush to increase density all the time. There is no evidence bigger is better, except in the capitalists eyes.

• Lots of close amenities, good parks, good infras tructure, sustainable growth and few inhibitors of progress.

• Outdoor activities

• Sufficient policing, more referendums on certain projects rather than the opinions and decisions of just a few people in office which has shown several times to a few in offices

• A great community Center with incoming v

• Accessibility, shopping choices, less traffic, outdoor activities, entertainment for adults and kids

• Plenty of activities and amenities, available jobs and affordable places to live

• I moved to Penticton from Westbank in October 2007 and have decided this is Not the place to Stay at forever

• Safety, clean , vibrant , physical activities

• Lots of beach, clean parks, decent traffic flow, friendly residents, lots of caring about the city and its amenities, nice community

centre, SOEC is a great facility featuring the Vees and quality concerts and shows.

• The city should have a good cultural core, such as theatre, art school or cultural centre that ideally could partner with the local college

• Job opportunities, cost of shelter, education/schooling options and access to healthcare and services.

• A mix of citizens from age groups, ethnicities, outlooks on what community should look like, willing to participate in the issues and activities and maintaining/improving them.

• Proximity to nature (especially trails)

• Surrounding view. affordable living, friendliness, shopping facilities, cleanliness, a modern and listening council.

• parks. no crime. no junkies. safe place

• Lifestyle, activities and festivals. Culture

• Safe and accessible for everyone, architecturally appealing, good access to parks and nature, friendly and caring people, offers an array of history, arts and cultural and sports facilities, activities and events

• Near mountain and hiking possibilities

• Safe, attractive, good healthcare, good social services, live music, a variety of restaurants, good support of the arts, good infrastructure, good learning opportunities for all ages, good fitness facilities and leaders, good transportation links, lively

• Amenities, aestetics , work opportunities, layout of infrastructure, proposed updates that align with forward looking expansions. LESS EYE SORE BIKE LANES THAT HARDLY GET USED. BE MORE LIKE KELOWNA THAT CITY IS TEN FOLD MORE BEAUTIFUL, WELL LAID OUT ETC

• Not too big and not too small.

• Clean, walk/bike/alternate transport accessible. Safety. Welcoming to all.

• Vibrant, Arts Scene, great infrastructure (sidewalk maintenance, hospital, airport access, park/beach cleanliness, etc)low, low

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crime and visible addiction issues, family friendly, activities for youth, a robust college or university

• lots good well paying ft jobs, low cost housing/living, lots of things to do

• Not too big and not too smalll. Airport access. Lake access

• The location and geography. Having things to do.

• Recreation opportunities, regional amities, affordable housing, local produce, reasonable cost of living, council and staff attentive to public needs, reasonable utility rates,

• Bike friendly

• Quiet, great place to raise/start a family

• Clean, accessible, friendly, has the necessities

• SAFE!!!for

• Lakes, employment, safety, nature

• Safe, clean, parks, pathways, Festivals, reasonable tax rates

• SAFE!!! Affordable housing/accommodation for all. A city Council who listens to their citizens or if going to spend large amounts of money, i.e. the bike lan, hold referendums..

• Safe community, traffic, good schools, access to amenities, wise city council

• SAFE!!!! a city council that listens to their citizens, and also holds referendums when they are going to spend large amounts of money… I.e. the bike lane. affordable accommodation, housing for all. Good healthcare and amenities.

• I chose Penticton in 2009 because I knew that it was a city that I could easily navigate by foot, bicycle, and in winter still walking plus bus. Its small city character was also a huge draw. Its location between lakes and high country was also appealing.

• Weather,aminaties,safety and housing affordability.

• I want to feel safe. I want homelessness dealt with. I want my parks and beaches clean. I want extended walkway at Sudbury Beach. I want public washrooms at beaches open year round or at least for longer periods in evening. Harsh penalties for thiefs

• Hello? You called my survey complete just after filling in only this section. Repeating former content, in brief: small city character;

easy transportation by foot, bicycle, and bus; location between lakes and high country; naturalists' club

• The mountains and lakes

• Jobs, housing, activities

• Safety, safety, safety Clean, Green spaces, variable commuting options (esp bike lanes) A place where my grandson can walk to school without fear

• Conveniences and sense of community

• Clean, safe, entertainment for all, reasonable property value

• A city where the people running it understand money doesn't grow on trees

• The ability to live my life without the constant worry about being harassed by the homeless and panhandlers. Also living in a city withoout the ugliness that has been created on Martin St in particular by pointless bike lanes.

• Not too dense and busy, public infrastructure is not pushed to its limit (traffic), walkability and transport that does not rely on car ownership

• nice scenery, honestly mostly ewather

• Access to outdoor activities (hiking/biking/swimming)

• Commute times. Safety and security, crime, access to recreational facilities

• Being able to access most things by foot, bicycle or public transportation.

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4 a. Why do you think the quality of life has improved?

• We don't have pandemic restrictions, so it's easier to enjoy company and nice restaurants.

• More things to do

• Younger council is listening to people and trying new methods re the mental health of our disadvantaged citizens

• New bike lane has made the city a much safer place, as well as a focus on apartments and other higher density constructions focusing on moving away from strict zoning codes. Local businesses continuing to pop up and succeed.

• pleased to see many new business that have opened

• More year round business open. City festivals

• the city is growing and adding more facilities and events

• More cool businesses are opening up every day, liquor on beach is nice, more housing developments are being approved/built, but maybe crime is worse though.

• Covid is largely behind us and people are enthusiastic about going forward.

• Improvements to mobility, including separated bike lanes

• bike lanes, transparency in government, great promotion of tourism in Penticton, lots to do for locals and visitors alike

• Bike lane, more community engagement (shape your city is great), more vibrant town drawing in a younger population looking to start a family. I feel like its less of a 'retirement community', and the younger population has a voice.

• The amount of crime is going down in my neighbourhood. There is more rental housing being built and social housing is being provided.

• There seems to be a lot of focus on community and growth, development into a city always helps support the quality of life

• There is more to do and more places to go such as restaurants, cafes, the bike lanes have improved

• Quality of life has improved everywhere since the end of the pandemic. But there are more cars on the road and some high

rises that I don't like, and the summer month air quality has become a problem. Compared to elsewhere Penticton is good still a good p

• Safety, theft and the homelessness problem is a major concern and is getting worse.

• Increased young people and families, increased restaurants and stores, improved bike access and local trails.

• Slow but steady increase in green spaces and urban walking.

• Focus and commitment to renewed infrastructure that prioritizes multi-modal transport.

• It seems like crime has gone down and the city seems to be trying to improve the town (bike lanes, north end, etc.)

• i think the city is taki g action on safety and homelessness, i also see a lot of great restaurants

• More great events!

• The number of food and beverage establishments that have opened is awesome!

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4 b. Why do you think the quality of life has worsened?

• Safety is the biggest reason.

• Homeless and crime problem

• Homeless and drug addicts everywhere, open drug use in public areas, so bad

• cost of living, free street drugs & too much poverty driven crime

• Drug/Mental health issues continue to be on the rise. The overall divisiveness of right vs left politics is getting out of hand (not just in Penticton).

• Lack of childcare and local professional jobs have made me and my partner look for other places to live

• lack of housing. crime.

• crime, homeless situation, open drug use, trails used as camp grounds, unusable bike laines

• the number of homeless that have flocked here is substantial therefore increasing crime rate. I no longer feel safe sending my kids to play at a park down the street unattended or have them walk from middle/highschool to my office downtown

• Pretty crime, transients every where, break and enters, no punishment for those committing small crimes even if they are repeat offenders

• increase in homeless population, increase in drug addiction, increase in property crimes, decrease in affodable housing, lack of increase in wages, continued focus on developing houses for rich people from the coast or summer folk not year round resident

• The number of homeless and beggers has increased.

• decreased feeling of safety due to needles in parks, drugs, theft, aggressive homeless, street violence, previous mayor

• Cost of living has increased and more people are ending up in situations where they can't afford to live here. There is more presence of unhoused individuals and feels like more reports of theft. Additionally, it feels as though the city is less clean.

• More crime, less affordability for housing

• Too much catering to drug addicts

• Since covid access to some services has deteriorated or become harder. Hours of businesses have decreased and the general morale of the City seems to have decreased - people don't seem as happy as they once were.

• housing affordability crisis - how can people work at businesses if they can't afford rent?; homelessness and toxic drug crisis definitely more visible - not a municipal problem though - needs to be addressed provincially and federally;

• It seems obvious that there is not enough low-cost housing. Housing for Seniors also sounding more difficult to acquire with added help, that is affordable.

• We are not helping our at risk population in the way they need most. People with mental health issues are not safe and supported and therefore crime is up and we don't feel safe.

• the town was never build to accomodate the amount of traffic we have... the more properties changed to duplexes of fourplexes is great but the traffic flow gets affected. Naramata road only one way in or out of Naramata and cyclists...

• Higher homelessness, addiction issues and petty crime. Luckily I don't live downtown so can avoid these things most of the time, however on occasion I head downtown in the evening and am shocked to see homeless people lying in shop doorways

• cutbacks, homelessness crime,

• Lack of help for people afflicted with mental health issues, bike lane destroying downtown businesses on Martin Street, crime and overdose rate climbing

• The number of vagrants in the city (which the city has done very little about), drug use seems to have intensified - visible on our streets. Level of crime - people just don't feel safe anymore particularly in the downtown area.

• Bike lanes suck, more pay parking, more bad restaurants than.good,

• Crime and homelessness

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• people living on the streets, fear for safety for older people, minor thievery, reduced ease of travel due to bike lanes and construction, high property taxes due to council continually spending money on projects ( little benefit seen), ambulance shortage

• The housing affordability here has gotten out of control. There is no injection of jobs or infrastructure to support this. Residents will be forced out by those from other places looking for a vacation or retirement house.

• The opioid and housing crisis. The pandemic hurt everyone.

• Improper treatment of vulnerable people whether addicts or the unhoused. They are being shunned into the wrong parts of the city and crime is increasing as a result. Rather than amenities being made properly available to them.

• Crime, cost of living

• Petty crime and homelessness

• huge increase in public drug use, property theft & crime. Increase of Drug paraphernalia in public spaces & playgrounds, beach.

• Worsened - city leaders are not listening to the people. Major crime, bike lanes causing traffic problems, lack of business and no camp grounds

• Cost of housing, rental and owned, has increased too quickly. The city needs more housing options for all income levels. Petty property crime and vagrancy continues unabated, which dispeoportionately affects certain neighbourhoods.

• Penticton has jobs but the pay gap between income and affordable housing is extreme. People are unable to find work here and live here, many have 1 partner who works out of town to afford to live here.

• Born and raised here, it’s extremely unsafe for my kids to go and play like I did.

• So many more homeless people and shopping cart tents everywhere. The wet shelter on main has brought down that

part of the city. The main area everyone has to drive by. People who visit us always comment on this

• Appears to be an increase in crime. Visible increase in open drug use in public places.

• All the open drug use, homeless hanging out everywhere, shopping carts lined with stolen goods everywhere. I personally am afraid to walk down the street with all the homeless around.

