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View Poll Results: Who should be the next mayor of Ottawa?
Mark Sutcliffe 8 15.38%
Catherine McKenney 43 82.69%
Bob Chiarelli 1 1.92%
Other 0 0%
Voters: 52. You may not vote on this poll

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  #21  
Old Posted Aug 10, 2021, 11:43 AM
Proof Sheet Proof Sheet is offline
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Originally Posted by waterloowarrior View Post
Jenna Sudds has been nominated for the federal Liberal Party in Kanata-Carleton, and based in her Twitter post she's resigning one year early from Council
https://twitter.com/JennaSudds/status/1424873555905363969?s=19
You're assuming that there will be an election soon

My understanding is that if there was an election and she were to lose technically she could keep her seat. This article seems to confirm that

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/co...-candidate-ottawa-city-council-1.6135560

Not a fan of that and who pays for a by-election? Probably time for a primarily online election with maybe some limited in person voting for those off the grid from an online election forma

Last edited by Proof Sheet; Aug 10, 2021 at 4:08 PM.
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  #22  
Old Posted Aug 11, 2021, 12:57 AM
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Originally Posted by Proof Sheet View Post
You're assuming that there will be an election soon
The election call is coming very soon, if you believe the pundits. The pre-campaigning has already started.

https://ipolitics.ca/2021/08/10/ipolitics-opposition-leaders-hit-the-hustings/
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  #23  
Old Posted Aug 11, 2021, 12:58 AM
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Coun. Jenna Sudds, now a Liberal candidate, won't take her city paycheque when federal election is called
"Once the writ has dropped, then I would be taking an unpaid leave of absence from my role."

Jon Willing, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: Aug 10, 2021 • 28 minutes ago • 2 minute read


Kanata North Coun. Jenna Sudds, announced this week as the federal Liberal candidate in Kanata-Carleton, said she won’t take her councillor’s salary during a federal campaign period, which is expected to begin soon.

“Once the writ has dropped, then I would be taking an unpaid leave of absence from my role,” Sudds said Tuesday. “My team will still be in place and the work will still get done, but I will have to step away during the campaign period.”

Sudds will continue to work as a councillor until the election is called.

The city would need to determine how political issues in Kanata North are handled in Sudds’s absence.

Kanata-Carleton Liberal MP Karen McCrimmon announced on social media Sunday night that she won’t be seeking re-election, opening the door for a new candidate to represent the Grits in Kanata-Carleton during a federal election.

The Liberals announced Sudds as their candidate in the riding on Monday.

The Conservative candidate in Kanata-Carleton, Jennifer McAndrew, has a small head start canvassing in the riding. She won the party’s nomination last month.

Running for the NDP is Melissa Coenraad.

Sudds hasn’t yet finished her first council term, which ends in fall 2022. She won the 2018 municipal election in Kanata North with about 46 per cent of the votes, succeeding long-time councillor Marianne Wilkinson, who retired from politics and endorsed Sudds.

Sudds raised more than $36,000 through contributions and fundraising events during her municipal campaign, the most out of the leading candidates in the Kanata North election.

Asked what she would tell people who voted for her and donated to her campaign in 2018, Sudds said she had planned to run again in the 2022 municipal election, but “these opportunities don’t come often and I do think that it gives me the opportunity to serve the broader community, Kanata-Carleton, in an even bigger way.

“As much as I regret having to leave about a year early from my term, I hope that the residents will understand that it is my desire to keep serving them, just in a new capacity,” she said.

Sudds cited the economic recovery from COVID-19, rural internet availability and LRT to Kanata as top federal issues for Kanata-Carleton. The City of Ottawa will require money from the feds if it wants to extend LRT to the western suburbs.

Municipal politicians are all independents who don’t represent a party around the council table.

Now Sudds is getting involved in the sometimes nasty business of partisan politics.

“At the municipal level, it can be pretty nasty as well. Although there is not an official party system, there are obviously party politics at play,” Sudds said.

The partisanship is amplified at the federal level, an aspect that isn’t appealing to her, but “it’s important work that we need people to step up to do.”

Sudds has held senior leadership positions in her short time on council. She started the term chairing the community and protective services committee before switching last December to being a deputy mayor.

Sudds worked as an economist in the federal government before becoming the founding executive director of the Kanata North Business Association and then city councillor.

An Ottawa city councillor’s salary is about $110,000.

The annual salary for an MP is about $185,000.

