Bob Mackin
The highest-paid employee in City of New Westminster in 2021 didn’t work the final two months of the year.
Tim Armstrong suddenly retired in October 2021 as the New Westminster Fire and Rescue Services chief with less than a week’s notice. The Royal City’s statement of financial information for 2021 shows he received $324,081 and charged $4,725 in expenses.
Armstrong’s pay was $129,729 higher than in 2020, when New Westminster paid Armstrong $194,802. He also billed taxpayers $3,827 in expenses that year.
The official story, as New Westminster city hall tells it, is that the 12-year department head notified city manager Lisa Spitale on Oct. 22, 2021 that he would retire on Oct. 28. There was no public announcement, only carefully worded internal memos distributed by Spitale and Armstrong.
City hall’s freedom of information office is refusing to disclose all email between Spitale and Armstrong for the last month-and-a-half of his employment, and it has also refused to show Armstrong’s payroll data. That has prompted a reporter’s appeal to the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner.
The statement of financial information also includes a special note signed by Eva Yip, the acting director of human resources and IT, stating: “There was one severance agreement made between the Corporation of the City of New Westminster and a non-unionized employee during the 2021 fiscal year representing a total of 13 months of compensation.”
Neither Spitale nor Mayor Jonathan Cote responded for comment, but city hall did not deny that the note relates to Armstrong’s severance.
“The city considers details of severance and retirement packages personal and privileged information and we do not discuss personnel issues publicly,” said Blair Fryer, New Westminster’s economic development and communications manager, in a prepared statement.
Spitale was the second-highest paid employee, with $285,590 remuneration and $621 in expenses, for a total $286,850. Director of parks and recreation Dean Gibson ($210,742) and human resources director Richard Fong ($210,202) were the next-highest.
Armstrong departed just three days before one of the busiest nights of the year, Hallowe’en. His parting memo generally thanked staff and said it was “time for a change” after 40 years in the fire service and public safety. There was no explanation for the short, six-day gap between his notice and retirement.
Interim fire chief Curtis Bremner was introduced at a Nov. 1, 2021 council budget workshop without fanfare and without mention of his predecessor. Bremner later retired and Erin Williams became the new acting chief. Bremner was paid $187,603 in 2021, and Williams $167,320.
City hall is spending $50,000 on a consulting contract through the end of the year with former Port Moody fire chief Ron Coulson to review the New Westminster department’s organizational structure, mentor managers and promote engagement between management and union members.
In early 2020, the Justice Institute of B.C. awarded Armstrong an honorary doctor of laws degree. Armstrong joined Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services at age 21 and rose the ranks over 28 years to become Deputy Chief. He became New Westminster’s fire chief in 2009 and also served as the Royal City’s director of emergency management. His also trained firefighters in the U.S. and Taiwan.
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