• Housing is out of reach of most people. People have almost no disposable income and this has created a negative feedback loop of businesses struggling and people having fewer quality job options

• Covid isolation, costs of everything seem to be increasing while wages have not.

• Worsened. More homeless and unhealthy people with addictions and mental illness. More crime and wanton destruction of property. Binding sense of community is unravelling.

• break ins, crime, theft, drugs, car racing in streets, criminals and 'zombies' everywhere, not safe to be out at night, houses need 8' fences to keep criminals and 'zombies' out

• More crime now and law enforcement do the best they can but it doesn’t seem to be enough

• Many more issues with homelessness and crime. I feel much less safe in Penticton than I used to.

• Junkies, theft, junkies, theft, junkies... (etc.)

• Drug use and homelessness

• Higher cost of living and less housing, increase of crime

• Too much development that interferes with the character of neighbourhoods. Visible unauthorized homeless encampments. Drug situation and mess more visible. Rising costs of shelter and necessities. $$ spent catering to a few (lake to lake bike route)

• Unhoused people cluttering the streets and setting up camp on any street corner, crime, drugs, feeling of being unsafe, city making decisions on major spending without taxpayer approval like referendums. This bike lane has degraded our traffic flow

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• The visibility of homeless/mentally challenged/drug impaired people in Penticton has worsened since we moved here mid2015. Provincial housing in old hotels along Main St & Skaha Lake Rd means these folks are living/visible adjacent to main travel areas

• Covid 19 restrictions hurt business and society, while drugs and crime have gon up dramatically.

• Rental cost has increased astronomically.

• Crime and street people are very prevalent making it uncomfortable to walk downtown alone, even in the daytime.

• The road trip infrastructure is not keeping up with the increased demand.

• Vagrants, homeless and addicted becoming a common sight without any apparent solution

• safety, barriers to getting around

• Penticton seems to focus on attracting "premium' retirees from the lower mainland rather than focusing on retaining or attracting young educated families. Its hard for younger people to find like minded individuals. Too many baby boomers making decisions.

• Homeless population has increased and becoming increasingly aggressive.

• Crime has increased - theft impacts my quality of life - two bikes stolen in 2 years, cars damaged, costs increase as businesses must incorporate theft

• unaffordable housing, unsafe & unclean streets do to unmanaged mental illness, drug addiction & homelessness, lack of family income jobs

• Many visible homeless people, not enough supports.

• The homeless issue needs to be addressed. We feel unsafe walking in many areas of the community.

• Cost of housing and rent hikes mean many, especially young people, cannot afford to live here and leave or remain unhoused.

• Rent and housing prices have been steadily increasing, pricing many people out. This isn't a problem that is unique to

penticton. Cleaning up the esplanade area without giving homeless people a place to go has made them more visable

• congestion, homelessness

• Cost of living, crime

• Prices have gone up considerably, housing is difficult to afford and find, intolerance is spreading, the homeless and drug problem has grown

• Inflation in general, lack of housing, drug problem and street population, crime

• More crime, cost of living here is expensive and multiple jobs have to be worked just to surivive

• Property crime increase, increase in homeless population, increase in addictions, terrible mental health supports. Failing medical system. Hospital full of travel nurses, 50% staffing levels in healthcare currently and not due to the pandemic anymor .

• Worsened because of petty crime. From drugs and homelessness

• Inflation and the drug crisis/unhoused population being more visible - not only a penticton issue

• More homeless camps keep popping up, drug addicts openly using

• Increase in crime and wasteful spending by council.

• I was mugged on my back steps last month and round up in the hospital.

• Too many apartments have been approved...too high density in what used to be lovely neighborhoods...the bike lane has totally messed traffic up. Too many people live here now and the roads cannot handle the traffic..then the idiocy of a bike lane

• increased crime and concerns about safe access to public spaces. closing down of smaller businesses which is what tourists are coming fo - unique experiences

• Crime and open drug use is increasingly worse. This has now been spread across the entire city. Cost of living is astronomical

• Increase in traffic, density, crime

• increased visible homelessness, increased crime rate, oversized lot filling by developers, the cutting down of healthy mature

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trees to make way for oversized lot filling by developers, excess heights of building proposed blocking light and view to lakes

• City Council doesn't listen to the people. Only business and special interest groups.

• Homeless , thefts/stealing, open drug use, useless

• No access to family oriented businesses, all get shut down by council. Catering to society's downtrodden.

• Streets don't feel safe at night. Drugs and addicts everywhere. Lots of for lease and derilict buildings.

• It’s become a haven for drug users and theft. There is no affordable housing and too many (!!) seasonal rentals. Crime is terrible and the homeless community makes walking alone or in the evening unsafe

• Workforce decrease affordable family housing does not meet the needs unhoused population increase feeling of unrest over apathetic and vigilant conflicted views of our residents

• lack of affordable housing, increased crime, high homeless population, little meaningful employment

• Too many people are homeless mostly due to brain conditions, and no where to go for help when they choose to do so.

• The insane cost of rent, the huge homeless problem and safety issues. My apartment has been attempted broken in too a dozen+ times in the last 5years. Also lack of anything fun to do

• Driving around the city makes me so sad, every street has been built up with what look like shipping containers. Old homes torn down grass being replaced with gravel. They are getting higher and higher and and block out any view.

• Homelessness, crime, bike lanes

• Overall, the cleanliness of Penticton has worsened. Small things like tending to the sidewalks, roads, and parks, I feel have been let go.

• More homeless/drug addiction that is visible . Petty crime up , every thing is more expensive

• Safety has continually gone downhill, particularly property crime and mental health issues. Traffic is getting worse. We are losing

greenery - urban forest. It is more difficult to use downtownparking, traffic congestion.t.

• Until penticton and bc gov does something with the catch and release of repeat offenders and drug enabling programs of our government I don’t have much hope of quality of life improvement.

• Mental health and drugsare big issues. All that, should funded by all big Pharmaceutical. and not our taxs

• City council not listening - building permits wacky, expenditure on bike lanes insane, status quo on B & B regulations injuring housing availability, durations posted for improvements seem ridiculous (sweet deals for Grizzly), downtown parking fees 2 high

• Housing costs are through the roof, there is less for children and families here, wages have stagnated and so has growth, businesses are shutting down constantly

• Crime, homelessness, drug use

• It is too easy to access drugs here in Penticton especially kids. Housing is more limited and less affordable, making homelessness an issue. There are more homeless "camps" and we are finding more drug paraphenalia around residential schools and parks.

• Too many experiencing homelessness open drug use petty crime the city seems unkept and dirty

• housing costs

• City planners and council aren't doing whats right for Penticton because they are all pushing their own agenda.

• Access to afforable housing.

• Crime, homeless, cost

• Get out there and see the penticton streets. They are full of crack heads and homeless people

• While not exclusively Penticton problems I think the increasing population of street drug users has had a negative impact on my perception of safety for my family. Lack of affordable housing is no doubt a contributing factor.

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• Bylaws not enforced. Unsafe places to walk due to dogs off leash. Too many people with personal agendas.

• Homelessness/ drug addiction increasing, lack of affordable housing, discrimination and lack of empathy increasingly more visible

• Daily I'm seeing open Hard Drug use on the streets, it's getting a bit much. I can't walk down the street with an open beer, but anyone can and does smoke crack in public spaces.

• Worsened due to: Housing/real estate affordability, drug abuse/mental health crises. I sometimes feel that our city imports ideas that make sense in larger centers but are premature here. Not enough focus on economy and working class

• Theft and vandalism associated with those who support their drug habits - Adding new services while infrastructure maintenance drops in priority.

• Increased homeless, drug use, rental and housing costs too high, vacany rates too low

• I am concerned with the increase in homelessness and drug use in our community. I feel let down by city hall learning homeless people are given free access to the pool and fitness areas when I am expected to pay and potentially be accosted or have my po

• Homeless and mental health issues are overwhelming which then contributes to theft and safety concerns. Housing is terrible for renters.

• Drugs, theft, homelessness

• Small Business is struggling, they are the heart of a community

• Homeless and Crime.

• Small business is struggling, essential to our vibrancy. Homelessness has increased

• The abundance of homelessness/open drug use in areas like playgrounds, lack of accessibility of washrooms in public areas year round, overall lack of feeling safe in certain areas of town, increased rate of petty crime

• Increased homelessness. Drug addiction encampments on main and industrial unsightly and feel unsafe to walk in neighborhood this year. Feels like you are putting multiple homeless accommodation in one place on main creating a ghetto feel .

• Increase in homelessness, on-going opiod crisis, and fear of being accosted in the downtown area

• Worse. What used to be shaded pathways are very open to the hot sun and not good for walking with family/strollers. Green spaces are very far apart. The shopping mall has nothing in it and Businesses avoid it

• homelessness, drug addiction, growing inequality,

• streets/storefronts etc are being taken over by the underhoused - very intimidating - grocery carts full of ? with these people

• Food and home security has worsened. Th drug using populations supports are no longer meeting the rising demands. There have been improvements made in a number of areas, but there are more individuals that need assistance & many barriers to supports

• Crime is a major problem.

• issues around drugs, mental illness and crime

• Cost of living including rent and food costs have shot up drastically

• Petty crime especially theft is out of control.

• Penticton (was) a wonderful excellent community to retire in, raise a family in, work and play in. The lack of leadership keeping our community safe and welcoming is pathetic

• Wages have remained relatively the same over the past few years, but cost of living has skyrocketed. It is difficult for younger people to afford rent & necessities and then try and save to get ahead on top of just getting by.

• The amount of open drug use and homelessness in such a small geographical area along with crime and repeat offenders.

• since the pandemic many services have decreased in quality and access but costs are excessive. People cant afford housing

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increases in costs overall with most wages not keeping up. People have to budget for necessities with nothing left

• unaffordable housing. poor medical. poor city planning. too many drug situations going on in public places

• Influx of “homeless/unhoused” and no effective means to deal with them.

• Influx of “homeless/unhoused” people with no effective way to deal with them. Proliferation of duplexes and four plexes on single family lots with inadequate parking. Recent redesign of city streets, ie “traffic calming measures” that do nothing to

• I feel saddened almost every time I drive down our Main St and see the homeless and open drug use that occurs. Our beautiful town is showing many nasty and ugly sides of life.

• Crime. Homeless people. Paid parking in Main Street, which is a deterrent to shopping in the area. Excessive bike lanes that make driving more difficult and a shortage of street parking.

• Becoming too densely populated, too expensive for lower income locals, too many homeless moving here from other places, too much bike lane clutter

• Too many homes less and drug/mentail heath issues

• Vagrancy and crime has gotten worse, housing is becoming incredibly expensive

• Crime, homelessness and ineffective people on council and mayor. The mayor should reside in penticton to know our challenges.

• Crime, degenerates everywhere, lack of keeping citizens safe

• Everything is way too expensive, we have plenty of jobs but no one can afford to live here. Taxes are too high

• Homelessness has taken over the once Beautiful City it once was.