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https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-new...aycheque-when-federal-election-is-called
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  #24  
Old Posted Aug 12, 2021, 5:26 PM
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Quote:
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Proof Sheet View Post
You're assuming that there will be an election soon
The election call is coming very soon, if you believe the pundits. The pre-campaigning has already started.

https://ipolitics.ca/2021/08/10/ipolitics-opposition-leaders-hit-the-hustings/
Looks like we have an (unofficial) date now: September 20, 2021

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/election-call-trudeau-1.6138794
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/world/ar...-call-snap-election-for-sept-20-sources/
https://ottawacitizen.com/news/canada/tr...wcm/31bd1f6c-7344-48d2-8ce4-2e414082dc67
https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/trudeau-...ff-this-sunday-reuters-sources-1.5544491
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  #25  
Old Posted Aug 13, 2021, 1:11 PM
Richard Eade Richard Eade is offline
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There appears to be confusion between the FEDERAL election, which may be called September 20, for a fall 2021 election, and the City of Ottawa MUNICIPAL election, to which this thread is dedicated, which will be held October 24, 2022.
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  #26  
Old Posted Aug 13, 2021, 4:52 PM
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Originally Posted by Richard Eade View Post
There appears to be confusion between the FEDERAL election, which may be called September 20, for a fall 2021 election, and the City of Ottawa MUNICIPAL election, to which this thread is dedicated, which will be held October 24, 2022.
I'm not confused. Proof Sheet was questioning the timing of the next federal election, and how that might impact a by-election to replace Jenna Sudds in the event that she won.
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  #27  
Old Posted Aug 13, 2021, 4:53 PM
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Council will need to consider holding a third byelection this term if a colleague wins federal vote

Jon Willing, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: Aug 13, 2021 • 5 hours ago • 3 minute read


The City of Ottawa faces the possibility of holding another byelection to fill a vacant seat if a third councillor resigns this term, potentially pushing the tab over $1 million for unplanned votes after the 2018 municipal election.

Kanata North Coun. Jenna Sudds is poised to take an unpaid leave from representing her ward as she runs for the Liberals in Kanata-Carleton in the next federal election.

On Thursday, Reuters cited unnamed sources in first reporting that a federal election will be called for Sept. 20.

If Sudds wins, council will be left deciding if another byelection should be held to fill the seat, or if a member of the public should be handed the Kanata North councillor job.

Five councillors have resigned in the middle of a term since the 2001 municipal amalgamation that created the City of Ottawa.

Two of the resignations happened in first half of the 2018-2022 term.

First there was Tobi Nussbaum’s departure from council not long after he was re-elected in 2018. He was sworn in that December and within a couple weeks announced he was leaving council to take the CEO job at the National Capital Commission. Rawlson King won an April 2019 byelection in Rideau-Rockcliffe to become the new ward councillor. The byelection cost $339,000.

Stephen Blais left council in 2020. The former Cumberland ward councillor successfully ran for the Liberals in a provincial byelection in Orléans. Council authorized a pandemic-era byelection to fill the Cumberland seat and the city budgeted about $520,000, which included increased costs attributed to COVID-19. Catherine Kitts won the Cumberland ward byelection in October 2020.

The federal election will ultimately decide if a third councillor leaves this term.

Stéphane Émard-Chabot, a municipal lawyer, university lecturer and former local councillor, said a fair and transparent appointment process might be the best approach, rather than a byelection.

“Democracy should be the goal each time,” Émard-Chabot said, but there’s also the “practical issue” of preparing and paying for a byelection, both for city hall and interested candidates.

Émard-Chabot pointed out the “grey zone” this late in the term when trying to decide between the two options.

The next municipal general election is scheduled for October 2022 and the legislative workload typically drops off by the summer as incumbents and other candidates prepare for the campaign. That means there might be only a handful of months of actual policymaking before the municipal government turns its mind to the election.

(And if residents aren’t sick enough of elections by that point, there’s an Ontario general election scheduled to happen by June 2022).

At the same time, appointing a member of the public to council could give that person an advantage as an incumbent in the municipal general election.

While council might be tempted to appoint someone who vows not to run in the 2022 municipal election, Émard-Chabot said that kind of agreement wouldn’t be legally binding.

It’s not an ideal time for a community to have no representation at city hall.

Council is scheduled to consider the final version of a draft official plan on Oct. 27. On top of that, the 2022 city budget will go through the consultation process over the fall before a council vote in December.

