The Liberal MLA for Kelowna Lake Country says he is seriously considering a run for mayor.
“The rumours are true. I am thinking about running, if there is a need for me to serve my community here at home, instead of being in Victoria,” said Norm Letnick, currently the assistant deputy speaker.
“My answer has always been my focus is advocating for the needs of our community in Victoria. Should there be a need for my experience and good relationships with the provincial government, I would give very serious consideration to giving the people that choice.”
The next round of municipal elections in B.C. is in October 2022.
Kelowna Mayor Colin Basran was first elected as a city councillor in 2011. He won election as mayor in 2014, and was re-elected mayor in 2018. He has not publicly stated whether he will run again.
Basran declined an interview on the matter.
Letnick won the 2020 election with more than 50 per cent of the vote, with was almost double the votes of his nearest opponent.
At the time, he said his top priorities include fixing Highway 97 and Beaver Lake Road, ensuring a community health centre moves into Lake Country and improving safety in Kelowna’s Rutland neighbourhood.
Letnick moved to Kelowna in 1999 and took a job at what was then Okanagan University College teaching business administration. He was a city councillor before moving into provincial politics in 2009.