• Street people

• Concerns around safety and property crime, as well as cost of living / inflation in everything including property taxes which went up 23% yr/yr due to 9.5% from the City and the remainder from BC Assessment increase.

• I think the quality of life for most North Americans has worsened over the past 3 years for a variety of reasons (health, political, professional, financial etc.).

• Homeless invasion, increase in crimes being committed, unsafe to walk anywhere, City staff tunnel vision

• there are junkies around, and lots of theft. never was the case.

• Take one look downtown. The homeless and drug addicted are severely impacting our safety. You can’t leave a bike or a door unlocked. It was not like that 10 years ago.

• Cost of living has become unaffordable, homelessness and mental health challenges have increased, isolation during Covid hurt the social fabric of the community (but is now recovering)

• Drug use and acceptance, poor decisions on city expansions and projects, few amenities and options of such, lack of viable long term employment. bike lanes are a nightmare eye sore what an extreme waste of money and time.

• Visible addiction and homelessness is a problem

• crime up, very high cost of housing/living, lack of well paying ft jobs, nothing to do

• Transients and lack of resources (defunding of community services like Pathways)

• Lack of concern by council and staff about heritage conservation

• Petty crime & vandalism. Self centred people

• The amount of growth in the unhoused community has removed the safe "night life" factor. I used to feel comfortable walking lake to lake after a night out but now I do not walk or go out on my own after the sun has gone down.

• Bike lane. ruined my livelyhood

• Worsening because of cost of living, crime and homelessness. Access to care and supports is overrun and lack of item availability in stores and stores operating hours

• Cost of housing, limited housing options, increased drug use, increased thefts

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• A growing group of people has been allowed to take over our City. Theft, drug use, violence are now normal day to day things we see everyday. No consequences.

• High crime, prolific offenders, high taxes, high cost of housing to buy or rent, city council making poor financial decisions.

• Homeless

• Criminal and drugs and the lack of the judicial system when it comes to sentencing people. Also how we offer handouts/housing to a certain community of people, but it’s not afforded to all. I understand we have to help the less fortunate, need be all

• It definitely has got worse.

• Homeless lack of work and housing for middle income,bike lanes wasting of public funds on city employees over inflated wages and sending them to conferences out of town that they treat like a holiday

• Infringements on freedoms through government over reach. Not listening to an avalanche of complaints over bike lanes, yet mayor and council still push for a globalist agenda.

• Street people make it unsafe and steal constantly

• We're mirroring societal breakdown with people not finding a place to live, work, have self-esteem and sliding into being street people. Their four-wheel vehicle is often an overflowing shopping cart.

• The Bike Lanes , the open drug use have worsened our town.

• The city is turning into east hastings

• Crime, open drug use, no accountability for criminal behaviour. I'm afraid to go the Pen Hi track outside of school hours & I worry while my grandson is at Balance dance school because of the crap at the Soupteria The kids are LOCKED in to keep them safe

• No affordable housing, lack of ability to deal with crime and waste of money on over built and unused infrastructure

• Drug addled thieves and a super large and threatening homeless population added to the ridiculously expensive and invasive bike path has pretty much destroyed our city.

• Crime and drug use is rampant

• the amount of free accomadation for thieves and drug addicts

• Because of the increase in petty crimescrime resulting from the sheer number of people attracted here by free food (Soupeteria for example), etc

• Climate change causing extreme winter and summer weather events. Summer smoke has become a fact of life.

• no housing for service workers, no rentals, airbnbs are not regulated well, crime, poverty, not evnough services for unhoused people who were targeted by previous council

• Rampant petty crime, homelessness, open drug use on city streets, garbage, road safety, attutude of many residents to public safety.

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5. In your view as a resident, what is the most important issue facing your community? What should receive the greatest attention from local leaders?

• Safety and then recreational opportunities for seniors.

• Homeless and crime

• bikes and scooters on sidewalks

• Homelessness and all the associated issues (housing affordability, health, crime, addiction). We need to do whatever we can to find safe housing for any homeless people who want it, then follow up with support to help them retain safe shelter.

• We need to clean up the drugs and homeless and reduce crime

• vacation rentals driving up real estate prices, pressure from developers and realtors to remove forests for housing

• Safety. We have built up so many resources for the unfortunate people that we are attracting others from afar to take advantage of the resources here. We need to balance providing services to the unfortunate while not attracting more of the like.

• Housing costs

• Childcare

• Potential issues from climate change (e.g. drought/forest fires)

• housing

• homelessness due to mental health & drug addiction issues

• homelessness, vagrancy

• homeless. I don't know how to fix the problem... I just know there is a problem!

• Affordable and attainable housing. We need to strengthen the social safety net before people are found in unstable housing situations. Working families, seniors and single people need support to live and work here.

• Public safety and cleaning up streets

• We need more affordable housing. Building higher density housing that can be occupied by people with lower incoms instead of prioritizing developments that unnecessarily consume natural spaces.

• housing. Not housing for the homeless/addicts, but housing for the working lower middle class. We need apartments for folks who make 30-50k per year

• Drug use, theft

• Assisted living for the elderly and facilities for the homeless.

• environmental issues: climate change, habitat loss, species at risk.

• Affordable housing for ALL

• Homelessness, open drug use, petty theft

• It is difficult as affordable housing can only go so far in serving people, which there is already a shortage of but then beyond that there is a lack of other resources that are needed to "clean" the city up by helping keep people off the streets

• Safety and cleanliness in general

• Affordably housing

• Public safety, reducing drug induced crime

• Safety

• Safety / mental health crisis

• housing affordability (low income, social housing, family, workers) and climate change (hotter temperatures, wildfires, water)

• Homeless people having somewhere to go with their belongings, that isn't on the streets.

• low cost housing - I know that some don't want to spend nights in doors, but a week ago , I was asked if my neighbourhood was a 'shopping cart area'. Penticton Creek walk way seems to be having trees removed by city crews -I hope they will be replanted.

• Public Transit! The expansion of the city is unnecessary, and if a developer really wants it they should have to build commercial and other amenities in the neighbourhood so it can still be walkable. Transit is a major issue as one must have a car to live

• Helping people on the street get the help they need.

• Penticton is beautiful and should remain pristine. this is why people come here and why we were on the 100$ bill. we don't

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want to be Kelowna or West Kelowna with high density housing... bigger is not better and comes at a costs

• Safety and security

• housing for families,seniors and those with a lower income

• more research on 15 min or smart cities, and CBCD's doing what your told by federal govt for your social credit points only serves to distance/isolate you from constituents

• Proper access to local businesses especially in the downtown core, paid parking has to go away downtown. The malls have free parking...

• The largest issues facing everyone are climate change and apathy. Any city, including this city, might want to be leading the way. Thinking outside the box, coming up with creative ideas and solutions, is not a strong point.

• homeless, addiction and crime

• Homeless people taking over areas of the city that are meant to be safe walking paths (Ellis Creek, creek by Industrial Ave). Having open drug use/dealing/unsafe garbage being tossed about in the open is getting ridiculous.

• Vagrants and drug users. Streets are littered with garbage, shopping carts filled with stolen items litter the streets, thieves seem to be free to steal from retailers without any consequences. Local leaders just don't seem to care.

• Crime, addiction & homelessness.

• Safety & Walkability. better sidewalks, lighting and traffic calming. For example new Crosswalks on Green Ave by Wal-mart are unlit and uncontrolled. Lovely there are crosswalks, but traffic speeds right through them.

• Affordable Housing For young people and senioner

• Homelessness

• leaders should lead and stop costly projects, increase policing and enforce laws

• homelessness, drug and mental health care, improve infrastructure as population increases

• More young workforce. This city can't survive or sustain on the elderly and retired. At some point, Penticton needs to understand we can't prevent growth and must manage effectively instead. Give younger people better paying jobs

• People become so frustrated with the on going, repeating petty crime, they loose sight of the good

• If we loose too many motels there won’t be space for holiday visitors

• Housing. Support for businesses to create unique experiences that are more open minded than the Lower Mainland

• Not enough decent paying jobs for younger people

• Affordle Housing for mid to low income earners and single people.

• I should feel safe walking down the street without people strung out, riding around on bikes after being displaced by police yelling or attacking me.

• Cost of housing. It affects crime, the ability to maintain or attract workers, less money at the end of a paycheck to be able to afford to go to local restaurants and businesses. I’m now forced to stay home more often due to cost.

• The homelessness and housing issues. Too many vacation rentals taking away from potential residents.

• Drugs, wet facilities, enabling and adding to property theft & vandalism, unsafe streets

• Crime! Lack of amenities

• attracting a real full size/full service grocery store to the north end to make grocery getting walkable.

• Building up the infrastructure to care for the least fortunate residents, particularly unhoused people.

• Crime, drug use and homelessness.

• Affordability

• Petty property crime and vagrancy should not be tolerated. Ignoring it only risks mire serious effects.

• Focusing on improving local life and not just vacationers or retirees.

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• Negative sentiment from a certain group of residents who are opposed to change

• Homelessness and addiction, finding a place that is not in the middle of the city… provide more storage for their belongings, more showers to clean up and early intervention mental health support.

• Homelessness and illicit drug addiction. For too often our emergency services and front line health care providers are out in situations that can be avoided if this issue is addressed. Advocating to the province to provide more support is needed.

• Lots of issues the city faces are not something they have a lot of power to solve. Homelessness, drug use and crime are problems and our city leaders need to lobby other levels of government in order to ensure Penticton gets their share of funds available

• Crime and drug abuse.

• The homeless, the open drug use, the thet.

• balance of rental and home ownership

• Crime and vagrants

• Eliminating all short-term rentals until rental prices fall to a level that makes it possible for people working full time in service jobs to not be in a desperate survival mode. I can't believe "housing" isn't even in question 6 or 7.

• Opportunities for well paying jobs. There are lots of service jobs available but they barely pay a living wage.

• Homelessness due to addictions and mental illness. There is a need for addictions recovery, mental health rehabilitation, with the aim not only to prevent homelessness, but also to rehabilitate people with addictions and mental health issues.

• Homelessness, lack of treatment centres for people living with addictions

• safety and security, protection of people and property

• Crime and homelessness as well as a shortage of affordable housing

• Housing - I would love to see more of those crappy motels and centrally located car dealerships knocked down and replaced

with mixed use retail/hotels/housing (supportive, low income and market).

• Homelessness and housing.

• Junkies / theft. Old dam replaced with a power generation station. Need for electric busses. B&B's taking up all of the rentals.

• Homelessness, crime, mental health and drugs

• Housing and affordability

• Maintaining the ambience of our city: pleasant neighbourhoods, clear views of the mountains and often the lakes; clean streets and parks; residents' sense of safety and wellbeing in any area of town

• Homelessness, open drug abuse which takes away our policing and our medical resources. Clean up the streets! How? I have no idea. You are the elected officials that should be finding solutions.

• Safety of residents & tourists in Penticton. No threats to personal safety or theft from businesses, homes, vehicles

• Homelessness

• To me Penticton is a haven. It needs to feel completely safe and accepting to ALL people! I think our greatest issue is fighting the rise of bigotry, racism, and prejudice that seems to be on the rise.