One of the city’s hottest planning files is in Kanata North. ClubLink has an active development application to build over the Kanata Golf and Country Club. The company has appealed to the courts to allow the development plans, even though there’s a legacy agreement with the city protecting the green space.

Neil Thomson, president of Kanata Beaverbrook Community Association, said Kanata North might not have political representation during a “crucial window” for the ward.

“The timing couldn’t have been worse from that perspective,” Thomson said, adding that the draft official plan also brings development implications for the technology park in Kanata North.

As for Sudds potentially leaving before the end of her first term on council, Thomson said constituents, while concerned, generally understand that good opportunities can come up for a councillor.

Émard-Chabot agreed that constituents might be disappointed when their elected representative resigns during a term, but many also understand that politicians have personal obligations and professional goals.

“Somebody who sees an opportunity elsewhere who is currently holding office will, I would think, give good consideration that leaving their job is not a simple matter,” Émard-Chabot said.

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https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-new...is-term-if-a-colleague-wins-federal-vote
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  #28  
Old Posted Sep 21, 2021, 11:36 AM
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Fire up the byelection machine. Again.

Quote:
Liberal Jenna Sudds wins Kanata-Carleton

Natalie Harvey , Andrew Duffy, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: Sep 21, 2021 • 6 hours ago • 3 minute read


Municipal councillor Jenna Sudds will be trading her chair at city hall for a green velvet seat in Parliament after her narrow election night victory in Kanata-Carleton.

Sudds, 42, who entered the election race as the Liberal candidate just days before the writ was dropped, garnered 41 per cent of the vote Monday, with 87 per cent of polls reporting. Her nearest challenger, Conservative Jennifer McAndrew, had 37 per cent.

Sudds was declared the winner at about 12:30 a.m. Tuesday by CTV and arrived to the raucous cheers of her supporters at her Kanata Avenue campaign headquarters. But she was reluctant to declare victory and warned that 6,000 mail-in ballots would not be counted until Wednesday.

“We’ll be waiting for those,” said Sudds, who never relinquished her narrow lead throughout the evening. “But all that to say, what a journey. What a journey these last 36 days have been …

“At the end of the day, I’m very optimistic that we’ll keep this riding red and that I’ll have the honour to serve you as your member of Parliament.”

Sudds had a lead of more than 1,500 votes when she was declared the winner. The best-known name in the race, Sudds capitalized on her high profile as deputy mayor and a sure-footed campaign to secure a place in the House of Commons.

When incumbent Liberal Karen McCrimmon announced her resignation days before the election was called, it guaranteed the voters of Kanata-Carleton would elect a new MP.

Kanata North Coun. Sudds was quickly appointed by the Liberals as their new candidate. A rookie councillor who took on the role of deputy mayor last year, Sudds had an election team in place having won the 2018 municipal election with 46 per cent of the vote.

Sudds said she wanted to jump into the federal arena in order to help Kanata-Carleton recover from the pandemic and assist its economic growth. “We need to build on the strengths of our technology sector with robust policies that enable and support Canadian innovators,” she said during the campaign.

Her principal competitor, McAndrew, won the party’s nomination in July, which gave her a one-month head start in canvassing the riding.

An entrepreneur who owns and operates an event planning business, McAndrew entered politics after watching small businesses struggle through the COVID-19 pandemic. She was convinced she could do more to help, and concerned that the Liberal government was ill-suited to leading the country out of “the post-pandemic financial crisis.”

She vowed to create a local business recovery task force to help companies rebuild: “I can truly say that I understand the struggles of small business, especially over the last two years as I have lived and breathed them,” she said.

The NDP’s Melissa Coenraad, a lab technician, said the pandemic highlighted the need to invest in the country’s health-care system. “We need to be better prepared should we ever experience anything like this in the future,” she said.

The other candidates were both veteran campaigners: the Green Party’s Dr. Jennifer Purdy, a family physician, and the PPC’s Scott Miller, a software engineer.

Key issues for voters included Sudds’ decision to abruptly leave city hall, reliable rural internet service, and the extension of the LRT to Kanata — something that will require an injection of federal money.

The riding has a deep conservative streak, but has gone Liberal in the past two elections thanks to McCrimmon, a decorated military veteran. The Conservative candidate finished second in both of those contests.

The riding includes Kanata’s suburbs and sprawling rural areas west of them, and features a significant number of public service workers, high-tech employees and farmers. Added to the electoral map in 2015, it was built largely from what used to be Carleton-Mississippi Mills — a riding that regularly sent Conservative MPs to Parliament Hill.

