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An honour for Campbell, a slap for us

You have to feel for the other 2011 recipients of the Order of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½, whose many accomplishments have been overshadowed by all the din around former premier Gordon Campbell getting the award.
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Columnist Jody Paterson.

You have to feel for the other 2011 recipients of the Order of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½, whose many accomplishments have been overshadowed by all the din around former premier Gordon Campbell getting the award.

We'll presume from the time stamp on the government's news release - the afternoon on a Friday before a long weekend - that it knew people wouldn't be happy that Campbell and three other high-profile ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ Liberal stalwarts made the list.

That's a great time to send out a news release if you hope to slide something by unnoticed. The timetested government communications strategy makes it less likely that reporters will be able to find the sources they need to build a big story.

But there's no hiding an incendiary list like the one government sent out last Friday announcing that Campbell would be honoured with the Order of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ And there's no hiding the growing prowess of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½'s political bloggers, who never sleep. Word spread fast.

Campbell's government wove politics into everything ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ did during his time in office. So I guess it's naive to think the Order of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ would somehow remain exempt from all that.

Still, I think there must be people inside the selection process who are very, very unhappy with the way things went this year. The annual awards haven't really had a political feel up until now. Unfortunately, that's no longer true.

Think about it. A committee is tasked with selecting 14 fine citizens to be honoured for their hard work, passion and dedication. That's all, just 14, out of the whole province. You have to be exemplary to be picked for an honour like that.

But this year, we're supposed to believe that it's just a coincidence that four of the 14 recipients happen to be tightly connected to the ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ Liberals. They want us to buy that a guy who British Columbians hounded from office because they were so unhappy with his leadership is one of the 14 most exemplary people of 2011.

Could it really be just one of those unfortunate coincidences? Maybe the selection committee concluded completely independently that Campbell, his former deputy Ken Dobell, fellow politician David Emerson, and halfmillion-dollar-a-year Liberal party donor Luigi Aquilini all deserved to be honoured in 2011.

Or not. And that's the problem. There's now a taint to an award that, up until now, had none.

Live long enough and you're bound to accumulate a few skeletons, so maybe it's no big deal that someone busted for drunk driving while premier gets named to the Order of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½

If you had to be a saint to qualify, we'd have run out of nominees long ago.

But having the selection committee declare Campbell a "visionary" whose efforts have made ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ a better place - well, that's a bit harder to take. Says who?

Under his leadership, we slashed needed community services, handed off tree farm licences to enrich private companies, failed to deal with child poverty, politicized every government decision and greatly enriched the salaries of MLAs and senior government managers. What's visionary about that?

And it's downright disrespectful to have Campbell and his friends shoved at us at a time when so many of us are still fuming about the guy.

The selection committee even appears to have broken its own rules to allow his nomination. No sitting politician is eligible to be nominated, but Campbell had five days left in his term when nominations closed. So did they stretch the deadline to accommodate him, or ignore the rule about sitting politicians?

If the process really has been neutral up until now, these must be sad days for any non-partisan staff and committee members involved with the Order of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ Perhaps it's just another odd coincidence that last week's news release was nowhere to be found on the order's own website until late Tuesday afternoon, but I'm choosing to interpret it as a sign that they're red-faced with shame and protesting in their own small way.

My sympathy to the other recipients of the 2011 order, who really are a very select group picked for all the right reasons. Special congratulations to Crystal Dunahee, a tireless community-builder and fundraiser in our region. Find out more about these worthy recipients here: orderofbc.gov.bc.ca/news/

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