• Affordable housing

• Homeless on streets/open drug usage

• homelessness

• Reducing crime is the most import issue facing Penticton. I don't think local leaders can tackle this issue on their own. It needs to be a province or Okanagan wide initiative.

• Bringing young families to keep the community thriving.

• Reducing the level of homelessness, drug addiction and vagrancy, not by just providing more housing and moving the problem elsewhere since this does not address the root issue. Working with all levels of government to have a more long-term solution.

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• I think addiction, mental health, and housing, which are all related and all fall under one giant sad umbrella, should get the most attention.

• Serious and considered action regarding homeless and what seems to be associated drugs and criminality

• Homelessness. Crime.

• Controlling petty crime and addressing homelessness.

• Safety

• Penticton needs to densify rather than expand into the hills. Lets focus on densifying and upgrading old infrastructure where it already exists rather than installing new infrastructure in forested places. We don't need more car focused developments.

• Identifying and drawing on sources of additional incomefed/prov money or increased local taxes

• drug addiction and related crime

• Addressing the homelessness issues. Focus on building sustainable transportation.

• Crime & Safety

• Creating a dense community that supports a carbon free lifestyle

• Homelessness and affordability

• Manage the mental illness, drug addiction & homelessness in Penticton. Prioritize balanced housing options.

• Housing, climate.

• Homelessness. Also, improving the appearance of the southern gateway entrance to the city needs attention, very poor first impression of the city from this route. The beach area across from the airport needs to get cleaned up and maintained.

• Homelessness

• Affordable housing. Sure, plenty of $1M homes are being built in subdivisions, but what about affordable options in town where people don't have to rely on a vehicle?

• Unhoused population. Solutions needed to provide support services.

• Housing shortage, climate change including increased risk of forest fire and increased droughts, food insecurity

• Homelessness

• homelessness, alcohol and drug addiction

• The planning and zoning is the most important issue.

• Cost of housing; environment; the need for harm reduction and housing-first initiatives

• Pay attention to what the community is telling you on what they want or don't want or need. Traveling one some streets has become dangerous.

• Climate chnage

• push towards a greener city overall. better use of boulevards. not just all concrete

• Housing

• Drugs and homeless. I am concerned seeing people using deufs

• Division between young voices and older voices, homelessness issue (they need a shelter and better services)

• Affordable housing

• Safety and mental health because they are greatly connected.

• Enforcement of laws drugs. Homeless encampments removal

• Cost of living

• Homeless/drug users causing problems for residents and businesses

• Inappropriate use of tax dollars on bike lanes and other infrastructure that has not delivered an increase in critical services provided. Associated rise in property taxes and city bills. Stop spending more than the city brings in.

• Safely

• High density. No more ruining neighborhoods with apartments and carriage houses.

• Homelessness, there need to be more social housing. Not just quotas of a couple subsidized units. Dire lack of housing, pet friendly housing, lack of(well funded) social supports for people struggling with substance use and mental health.

• Pretty crime is a huge issue and tough to control. Bike lanes are needed but the curbs are an ovekill. Separate bike lanes painted green work in so many communities. .

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• Penticton could be more inclusive of people from diverse background, lgbtq+ people, people of colour, etc.

• safety walking around the community and enjoying public spaces including washrooms, drug use and behaviours associated with it. Housing for various socio-economic groups and infrastructure for a growing and changing city and environment (use of more elect

• Crime and drug use, homeless population, affordable housing

• Creating a more active and sustainable community. Get people out of their cars and engaging with each other and local small businesses. If there are more people out walking and living in shared public spaces downtown etc. it will begin to feel safer.

• Keeping it a safe place to live

• Protect agricultural land, reduce crime

• Stricter monitoring of by-law adherence of developers, mature tree protection, secure public green space/park areas in the city core and lakeshores, increase funding to parks dept for maintenance of healthy mature trees, succession plans and new growth

• Infrastructure, affordable housing

• Homeless folks, drugs, Crime.

• The revolving door for repeat offending criminals is my main concern. The homeless population is important also.

• Vision for this community needs to be more clearly communicated. City still feels like it is for elderly - need to expand college/educational/ well paying jobs to attract younger people. Need 2 plan for loss of tourism due to smoke/focus on 4 seasons.

• Homelessness and theft and open drug use - all go hand in hand.

• Why so many homeless and drug addicts/ mental illness people coming here? It seems more arrive every month. It is making the city unsafe and for tourists I am sure less appealing. Crime is nuts.

• Lack of doctors

• Drug abuse openly in our streets and parks.

• Family friendly affordable ho using that matches the mediun wage in this city. We cant grow this city if we don't make I appealing to families. School enrolment is down...

• crime and homeless

• This Council is getting better at listening to the people by asking their opinions.

• Affordable housing!!! Rent caps and dealing with the severe homeless issue

• I think the leaders are going to need to start thinking about water availability. The hundreds of new buildings going up - 2-3 Bathrooms, the odd pool, or has someone decided that global warming will not affect us? can't even believe that 700 more home.

• Access to medical services

• My earlier survey submission cut off here so this is where I will pick back up. City funded programs need a massive boost in spending to achieve goals. Set prioritieshousing/addiction/policing/educ & get more money - raise taxes/gov't funds/other

• Dealing with the ongoing housing crisis (lack of affordable housing, and dealing with unhoused individuals)

• Safety.....dealing with homelessness and addiction issues

• Safety. I will not longer go downtown at night. This seems to be a problem in all cities now.

• Homeless having run of city . When I see fire department hiring more fire fighters and their largest task is dealing with drug overdoses. When you see anywhere from 3-10 first responders attending a drug overdoses then you know we have a problem.

• Drug use, homelessness and safety

• Homelessness. I’d like the streets to be safer for my kids. Right now they don’t always feel safe walking around.

• Homelessness and the drug problem

• Mental health and drugs

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• Persistence of city in implementing unnecessary bike lane "improvements"?????

• Climate change resiliency

• homelessness. For all people.

• Consultation with the public as to what is a priority. Housing and employment opportunities for the younger generation.

• Affordable housing

• Homelessness

• Homelessness

• We have to stop thinking we can become a metropolis - we are stuck between two mountains.

• housing options

• Policing. Homelessness. Theft. Safety.

• pe

• Drug zombies, mental health, homelessness and rampant crime.

• They are already doing what they can about the housing and the homless..

• Crime

• The homeless. Theft

• Affordable housing is key to having a youthful vibrant population. I don't think that vacation rentals fuelled by speculative home ownership are helping this.

• Mayor & council should hold referendums on important issues like bike lanes. That turned out to be a fiasco.

• Lack of affordable housing, lack of realistic/ accessible treatment options for people with addiction. Need programs to help get people off the street and on the road to some form of better life afterwards.

• Homelessness and drug use that essentially lead to petty crime and theft.

• Improved street level design and housing options to reduce the visible homeless.

• Housing affordability and increased number of units. It's hard for a Developer to build something here and City Council just wants to shoot things down- ie. Spiller Road & Green Ave.

• Affordability

• Recognize that a growing number of the street community are not capable for caring for themselves and are a danger to themselves and the public. Too much of our Ambulance/Fire service dedicated to dealing with overdoses.

• Crime and safety

• Recreational and leisure amenities, as well as affordable housing for the most vulnerable.

• The rise in homelessness and how the homeless are treated. When I see bylaw officers taking taking their possessions and disposing of them can only lead to more theft.

• Safety which then means homelessness and supportive services and housing needs to be addressed. Social development is key!!

• The fact that we pay big bucks to live here and we feel unsafe everywhere . drugs, theft and homeless at every turn

• expanding & protecting green spaces; low income/affordable housing; the homeless; preserving heritage

• Crime, from petty to serious charges.

• Homelessness reflects the core values of a society

• Homeless/drug addicted community and increase numbers for emergency services

• Speed up building of affordable housing. Get rid of red tape. Lake safety. I’m worried about muscle invasion. Also sharing the lake between boats and paddlers. Safety around the marina. Boaters harassing paddlers. Supports for homeless, mental health.

• Cleaning up the Main Street it is looking unkempt. We are a small town promoting tourism the main thoroughfare needs work not just downtown.

• Consistent, coordinated development planning. Penticton seems to be run on the whims of the moment and, as a result, some residential areas resemble pizzas. Focus on input from residents.

• Crime, affordable housing (including rentals)

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• More tree's and shade structures as well as making sure the mall is a shopping destination

• safety

• Homelessness.

• More housing

• rental housing at fair market price - enough high end condos until housing issues resolved somehow

• Sustainable food security

• Policing, reducing crime and homelessness

• A proper growth strategy that protects what we have and adds new affordable housing and mental health and drug recovery.

• homelessness, pay parking on main street - not very kind to seniors. I don't go downtone any more

• Theft

• issues around drugs, mental illness and crime

• Create stable housing and support for the homeless and at-risk.

• Get the prolific offenders moved out of the City. Use bylaws to ban wet houses/sites and clean up the City core.

• Safety!!! Enabling drug addicts is NOT a solution. Concentrate on creating affordable housing for families and not supplying drug houses.

• The homeless/transient struggle facing our community. Something needs to be done.

• Open drug use and homelessness

• Poverty, homelessness. meet housing and food needs for everyone. Back to the basics. Also improve healthcare

• Over expansion/development of the city. Doesn't seem sustainable with the way some of the roads have been built. I don't like to bike because there are not a lot of places to lock a bike, and I worry it will get stolen.

• too many apartments are being converted to condos. Too many incidents of needles, and tubes and whatever other item is used for doing drugs laying around the streets, Streets are unsafe after dark.

• We need to “clean up” our streets and make them approachable for the general public again.

• Crime. So much vandalism, property damage and graffitti.

• Slow population density or spread housing communities farther out where possible, improve traffic flow on roadways. The bike lanes are a real sore spot for me. I'm a avid biker; the painted bike lanes already in place were enough.

• The drug addicts and mental health people need to be helped. No wet houses!

• Homelessness and vagrancy

• lack of doctors

• Truth and Reconciliation

• Crime, homelessnes

• Over densification is not sustainable

• Public drug users / homelessness / petty theft, which are all tied together in general High Cost of Living with no hope for a better future.

• safety, cost of living

• Crime. The revolving door of "justice"

• Homelessness

• Crime, Homeless and Affordability

• Street people

• Lack of housing options (rentals and ownership) for lowerincome workers up to middle-class workers, especially those in essential services like health care and education. Second is community safety and cleanliness. Eg: Main and Industrial

• Affordable housing for families and single seniors on fixed income.

• Cost of living, employment opportunities and public safety

• Caring for all citizens and listening to all views. Listening to the input and comments of the citizens and sharing information the city has that has informed their agenda.

• Safety

• crime and homeless people and rethink the bike lanes on soutn main

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• crime and open drug use.

• Clean up downtown and the areas (such as the old super 8)

• Access to good paying jobs and affordability of everything

• Public transportation

• Homelessness, lack of affordable housing, lack of primary healthcare providers. All these issues need to be addressed.