— With files from Natalie Harvey

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/riding-results-kanata-carleton-looks-to-be-a-tight-race
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  #29  
Old Posted Sep 23, 2021, 11:37 AM
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How to fill the Kanata North council seat for 14 months
Now that it's certain Jenna Sudds won her federal riding seat, council has to decide how to replace her

Joanne Chianello · CBC News
Posted: Sep 23, 2021 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: 4 hours ago


On election night, in the wee hours of the morning Jenna Sudds pulled ahead of her rival by just 1,700 votes in the race to represent the riding of Kanata-Carleton.

With Elections Canada having tallied 95 per cent of the 6,381 special ballots cast for the riding as of Wednesday evening, her victory is definitive.

But as Sudds heads to the House of Commons, what happens with her seat at Ottawa's City Hall?

Sudds is the third person to quit before the end of this term. The first was Tobi Nussbaum who left shortly after his re-election in 2018 to become the CEO of the National Capital Commission, and the second was Stephen Blais who became the MPP for Orléans in February 2020.

It's now up to council to decide how the people of Kanata North are represented for the next 14 months and time is of the essence.

First, Sudds needs to resign, which she's expected to do as early as Thursday. Council must then declare her seat vacant at its next meeting.

Council can then opt to elect or select a replacement, a decision it has to make within 60 days of the seat being declared empty. And frankly, neither option is ideal.

Appointing a replacement is not how past councils have usually filled vacancies, but it is the easiest. Ontario law says council can appoint almost anyone who consents to taking the job for the rest of the term with few other parameters.

If council opts for a byelection, which is the usual course, then a very specific schedule that is set out in the Municipal Elections Act kicks in. The clerk sets a candidate nomination day 30 to 60 days from the time council decides to hold the byelection. The voting day must be held 45 days after the nomination day.

Let's look at the calendar.

The next council meeting is Oct. 13. If council declares the seat for Kanata North to be vacant and to move ahead with a byelection on that day, the earliest a new councillor could be chosen would be just after Boxing Day.

And it's not just the timing that's a problem with a byelection. As we've just seen in the federal election earlier this week, it's difficult to find polling stations with so many schools and other usual community spaces being unavailable.

However, Mayor Jim Watson could call an emergency council meeting early next week, for example, so the process could be set in motion sooner.

And the Municipal Elections Act does give the clerk special powers to make an adjustment to procedure that, in his opinion, "is necessary or desirable for conducting the election."

So city clerk Rick O'Connor could, in theory, truncate the campaign period if he thinks there's a good reason. So a byelection date of early December or even late November would be possible.

Responses to an informal survey of council members — about half answered our emailed questions — indicated that many were torn about what to do.

They all say in theory, they prefer byelections. But some wonder what the point is of going to the expense of a byelection this close to the next municipal election in October 2022. Last year's byelection in Cumberland cost about $375,000, although this one would cost more because of restrictions caused by the pandemic.

With typical polling locations unavailable, the City is expecting it would have to rent private-market spaces for advance polls and voting day.

"We know that there is a de facto tools-down period in the last months before the election when most of the work done by council is keeping the lights on," Coun. Jeff Leiper said. "Major files such as the Official Plan and budget will have been dealt with by December."

Those councillors leaning to selecting a replacement want assurances that the person appointed won't run in the next election, which would give them an incumbency advantage. They also want to make sure the selected person isn't "partisan", but how? There is no playbook on where to find individuals to replace elected officials.

And there have been byelections held closer to the next election date than this situation.

"When Herb Kreling resigned his seat from Council in September 2005, the City held a by-election in January 2006 to replace him," Coun. Scott Moffatt points out.

Bob Monette won that byelection in Orléans just 10 months before the election in November of that same year.

"I see no reason why we wouldn't follow that same path today," said Moffatt.

And other councillors want to hear from the people of Kanata North what they'd prefer before deciding to elect or select. Because, after all, they're the ones currently without representation at the council table.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/kanata-north-byelection-or-appointment-1.6186036
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  #30  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2021, 2:00 PM
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Precedent was indeed set with Orléans. We may as well continue the practice.
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  #31  
Old Posted Oct 7, 2021, 2:20 AM
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Is there any buzz on whether Watson plans to run again and if there might be solid candidates running to replace him?
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  #32  
Old Posted Oct 7, 2021, 12:46 PM
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Is there any buzz on whether Watson plans to run again and if there might be solid candidates running to replace him?
I heard somewhere that Watson said that if Line 1 isn't fixed, he won't run. One of the big media outlets, don't remember which one.