• Beautification of the city, new parks and greenspace updates, rid the city of drug users and homeless. get oyur cit

• challenges with housing.

• Improving Arts and culture opportunities and affordability

• high cost of housing/living & lack of well paying ft jobs

• Parking

• Mental Health

• Loss of our history through City neglect. Things like the loss of the grants to Art Gallery make this a no fun city. Council and staff attitude to culture quite negative. EG: The Art Gallery was not included in Section 6!!

• AFFORDABLE HOUSING. If housing is not affordable for young people and families then it makes its difficult to keep the population and stores open.

• FIXING THE BIKELANE ON MARTIN ST. INSTEAD OF FOCASSING ON SOUTH MAIN MARKET. Its a sslap in the face of everyone elses suffering from the causes of the bike lane

• Homeless and crime

• Housing

• Safety. Penticton is not safe for the citizens. Our belongings are not safe, children not safe, there is no where left that you can without having encounters with the thieves, drugs, and never ending violence.

• Crime, high housing prices, fiscal responsibility

• Safety, affordable housing, the homelessness and criminals. And of course the crazy implementation of the bike lanes, I am not against the bike lanes. I just think the implementation of it is bizarre to say the least.

• Addiction,thieving,affordable housing for Working people.

• Middle income employment and housing

• Freedom. Municipal government overreach colllecting property tax and barring tax payers from tax funded venues enforcing unlawful mandates. You are liable. Refund taxes paid to all citizens whom you infringred on their rights against.

• Safety from street people

• The huge gap between those who have the finances for a "normal" life and those who find no way to even get on the bottom rung of upward mobility to the current definition of the good life.

• Stop the spending on the bike lanes first off then tackle the homeless with the left over money, be smart with our money.

• Approve housing developments

• Safety for the taxpayers. My grandson who grew up in Penticton fells safer walking in downtown Vancouver at night then he does in Penticton

• Low income housing

• Homeless louts and drug addicted zombies.

• Homeless and drug use

• Council and staff not listening to the majority of tax payers

• Homelessness and drug taking

• Climate change - future droughts/water shortages, flooding, fires coming precariously close to city limits, population growth exceeding available resources like water

• The average worker cannot afford food and housing with their wage even if they work 40 hours a week. This includes businesses run by current councilors (Ryan Graham). City is unaffordable except for those with wealth and have undue influence on politics

• Crime

• Lack of policing

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8. Please feel free to explain any of your ratings on the City’s services.

• More pickleball courts are required. There is no other part facility that gets as much use as the Robinson Park Pickleball courts. There are lineups every day to play. We need more courts.

• Bike lanes are a fiasco. Recycling needs to be mandatory for everyone not just residents

• I hope the city decides to finish the lake to lake bike route with proper barriers. More people will cycle when it is safe to do so.

• Everything with a 1 should be addressed now

• moving services online is great if it would save taxpayers money

• In order to do more with less we need to embrace technology but Penticton is a community afraid of change (likely due to our large elderly population). We can't continue to have the few hold back progress.

• mismatch bewteen develoments that are proposed and actual building permits.

• I feel too much emphasis has been put on the bike lanes while other improvements are being forgotten. Bike lanes don't need to be as elaborate as they are... but what's there is there so leave it; just don't crowd South Main with barriers etc.

• Transit improvements should be added alongside planningadding more doors, increase frequency on major routes to encourage people to transition from their vehicles (Bus 5 every 15 mins M-F); OCP lays out Indigenous targets - slow to action

• Scale used for question 7 doens't make sense. You asked to rate "satisfaction" but then indicated '1' as "not important at all". I rated them as 1 being "not satisfied at all"... the responses you are going to get are going to be uninterpretable.

• There's no actual long term plan. Each mayor/council has their own agenda and they just redo planning phases. There's no action that reflects a true long term strategic plan--everyone just wants to get voted in again.

• Compared to many places in the world our public transportation is minimal.

• Parks and sports fields are two very different things. we need more natural parks. Communication is not strong.. environmental issues, other than climate change, are apparently not considered as worthy of a separate category, effectiveness is unclear

• Too many events, too much focusing on dumb perceived social issues instead of real ones.

• Penticton used to be clean, now too many homeless encampments, public drug use, too many drug overdoses

• Penticton needs some major upgrades and having Amelia Boultbee on city council is miserable. She has consistently been promoting her Kelowna firm over Penticton businesses on social networking websites.

• Bogners teardown - there are so many empty buildings downtown - why rip it down to build another realtor office? Should have been a community hub (e.g. corner store, bike repair, etc.). Land use makes zero sense.

• I think that the city provides great support to all of the events that we have here, which are many. I also think that we could provide more help for the homeless by housing and professional care, such as the "Institutions" we have closed down.

• I think the bike lanes, especially downtown are ugly and dangerous. bike lanes are OK, but all the extra signage, posets, and loops are silly and must make truck ability for deliveries etc. difficult. On Duncan the bike lanes West of Main are confusing,

• Moving services online will only make it more difficult for those who need it to reach it if you get rid of the other previously existing access to the services. If it’s just done to add to the services then it seems ok. Transit is still a major issue

• bike lanes are a good idea but we already need more roads Goverment street was a great road to use for locals... have you tried to use it now during rush hours or school time. and some of you wants to get more and more houses on the hills ...

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SECTION 2 – CITY SERVICES

• The City could improve sustainable development, treatment of historic sites, caring about arts and culture, treatment of the natural environment, the ancient water system, increasing recycling options, etc.

• It would be nice to have better options for active recreation in the City, there are not a lot of tracks/paths for people of all abilities.

• We don't need any more costly bike lanes - painted lines is sufficient. City does not seem to address the on-going littering of vagrants coming to the city or the use of drugs on the streets.

• Glass recycling pickup would be nice a few times per year. Glass is quite heavy and cumbersome to take to recycling depots. I also see many businesses thow away glass as recycling is a hassle

• Bike lanes should not be included with sidewalks and more attention should be paid to preserving historywd

• tough to attract tourists when motels cost $250 a night, no apparent success in making streets safe and clean

• Does bylaw actually do anything other than babysit those experiencing homelessness? There is so much garbage in the creeks, people with shit piled 8' high in their yards, stupid noise violations, dogs and cats off leash at dog parks. Not enough wordspace

• Bylaw needs to stay alert to dogs on the public beach.

• Cannot comment on the museum as I haven’t been there yet

• We have very poor water on the West Bench and I think Penticton should be more proactive creating a lucrative film business

• Our parks always look wonderful. The street cleaning isn't great. We've had rock debris on our street since last fall and no street cleaning. Our Benches downtown need to be power washed more often.

• All self explanatory.

• So many sidewalks and particularly crosswalks (including recent builds) are not accessible especially for those using power

mobility. Many crossing buttons are unreachable, access are difficult/unsafe. Bike lanes should never take away street parking

• We need compost pick up. No options for garbarator, Putting compost outside, just attracts rats. Support the art gallery!

• Cycle infrastructure is moving in the right direction but could be much more joined up

• The city needs to pay more attention to climate action and less attention to the bike lanes. I loved the latest art installations, it's a shame they were vandalized

• The preservation/maintenance of the city treasured parks and beaches appears to be good . The lake to lake bike route good. Is a great asset to the city. I look forward to its completion. It is visionary. More routes are warranted.

• Attracting tourists will boost the funds to penticton, however, when that is the only focus, locals suffer. Keeping penticton clean and helping the people that live here will improve the quality of living. Penticton is growing too fast to keep up with.

• Social issues of drug abuse are poorly managed. Stop encouraging drug use and start teaching our youth the detrimental effects of drug abuse. Bring back the idea that “drugs are bad” and help save our youth and future adult population.

• There is no concrete community plan to deal with the increasing homeless people moving to Penticton. There seems to be a lack of any plan to rehabilitate people with addictions and prevent the problem from getting more widespread.

• Recreation services: more needs to be done to increase availability of swimming lessons for children. We live on two lakes and staffing for the aquatic centre should be a priority.

• The city does not focus enough on bringing events to town that are good for all ages. There is also not a lot of activities for small children. There has been no effort made to upgrade important things such as public beach bathrooms in busy tourist areas.

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• Seems the only thing this city is interested is bike lanes which are sort of a waste as it isn't safe to take a bike out of your home without it being stolen.

• Need more budget for policing and bylaw

• I would like to be able to pay the City online (eg dog license) without fees.

• Fix the sidewalks and roads. Potholes and road surfaces are terrible. Get rid o& the bike lanes. These have created such a bottleneck and hazard. Just look at Duncan Ave between Main St and Fairview. Very poor design. Designers were not thinking!

• Don't combine bike lanes with sidewalks! They're 2 totally different topics! Bike lanes SHOULDN'T have gone through downtown! When community engagement says don't do something & the City goes ahead & does it anyway, why would people engage again?

• Communications could be more prompt - I often find out about events AFTER the event.

• Need more kids programs, lessons, sports on different days/times. More fun family activities. Need better snow removal in winter.

• Water, sewer and garbage services provided by the City are exceptional. Many of the others do not impact me. Sometimes there is too many requests for public engagement that people get worn out and complacent.

• Too much money being spent on By Law Enforcement and policing should be one not both. Petty offenders taking up too much resources without tangible results. Root causes need to be addressed not all the City responsibility. Too much emphasis on consultants

• I think the City gets a bad reputation for things that are outside of their control, for instance the messes left by the people living with addictions. I think they do the best they can addressing the currents social issues.

• The city staff do a great job. Need strong political support for our homeless and related drug and criminal incidents. Bylaws

must be adhered to including dogs off leash in parks and homeless encampments.

• On-line services are not very accessible for screen reading software used by blind users.

• The reason I stated that I'm not happy about bike lanes and sidewalks is because of connectivity issues. More connectivity will mean that it's more accessible to use.

• There is a need to connect the KVR trail at the south end of Penticton past the airport. Currently dangerous bike travel along the highway to get from channel bike path to Skaha lake potion of KVR trail. Poor use of public funds to build the 2nd phase bik

• Crime impacts many areas - facilities are damaged, parks are not safe, emergency services are focused on drug usage while other issues do not get as much attention. The city does a good job although the root cause of the problems is not addressed.

• City is currently too car dependent, changing this should be the main infrastructure focus

• Prioritize mental health & homelessness. It is a disgrace. Allowing Bogners to be torn down was a significant irreversible loss to Penticton. Not reverting it back to residental/maintaining areas character in the new developement disappointed resident

• Way too much money and attention on bike lanes, arbitrary rubber stamping of arts grants, delay in communicating arts grants hugely impacted organization's ability to plan, issue with the Art Gallery grant was a very bad look

• Flip flop on budget and spending is frustrating. Clear planning needs to be addressed in the future.

• We need more dedicated parks and off-leash dog areas. Need more focus on affordable housing. Happy to see Ironman back. We need more economy diversity than tourism, i'd love to see more consulting (engineering, design, etc) offices here.

• I strongly support safe bike routes in the city. The currently completed design is overly complex, dangerous and expensive. In addition, please work with RDOS to fill potholes on eastside road that have remained for years.

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• Need to balance arts and culture with sports budget

• Running stop signs in the industrial park. Not safe lock bikes up downtown. People speeding excessively. Enormously loud vehicles. Homeless and drug issue. What does bylaw and police actually do? Dog parks suck. Crazy tax

• I think you put too much time/money into tourists and forget about the safety of the people that pay the taxes and keep the community alive the other 9 months. Focus on crime, safety, homelessness. My kids can’t even walk to school safely.

• I would like by-law 24/7. City not clean looking garbage / camps/ graffiti.

• City is fighting a losing battle with the unhoused/drug situation. I don't feel safe walking around this city at night, and emergency services budgets (especially FD) have become majorly inflated trying to combat it.

• The city has a proclivity to waist money on infrastructure that is useless to the majority of city residents. The city also has started to waist money on socially woke nonsense that has no business in municipal politics.

• City is being overrun with a crimanal element and no longer safe.

• This town has become a town for tourists only. The livability for residents is terrible.

• The focus on policing and bylaw enforcement is a very archaic approach to complex social issues people are facing in the community. The obsession with "crime"creates a wider rift in the community, and only addresses a symptom of a broader social issue.

• Why is it necessary for two by-laws officers to drive around the community? Safety? I don't think so.

• We need more sidewalks in already established neighbourhoods where traffic is increasing. The current sidewalk plan needs to consider updating as new developments are permitted. You cannot stick with a 25 year plan and not update as housing changes before

• I think more funding should go into our cultural institutions to provided more programming and opportunities to engage the community. Also, continue to build cycling and active transport network throuhout the city.

• Please continue to support the Peachfest to keep it free to all, Please increase support to the performing and visual arts events in our city. particularly Ignite the Arts

• I'm not happy about the city forcing bike lanes in places where the existing roadways work very well for both cars and bikes. Note: I am a cyclist.

• The city has taken away all fun for small children and families. The water parks here are in dire need of repair

• A lot of focus on making life nice for tourists but not much put into services for year round residents. We don’t need a bike lane. We need drug and mental health services, childcare, rentals, etc.

• Sidewalk and bike lanes are 2different topics the bike lanes are here period. The sidewalks need widening, leveling and ramp upgrades snow/ice removal has been historically AWFUL. Child stroller and wheel chair use is virtually impossible on city sidewalk

• Need to preserve more historic places and old houses

• I like the recent increase in communication and resident input. Be careful with that because people are mostly looking out for themselves, not the community. Garbage program and dump are very good as is yard waste. Recycling is weak.

• The amount spent on bike lanes was outrageous. It would have been sufficient to paint the lane, use rumble strips and use bumpers at the corners. There are too many signs and extra nonsense that clutter the streets and confuse drivers.

• City planning and growth management: It seems as if the city is getting too crowded. According to Global News, we have the lowest water/per person ratio in Canada, is that being taken into consideration where growth is concerned?

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• I'm afraid I can only make a generalized statement which is to say I believe the Mayor and council do not represent the desires of the majority of residents.

• I do not know how well the city is doing in all of these area

• n/a

• Need much more public transit, especially earlier & later for shift workers!!!

• Our streets are pretty dirty for June. Did the street cleaner break down?

• Horrible job. Wasting money on bike lanes. Theft is unreal. Council don’t care. Mayor don’t care. All you care about is your pay cheque and your benefits. You guys are the most selfish people

• Too many variances allowed to developers. No long term plans. Too many developers allowed to build instead of saying no.

• The city attracts plenty of people in the summer months. Infrastructure and budgeting should be around the people who live here.

• Penticton's Parks and Sports fields are seriously lacking compared to Kelowna or Vernon. We're the only City without a Turf field. I don't know why the Irrigation was redone in Kings Park- put the money towards Turf, less maintenance and water longterm

• I am an avid cyclist. The south main bike lane is fine as it is. Reallocate those funds to a place where they’re needed. The $10 million South Main project was delivered days after budget presentation. Poor communications

• I feel the bike lanes were very expensive for what they are. I think we should have residential composting pickup available. There needs to be better balance for dealing with social issues and impacting taxpayers

• The city is small which makes having more bus routes or more stops, but it really shouldn't take an hour to go from the hospital to Skaha. Historic sites also seem to have no value , especially allowing Bogners to be demolished for Remax.

• more could be done to protect heritage buildings & expand green spaces; improve traffic flow downtown or create pedestrian zone

• Historic places-we don't have that many. Snow removal- we need to be better with sidewalks, go after non compliers.

• Need an increase in emergency services given the amount of calls they receive for medicals especially surrounding the homeless population

• They’re all important, we have to pay taxes to support these services, some aren’t glamorous, they can always be improved but they are pretty good. We are fortunate to live here.

• New to area

• More work needs to be done to prevent crime and homeless. The city also needs to fight for more flights into the penticton airport.

• I support expanding bike lanes throughout the city

• Clean up the drug use and theft. Add more police. The bike lanes are the most divisive issue I can remember and perhaps should have been scuttled long ago or moved off commercial streets.

• The leasdership has dropped the ball on so many services over the last decade. The bike lanes, which I fully support, could have been designed and routed much much better

• I'm not sure of the whole story with the building that housed Granny Bogners, but more of an effort should be made to preserve historic buildings in the city, if at all possible.

• We have family that used to come for two weeks every summer. They say there is a loss of camping, less here now for the kids and they no longer feel safe. They did not feel safe walking from the Lakeside Resort to the Cannery at night. They prefer Osoyoos

• better road maintenance and cleaning in city needed. make sure city infrastructure keeps up with growth. roads, schoolshospital and other services are limited. careful planning is crucial without big tax increases

• There are people that want to deal directly with a person, not an online robot or a machine offering selections of departments.

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There is too much emphasis on doing everything online. You still require a place of business where there is walk in traffic.

• Bike lanes are too wide and make driving dangerous in Atkinson Street particularly difficult. Busses in Penticton seem too large and run virtually empty much of the time. Surely smaller more economical busses would be adequate.

• city could do better at ensuring development fits in neighbkurhood what about more parks?

• Would like to see more opportunities for residents to participate in indigenous learning

• Public transit needs to massively improve; it takes almost as much time to go from my home to work by bus that it does to walk, and I live in town. Thankfully I can bike in the non-snowy months.

• I would like to see the river channel walk/ bike route and a walkway improved and extending to Writes campsite along airport beach

• Overall, city services are above average. Unfortunately, issues (and funding) that should be taken care of by the province are being downloaded onto municipalities.

• The city dismissed the Museum /heritage advisory committee and has ignored the several neigbourhood community charm projects. Bylaw is not doing its' job . For instance I go to the beach four to five times a week and will always see dogs in the water...nd

• I wonder if there is an employee looking through the catelogues citys can order from and decides some things would be nice, can have ballustrades, bike lane protetors, hanging lights, without testing the waters.

• some of the road changes and certainly the bike lane dividers need to be reconsidered

• crime and vagrancy aside, a good place.

• Composting seems not important for the city, this is a black mark for Penticton

• there needs to be an increase in keeping the streets clean, more sporting events (slow pitch tournaments). the more money spent during the tourist season the better our community is.

• fix the bikelane

• My taxes keep going up yet the services are going down. The bike lane is a complete waste of money, hiring more police and fire, bylaw and more city management is not solving the issues.

• Bike lanes I think goes back to my answer above EXTREMELY poor implementation a council that isn’t listening to the citizens. That is also why I roommate rated communications and engagement. Lol.

• The addicts and the mess they make is out of control and tax paying citizen’s don’t feel safe.

• Stop forcing diversity issues from your municipality level. These groups are grooming children with sexualization too young.

• Overall my ratings would be better but I really would like all effort to be making our city safe so getting rid of street people is top priority

• [sections 6 and 7 above are redundant.....annoying to be asked the questions a second time]

• Stop wasting money on bike lanes and start green lighting housing developments

• The balance is about right but it does seem that a vocal MINORITY seem to have influenced the council in some of their decisions

• Bylaw look like paramilitary with fake flak jackets, I dont think this is said often but demilitarize our bylaw (also they push false policing theories like broken windows policies etc. to pad their budget they raise fear)

• Finish the lake to lake bike lane please.

• Bike lanes need to be sepated. Painted lanes are dangerous

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11. What other suggestions do you have to fund the City needs?

• We should look at revenue streams which capitalize the influx of tourists during the summer months (ie. higher airBnB fees, higher hotel tax, paid parking during summer months only, destination tax, etc).

• More accesible childcare and affordable coworking

• Put a hold on bike lake expansion along South Main

• STOP Building "wet" houses. Provide services to the people wanting to get clean instead. Maybe that would reduce the open drug use on our streets. Provide services that reduce drug use; not promote it. 2. Don't put expensive barriers on bike lanes

• Review City contracts and contributions to sports events - these have economic benefit but not for the benefit of all residents.

• I think the city needs to encourage the building of higher density housing, particularly in the downtown core, to create more affodable housing options and to revitalize the downtown area, add more vibracy to the downtown to help support local businesses.

• Bring in industry...need to create jobs that actually pay a living wage...not working at WalMart or cleaning rooms in a hotel. Year round, living wages combined with housing options for those making under 50k year

• user pay, deal with repeat offenders effectively, use volunteers effectively, create partnerships

• Tourist home tax + retirement tax. If it's hard to do, Increase tax for everyone, and give tax break for those who work full time in Penticton. Support those who support the city, not the leeches.

• Mayor & council should listen to tax payers & learn to respect them as much as they respect the drug addicts & dealers

• Cut city salaries

• if developers are building, there should be incentives to build for the missing middle and also for people to work here. Read an article about City of Vernon working w/ developer to build housing for health professionals

• ? a bigger cut from concerts etc at SOEC, stop spending on unnecessary bike lanes that detract from beauty of area and complicate driving.

• Create multi use zoning (residential and commercial) to allow for business (your most profitable taxpayers) to have built in markets to sell their products to as people will only have to walk outside to get something they want instead of driving.

• I believe this is good as it is...getting bigger wont solve the funds as their will be more costs to be added for the infrastructure , repairs and maintenance... more tourist will come this way if parks, beaches, BMX trails and maybe another golf course

• there are many great minds out there researching "outside the box ideas" would be a good start, your always charging taxpayers more without looking for alternative ways example, in Africa they built a children's roundabout which pumped water

• Stop stupid spending on useless bike lanes

• Utilize empty spaces within current growth area for supporting citizens' services and needs. Building more financially inaccessible market housing outside the current area does not provide incentive for businesses or workers to increase the tax base.

• More provincial/federal funding to help deal with out municipal tax dollars going towards the homeless.

• registration or tolls for bike lane users

• have council spend less on poor value projects

• Maybe a third party audit of city employees, particularly city yards and city planning. Too many people seem to be "vital" to perform the same task.

• I understand we have a significant surplus. What is the short term and long term strategy to best utilize the cash surplus

• Don’t waste the money you have

• Encourage filming. Look for more Corporate involvement

• none

• Work on increasing tourism in the off seasons by creating more amenities for the harsh long okanagan winters.