As for who may run against him (or without him), old man Chiarelli or maybe Diane Deans.
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  #33  
Old Posted Oct 13, 2021, 3:40 PM
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City staff recommended a by-election for Kanata North. Surprisingly, Leiper put in a motion to appoint instead, and it passed. Only Moffatt, Kavanagh and Chiarelli dissenting.

With less than a year until the general election, I think this was the right move.

Possible candidates will be able to apply October 25 to 29. City clerk to prepare report for November 5. Special Council meeting November 10th where each candidate will have 5 minutes to make their case.

To follow the Council meeting without listening to the whole thing, I recommend Kate Porter's Twitter:

https://twitter.com/KatePorterCBC?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor

or Jon Willing:

https://twitter.com/JonathanWilling?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
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  #34  
Old Posted Oct 13, 2021, 5:01 PM
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Vacant Kanata North council seat will be filled through appointment, council decides

Jon Willing, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: Oct 13, 2021 • 47 minutes ago • 2 minute read


The vacant council seat for Kanata North will be filled through an application and appointment process, council decided Wednesday.

Jenna Sudds was the councillor for Kanata North until she won the recent federal election as a Liberal in the riding of Kanata-Carleton.

It’s too early in the four-year council term to simply not fill the council seat. The Ontario Municipal Act says if the vacancy doesn’t fall within 90 days of the next scheduled municipal election, council must fill the seat through a byelection or appointment.

The next general municipal election is in October 2022.

A five-day application period for the Kanata North seat will start on Oct. 29. A special council meeting will happen on Nov. 10 and applicants will have the opportunity to make a presentation to council and field questions from council members. At the same meeting, council members will then vote on their preference for Kanata North councillor.

The appointment process would create a “nominal” expense for the city, clerk Rick O’Connor said.

The city expected a byelection would cost $566,676, more than the $349,263 it would likely cost in non-pandemic times. The extra expenses would have been generated by COVID-19 health precautions.

Sudds was elected to city council in the 2018 municipal election, succeeding long-time councillor Marianne Wilkinson.

Community groups in Kanata North have been calling for council to appoint Wilkinson to the vacant seat since she has deep knowledge of the ward and Ottawa’s municipal government.

Wilkinson has indicated that she would be willing to accept an appointment, but the city will advertise the council vacancy and accept applications.

City staff found 41 vacancies that have happened on Ontario municipal councils in 2021 at least 37 were filled by appointments or on track to be filled by appointments.

If Ottawa council chose a byelection, the city would have had to adhere to legislated timelines for an election period. The holiday period would scuttle the chance to hold a byelection at the earliest legislated opportunity, which would have been Dec. 27. The clerk recommended Jan. 24 as a byelection date if council decided the most democratic option to fill the seat.

On Wednesday, Coun. Jeff Leiper won council’s approval for his motion to fill the vacant seat through an appointment process so that Kanata North would have a councillor for the 2022 municipal budget process. Council will consider the final draft budget in December.

Council voted overwhelmingly in support of Leiper’s motion. Councillors Rick Chiarelli, Theresa Kavanagh and Scott Moffatt voted against having an appointment process.

Wilkinson confirmed Wednesday that she will submit an application.

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https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-new...lled-through-appointment-council-decides
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  #35  
Old Posted Oct 16, 2021, 1:26 PM
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City invites applications to fill Kanata North council seat vacated by Jenna Sudds

Matthew Lapierre, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: Oct 15, 2021 • 14 hours ago • 1 minute read


The city on Friday released details on how Ottawans can apply to fill the city council seat vacated by the newly elected member of Parliament, Jenna Sudds.

The city council voted earlier this week to fill the seat for Kanata North (Ward 4) by appointment as opposed to conducting a by-election.

The application period opens on Oct. 25, and the deadline to submit an application is 4 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 29, the city said Friday in a media release.

To be eligible to hold office, a person must be 18 years of age or older, a Canadian citizen, and they must be an Ottawa resident, an owner or tenant of land in the city or the spouse of an owner or tenant.

The applicants must schedule an appointment to submit their forms in person at the elections office at 1221 B Cyrville Rd., the city’s media release said. “Appointments can be scheduled Monday to Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with the City Clerk or his designate by calling 613-580-2660 or by emailing [email protected].”