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• Treat bylaw as an income source, write more tickets and spend less time being social workers.

• Increase taxes on businesses - if possible taxing non-local large businesses at a higher rate to local or small enterprises.

• Properly address the air bnb issue and tax.them the same way hotels are taxed.

• Close tax loopholes for businesses. Tax undeveloped land in the city more heavily. This discourages sprawl and speculation.

• Locals should have to register to have certain perks to living here during tourism season, the increase rates for tourists however possible

• Increase pay parking costs

• Big Sports complex with rinks indoor track, indoor basketball courts elect across from the hospital.

• Spend funds in a wiser manner and not waste them on frivolous projects.

• Encourage ways for more revenue to be generate by residents that has minimal taxes but increases tax base

• Heavily tax big box stores and grocery stores that are raking in huge profits. Collect energy from the water flowing through the channel to increase your margins on electricity.

• Use free enterprise and corporates investment in manufacturing, such as solar and wind. Better economic development to encourage more businesses, expand the tax base, develop a plan for more private economic investment, improved economic diversification.

• Quit funding hike lanes that impede traffic

• Start taxing vacation rentals more heavily. Apply for project specific grants.

• perhaps have a police force that is not RCMP ? do we get value from the money spent on RCMP or could be get better policing with our own City Police?

• Penticton library should join okanagan public libabry?

• Stop spending on unnecessary things.

• Bulldoze that condemned brick building beside the Okanagan Lake tennis courts and implement the same type of restaurant agreement deal as we did with the new restaurant at the Skaha Lake marina. It's a waste of our infrastructure as it currently sits...

• Quit wasting money on useless bike lanes

• Reallocate budgets to more important services. For example bike lane costs to hire more police

• Impose higher fees to outside companies coming in to build large structures of high end housing.

• Reduce some city staff wages. Increase fees to pass on to usersthere was no choice “6” . Fix your survey

• Encourage business growth, advertise outside of BC to bring new businesses to Penticton, support downtown businesses & bring in more by reducing taxes, rent incentives (work with owners). Don't add low rental housing which encourages social problems!

• Expand programs to encourage winter tourism! Fire & Ice Festival w/ beach bonfires in winter, ice sculpting, hot chocolate, music, etc., winter snow hiking/skiing events, "Hygge Festival" this will all help tourist-based businesses survive winter

• Implement user pay. Residents of RDOS reap the benefit of amenities paid for by Penticton tax payers. They should pay their share.

• Apply common sense, stop, hiring consultants, realize we are a small city, not a metropolitan area, cut our coat, according to our Kloss rather them putting grandiose under required plans in place

• Densification rather than expanding into new areas. This will help maintain/ upgrade existing infrastructure and won't add maintenance burden from the installation of new infrastructure in new developments. SAY NO TO SPILLER RD DEVELOPMENT

• Corporate sponsorship, Public education to reduce costs - such as the recycling program - what else can citizens do to help. Focus on increasing costs - to a degree - for non-residents - Air BnB owners, tourists, there are so many rental property owners

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• Reduce bylaw enforcement department

• Public and Private partnership

• Better enforcement of vacation rentals = more business licenses. Make developers bringing in $1M+ homes pay more than affordable housing. More affordable housing = more working families that are paying taxes and contributing to the community.

• It's extremely odd to me that of the six suggested actions, not one of them includes better matching a service to the demand. Improve quality to decrease cost seems to be a foreign idea. Why?

• project-specific grants, appropriate private -public partnerships, redistribution of funds between expenses

• Increase taxes a bit per year

• Cut city jobs, halve bylaw, get rid of "community safety officers"

• Move to online services and close city hall. Or open two days a week. Any other places like that. People could work from home the other days. Cuts costs and fees.

• Events

• Cut staff. Fire as many people/middle management as possible at city hall and public works outside of core services. Fire, Police, ByLaw, Roads, Electrical and Plumbing trades people are exempt. We need less management, bureaucracy and committees

• Paid parking on beachs

• Cut rcmp budget and bylaw, you will save a lot of money employing SOCIAL WORKERS to deal with SOCIAL ISSUES . You might even qualify for grants if you embrace well researched progressive approaches like Housing First.

• Actively seek out businesses from other communities to relocate here. More businesses a larger population creates a larger tax income.

• encouraging more business development, maybe easier access to permits?

• Charge non primary residence (air bnb) more tax. Crack down on unregulated air bnbs.

• Increase efficiency

• Lessen the number of paid positions in the city staff administration departments

• Densification of downtown core, paid secure parkades for people working downtown (if Vancouver can do it, you can too), reduce or eliminate vanity projects, address maintenance and infrastructure needs first, more efficient use of staff and vehicles

• Stop spending money on special interest wish lists, ie. the bike lanes.

• Make sure developers are paying their fair share.

• some of the options for answers in Q10 were grayed out? also you switched the scale from start of survey in q 10? this will skew results.

• Listen to the community and cut back frivolous spending in other areas that don't matter to the community

• Clamp down on Airbnb. SO many unregistered airbnbs in this town. MANY are operating without paying taxes for seasonal rentals. It’s destroying residential neighborhoods and rental availability.

• Fundraisers

• Section 10 here is not working properly

• Look for alternative sources. There are a variety of home lottery charities out there. This is one potential source however I find it shameful that critical functions (hospitals/fire/rescue/etc) need this type of funding instead of adequate base funding.

• Core services review, seek new partnerships to build new facilities and/or share in operational costs. Educate citizens on tax receipt on donations towards community projects

• Growth costs more money than it brings in. You will need to upgrade services, roadways, sanitation systems, etc. Boom time growth is not a good thing for the quality of life in a small city.

• Look at all your departments and make sure you are getting bang for your buck . This needs to be done with independent audit.

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• Obtain more money from the Provincial and Federal Governments, we pay enough in Taxes. There is a lot of Government waste. Cut non essentials.

• Quit wasting money on bike lanes.

• the city needs to be able to suppor the population currently so that people can actually afford to live here and pay taxes

• Tax empty homes VRBO type properties

• Encourage on-line business; organic farming; more outdoororiented vacation options

• Density in the downtown core.

• Have all cyclists pay for bike licence as dog owners have to. This would help offset the costs of maintaining the bike lanes.

• The city gets enough funds as it is. You just need to learn how not to waste it

• Have local police to enforce traffic laws. Less high paid R.C.M.P. There is no evidence they are effective.

• Make better use of the money the city has. The bike lane has to be one of the worst financial decisions this city has made in quite a few years. I understand the need to promote healthy living but infrastructure make driving more challenging

• Create a city owned but arm's length development authority to assemble land for redevelopment, and joint venture with private investors to develop it with high standards of urban design and architecture.

• Taxes increased by 10% last year, plus assessments went up 2030%. The City should have a huge surplus, no?

• Can any of these services be privatized? Can fundraising or municipal bonds be used? Focus more on highest priorities and delay pet-projects or "nice-to-haves"

• The City needs to take care of existing services before trying to add more. When adding more services there has to be a discussion of what will be deleted.

• More grant writing. Partner with service groups for community upgrades. I am with Kiwanis and we never received any

communication to ask us to help fund the Kiwanis pier improvements!

• increase ratio of taxes paid by the most expensive homes

• Sell some of it's real estate- Library and museum plus some fo the 15+ homes they own.

• Yearly raffle similar to The Hero’s Lottery, for funding towards affordable housing options, and housing for those at risk

• Tax home owners who don’t live here and refuse to rent their property. It’s a no brainer.

• Increase housing density in the city core for more rental units to maintain current tax revenue without pricing all low incomes out of the valley with high taxes.

• I think our provincial PST should increase by .5 to 1% and that amount go to municipalities

• More housing development

• Build density in the Core where infrastructure and services exist.

• Increase taxes on luxury homes/vacation homes

• Sell property and encourage development

• Remove the exorbitant retirement packages and high paying executive positions that drain out taxpayers unnecessarily

• Use more common sense with how our tax dollars are spent

• more money for big building permits. not residential but commercial increase. Provincial government needs to give more money to municipalities.

• The City over the the course of time has made many a bad choice at the taxpayers expense. Skaha Lake for example. It seems to fall on the taxpayer when the City makes bad choices, but I hate to mention that the City members continue to get their raises

• Surrounding areas should help pay for services at a higher user rate than city tax payers

• Sell naming rights to the SOEC. Try to attract events and businesses that don't focus on wine, beer, or cycling/races

• impressed by citys success at getting grants

• more paid parking

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• Search for and apply for grants for projects already being done rather than starting new projects just to obtain an available grant.

• Stop the bikelane nonsense.

• Stop overpaying city employees so much and you'd have more funds

• Save money and Not change the bike lanes on south main street

• SILGA and UBCM need to push Province for more funding as many of our issues, like housing and mental health care fall under their purview.

• I could not fill in several of the above as the red circle with the red stripe through it would not let me select any number 1 thru 6 which is why I hate electronic questions etc

• Charge higher fees to those operating vacation rentals and ensure that all those operating vacation rentals are registered.

• sstop spending on stupid projects that only effect a few

• don't waste it on bike lanes! I can ride, but can't leave the bike anywhere (safe), so i need to drive.

• Look at keeping core programs and quit trying to do more. We have a limited tax base and we cannot do everything for everyone

• Are there any ways that the City could sustain or even enhance services through greater efficiencies?

• Reduce waste and inefficiency in city administration and services

• Tourism taxes - increase airb&b fees to city, hotel taxes, wine tour tax, etc

• stop wasting what money we already give (ie bike lanes)

• Less expenses for politicians

• Better acknowledgement of the Indigneous Community

• Federal and provincial grants

• Focus on the needs not the wants. When things are tight focus on what is necessary. Do not worry about extras. If I have $100 for food I buy the basics. I don’t throw in a Sirloin Steak. That’s a treat for when finances are better.

• Reduce overhead at city hall

• Stop crime and people will be willing to support a good city

• Attract more events/concerts

• Increase taxes on the wealthiest of homeowners. If they can afford mega homes with huge price tags, they can afford to part with additional money in taxes.

• Pay cuts across the board ,stop spending on the Bike lane

• Stop spending on the bike lane

• Consolidate departments, ensure municipal funding & efforts stay within their realm. Send a bill to the province for the ambulance services being downloaded to the Fire deparment

• Don't waste money like you did on the bike lanes

• Stop wasting money on vanity projects like the bike lines. In a town of 35,000 people, we have a bike lane which is used by say 200 people a day (probably a generous assessment, even less during the winter). How is that a good way to spend our taxes?

• Tax air bnbs and short term rentals. Implement a vacancy tax.

• Reduce bylaw services budget

• Monetary efficiency improvements. Better bang for our buck. How would costs the city incurs compare to a private organisation getting the same service?

• Look at what progressive cities are doing

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SECTION 3 – COUNCIL PRIORITIES

12. Please feel free to explain your ratings and offer any ideas or examples of how the City can improve in these four areas?

• Quit raising taxes for each council legacy. Dumb ideas.

• This city is no longer safe. Make it

• We seem to skew towards catering towards the retirees. This makes Penticton less appealing to younger people and families. This in turn will potentially cause issues (ie. workforce issues, declining economy, etc).