After the application period is over, the city clerk will examine each application and certify them before presenting a list of the applicants to the city council.

Then, at a special meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 10, the applicants will have the opportunity to make presentations to council and to field questions from council members. Councillors will then vote on their preference.

The city council opted for an application process rather than a by-election, which the city clerk said would have cost more than $500,000. The application process, by comparison, presents a “nominal” expense to the city, the clerk said.

Sudds was elected to city council in the 2018 municipal election, succeeding long-time councillor Marianne Wilkinson.

Community groups in Kanata North have called for council to appoint Wilkinson to the vacant seat since she has deep knowledge of the ward and Ottawa’s municipal government. Wilkinson confirmed Wednesday that she would submit an application.

With files from Jon Willing

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-new...orth-council-seat-vacated-by-jenna-sudds
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  #36  
Old Posted Oct 27, 2021, 7:37 PM
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Harder not running it seems. The area will finally get new representation after 25 years with the City's top developer funded politician.

Quote:
Kate Porter
@KatePorterCBC
52m

Harder looks back on when Watson honoured her by asking her to chair planning committee, and says she was clear in 2018, she wouldn't run again for #ottcity council but wanted to lead this OP and complete it. She thanks residents and staff for all their input.
https://twitter.com/KatePorterCBC/status/1453431962371248133
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  #37  
Old Posted Oct 28, 2021, 12:20 AM
Norman Bates Norman Bates is offline
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Harder not running it seems. The area will finally get new representation after 25 years with the City's top developer funded politician.


https://twitter.com/KatePorterCBC/status/1453431962371248133
She previously announced that she was not going to run. But then changed her mind and was re-elected.

I wonder if she’ll pull that same bait and switch again?
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  #38  
Old Posted Oct 28, 2021, 12:49 PM
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She previously announced that she was not going to run. But then changed her mind and was re-elected.

I wonder if she’ll pull that same bait and switch again?
I sure hope not. A few others did the same, like Blais who ended up leaving for Queen's Park.
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  #39  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2021, 4:19 PM
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It's Barrhaven. I wouldn't get my hopes up, for a substantial change in attitude, for a councillor from there.
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Old Posted Nov 10, 2021, 11:03 PM
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Former school board chair selected councillor for Kanata North
In a council vote on Wednesday, 12 members voted in favour of Curry filling the vacant seat after hearing from 20 applicants.

Jon Willing, Ottawa Citizen
Publishing date: Nov 10, 2021 • 16 minutes ago • 2 minute read


Cathy Curry has been appointed city councillor for Kanata North ward after convincing her new colleagues that she’s the best person for the job.

In a council vote on Wednesday, 12 members voted in favour of Curry filling the vacant seat after hearing from 20 applicants.

Curry, who received Mayor Jim Watson’s vote, is a former public school board trustee for Kanata and board chair.

Council used an application and appointment process to fill the seat, which became vacant after Jenna Sudds was elected Liberal MP for Kanata-Carleton in September. Sudds had been councillor since December 2018.

The applicants each had five minutes to make a presentation to council and council members could ask one question.

Curry said she has been following the major issues in the ward, including council’s approval of a new official plan.

Asked if she plans on running in the general municipal election next year, Curry said she wasn’t intending to, but she left the door open.

“I would have to see how this goes. I could be convinced either way,” Curry said.

Curry’s work on council starts right away.

The next municipal election is on Oct. 24, 2022, with the four-year term starting on Nov. 15, 2022.

Another applicant, former Kanata North councillor Marianne Wilkinson, had the endorsement of community associations in the ward . Wilkinson, who said she wouldn’t run in 2022, received eight council votes.

Kanata North has one of Ottawa’s hottest planning files.

ClubLink’s proposal to bulldoze the Kanata Golf and Country Club and work with homebuilders to establish an infill community is the top planning issue in the ward. A court decision on protecting the green space is outstanding and an Ontario Land Tribunal hearing is scheduled for January.

The ward is also home to one of Ottawa’s most important business areas. The Kanata North technology park has been given the status of a special economic district in the council-approved official plan.

Curry will be thrown right into the fire of municipal policymaking as council begins to dig into the 2022 draft budget. A final vote on the budget is scheduled for early December.

Kanata South Coun. Allan Hubley and Bay Coun. Theresa Kavanagh had been handling constituent issues in Kanata North during the seat vacancy.

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https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-new...air-selected-councillor-for-kanata-north
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