• The city needs to be densified rather than sprawling

• Offer more affordable housing and enurse people who ACTUALLY live in Pen have prioirty to buy houses

• Again... bikes lanes... they restrict access for emergency vehicles.

• Persistent inflation, increasing interest rates, supply and wage costs are challenging. The focus for City spending should be maintaining the status quo and focused on must-haves not niceto-haves, e.g. skate park lights, decorative lights, etc.

• Enough with the fear mongering "public safety" that got several of the current council members elected. Stop banking on fear to get into office and start doing some real work to improve things.

• I haven't seen any of the above, but I also can't say it doesn't exist.

• It doesn't seem like much progress has been made in these areas.

• Any development with multiple units should be almost automatically approved. Housing is such a crisis and the fact that condo building are being denied is disgraceful.

• No comment

• Stop promoting themselves personally online (Amelia) and start encouraging growth and business to stay in the community

• needles in parks; people feel helpless when they see so many unhoused struggling; city can seem dirty. Why are we building luxury developments (e.g. by Campbell Mtn) when so many people need help. previous council very antagonistic

• The community is very safe counter to what most people seem to think. The largest problems seem to come from how disconnected some of the groups in the city seem because you have to drive everywhere. Make it so people can live where they want to be.

• I just don't believe we are getting to the root problem of the safety issue. I think we need to put time/money/advocacy into that.

• carry on with the new buildings going on around town not on the hills keep them pristine as much as you can... the KVR, 3 blind mice, and so many more trails in the area that brings more tourists... one more golf course with some housing around

• We need additional focus on safety & security and less focus on supporting certain minority interest groups just to demonstrate 'wokeness'.

• Reducing crime starts with reducing the root causes of crime. Asking the RCMP and Bylaw people to 'move people along' simply moves the problem. Affordable housing increases the livability for everyone.

• i am not aware or informed of priorities and progess/sucess

• It would be nice to see if these plans have follow through and create change. They all sound like great ideas though.

• Perhaps they are making inroads but their achievements are not adequately communicated to the public. They need to communicate more either through the newspaper or through monthly town halls.

• Rent controlled housing/townhouses and subsidised housing for working locals. Not only spend money on Social Housing. Subsidies to support higher education for residents at Okanagan College, keep educated locals living and working locally.

• seems to be a consistent thread herein to spend, spend, spend...time for controlling spending and vanity projects

• Vibrancy and connectedness could probably take a back seat while we enter what looks like a recession.

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• Going over budget on things like a roundabout and forcing a bike lane when people clearly don’t want/ need it seems foolish

• Lots of wasted spending on crosswalks that aren’t accessible or unsafe for seniors (Duncan/Atkinson), removing parking for residents for a bike lane affects traffic flow, livability for people in townhouses in particular

• Nc

• Planning appears to take place however diverging from those plans appears to be too easy.

• Ban short term rentals and make it easier to convert empty nonresidential space into residential space.

• Use more private corporate investment and community input to improve design and excellence

• Safe, reduce crime- get people off the streets overnight. Provide barrier free options, and stages of supportive housing depending on needs.

• Include the public in major decisions that affect everyone

• Stop paying top dollar every single time to Ecora for, "yet another $50000 study"! Negotiate with outside entities for these over-priced studies! Ecora needs some real competition.

• This city needs to go back to being family friendly and more affordable instead of focusing on financially stable seniors. There is very little interest in families and young people, rents are too high for income and nothing for low income to afford.

• Listen to the people - we need more policing and affordable housing. Focus on the people who LIVE and WORK in Penticton, instead of tourists or visitors.

• This weekend I found drugs and drug paraphernalia in a school ground. A couple of times we drove past individuals who were doing drugs or under the influence of drugs. Non of this is OK!

• I don't see plans for growth in my day to day life. I don't see communications from the City on that topic. I don't know how the City is prepared for emergencies. The public doesn't know what's going on unless we volunteer to help in emergencies

• just put politics and differences aside and focus on human beings as human beings in need

• I'm not in favour of the Naramata housing development. Streets need to become safer.

• The City is spending too much money on cosmetic things like lighting for Lakeshore Drive and Skaha. Projects need to be prioritized to plan for the future. Not everyone can handle a 10% tax increase and this will cause residents to relocate to affordabl

• Not sure how anyone can give answers from any knowledge base to the above questions. They are not areas that they common residence of Penticton would have information about, unless they were very connected to what is happening politically, which is not a

• Feel the current council is rather new to Guage effectiveness at this time. There have been some questionable actions (supporting a single older citizen without much research into background research and thought on others in similar situation).

• Some of these appear to be provincial responsibilities - housing is coming along and safety is still an ongoing issue for many problems

• Pay parking downtown has devastated Main Street businesses

• Be more transparent before decisions are made

• I used to run early in the mornings and no longer feel comfortable doing that due to the number of homeless people.

• Please continue to expand on the bike/accessibility lanes! It takes time for people to develop habits where we will see high use, and I see it being valuable for safety, accessibility, sustainability, and quality of life in the long term. .

• I think it is important that the city doesn't forget that the unhoused are it's citizens too, often a lot of the "safer cities" work is centred around trying to deal with the unhoused. Those wrap around services are a much better plan.

• Organizational Excellence does not appear to be understood. Consider referring to "The Whitehall Effect: How Whitehall

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became the enemy of great public services and what we can do about it - John Seddon"

• Vibrant and Connected: I see the same community activities this year as other years. Not sure how this is being done.

• Have focus groups that understand what the city wishes to do and a Council that knows how to listen

• Why is it laggy to type on this website and no where else?

• You need more time

• Lots of these issues can't be fixed at the municipal level, but repeat offenders need to be better handled, property crime and theft is becoming demoralizing, and the drug crisis needs to come to an end somehow

• The city needs to be safe and on a sound financial footing. Social programs and subsidized living MUST the put aside until rise crime is checked and the city is able to fund programs without incurring debt. Rising inflation and borrowing costs must stop

• City council NEVER listens to the majority. Hardly anyone wanted bike lanes! We already had bike lanes that were sufficient.,

• Enough with the "Crime" fetish. Do some research and find best practices on how to address ROOT social issues and thereby save millions of dollars and LIVES

• Penticton is doing a good job but there's always room for improvement.

• Cancel the remaining bike lane project.

• I dont see the prove - where is the communication showing what you are doing in these 4 areas? comms needs to be visible, consistent & persistant.

• Co-oerative housing projects are typically more affordable for families and young people. The family MHP in penticton are disgraceful and uninviting. 55+ MHP have standards - lets create MHP for ALL ages

• So happy to hear the South Main Market is pleased with the new design on bike lanes, sidewalks,etc.

• We need to lower existing rent

• No need to put up million$ homes for the very wealthy. Hardly accessable housing. The mess created on Riverside Dr. is so obviously intended for vac. rental. Soon the views of lake & mtns. will be for whoever can afford to be on top floor or on Lakeshor

• The existence of a concerned citizens vigilante group indicates a poor performance in the city's handling of Safe and Resilient initiatives. There is a clear problem with petty crime tied to the homelessness and addition issues that never seems to improve

• Bike lanes and going green seems to be city’s main priority and crime ,drugs and homelessness is what is going to make or break our city like what is happening out in Vancouver. We need this addressed first before anything else.

• Completely opposed to large development being approved for Naramata Bench.

• The city doesn't consult the population enough, and when people disagree there is no represntation for that.

• How the funds were spent on the bike lane. The dressing up "waves" along the route was totally unnecessary, the parking pillars and repaving of Martin and Main and Westminister were also a waste of moeny.

• Until the addiction treatment needs of street-based people are addressed, Penticton will not be a good place for residents or tourists.

• Listen to the people of Penticton!

• Not worth my time

• Tooo much talk re: affordable housing. Affordable housing is 30% of income. Too many greedy landlords.

• These goals align with what I said in survey. Goals are great but the implementation/ execution of them is what matters.

• City would benefit from using expertise from outside the bureaucry. For example a design review panel of local architects. Or an arts council.

• Livable- Penticton would be a very hard place to move to currently- although not unique to the Okanagan.

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• The City should limit it’s involvement in housing to zoning. Our relationships with partners needs to move past being apologetic to one of building a better future for everyone.

• Action has started for the first 2 examples, it just needs to have time to grow. There is still much work to be done to have an inclusive community. Council doesnt seem to agree on big issues.

• Make it even more obvious with the "see something , report it " program- More CCTV.

• Our small businesses are suffering and are essential to our residents, our tourists, our young people. There has got to be a way to facilitate and support their well-being. A forum with those that are thriving and that are hurting might reveal options

• Water safety for residents and visitors and could definitely be improved. Improved safety for non motorized and restrictions on motor boats (Skaha). Pedestrian safety. Walking in parking lots like cherry lane and Walmart is treacherous.

• New to town

• There are very few accessibility measures respected or enforced to the degree that would greatly benefit or assist the neurodiverse and physically adapted population. This lack o causes a feeling of othering to a potentially vulnerable population

• A lot of people in the community believe the city is using the buzz words of affordable and attainable growth to sprawl out rather than building density in the core .Does the city accept they sprawl costs taxpayers and negatively the climate action plan.

• Set bylaws and get prolific offenders removed from town and drug use off the streets.

• Then DO what you have prioritized! Reduce the crime and drug addicts that have scared this once magnificent city. Make our city SAFE

VIBRANT DESIRABLE EXCELLENT CONNECTED

• A lower rating for the first two priorities because I have not personally seen or heard of any advancements or changes in these areas.

• I've been here over 20 years and honestly I don't see anything that the City has done that I can say, wow that was a great improvement. Most initiatives dont seem to consider the working person, young families. New housing projects are not affordable,

• Read the letters to the editor of our local newspaper and listen to what writers say

• Relax rules about "illegal" secondary suites.

• We need to cap growth

• Penticton is a well-run city and has taken a lot of initiative on preventing quality of life from deteriorating. That said, annual tax increases must be closer to 5% and that may involve some hard decisions to make.

• reinstating citizen committees to provide input and discussion with staff and council. Getting information is difficult. I have asked three different stff and councillors as well as requesting information thru FOI and have had no response...there is ab

• I honestly haven't noticed any major changes in any of these priority items.

• Havent noticed any difference

• deal with crime. the rest is pretty good.

• no affordable housing

• No point focusing on growth when what you currently have is in such an awful state. Focus on fixing it first before worrying about growth.

• Could put more thought into is good for the whole Penticton population not what works for a few or have referendums and let the people have a say.

• Nearly nobody wants a bike lane. StOp pushing socialist ideals on a consrrvative population

• I don’t feel safe. I don’t feel my personal property is safe even with security cameras

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• Encouraging huge growth in this fragile ecosystem with serious water availability is heading us to disaster. Old institutional ways of responding to critical issues of climate change and social breakdown spell disaster. Sorry, have no positive words.

• I think you may have already understood where my focus lies from my response to previous questions!

• Council is just well-off white people who only look to advance their own priorities, change will only come through a working class revolution - good luck!

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