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Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward

Coordinates: 45°27′N 75°38′W / 45.450°N 75.633°W / 45.450; -75.633
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Rideau Ward (1887-1980))
Rideau-Rockcliffe
Location within Ottawa
Location within Ottawa
Coordinates: 45°27′N 75°38′W / 45.450°N 75.633°W / 45.450; -75.633
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
CityOttawa
Government
 • CouncillorRawlson King
Area
 • Total
19.8 km2 (7.6 sq mi)
Population
 • Total
36,030
 • Density1,800/km2 (4,700/sq mi)
Languages (2016)
 • English50.5%
 • French30.3%
 • Arabic4.4%
 • Spanish1.5%
 • Somali1.4%
 • Creoles1.3%
 • Portuguese1.0%
Avg. income$44,561

Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward is a city ward in Ottawa, Ontario. Located in the city's east end, the ward covers the neighbourhoods of New Edinburgh, Manor Park, Rockcliffe Park, Wateridge Village, Overbrook, Lindenlea, Viscount Alexander Park, Carson Meadows, Cardinal Glen, Rockcliffe Mews, Forbes, Castle Heights and part of Carson Grove.

Prior to amalgamation, the area was part of Rideau Ward. The name "Rideau Ward" has been applied to this area since New Edinburgh was annexed by Ottawa in 1887. It was first contested in the 1887 municipal election,[2] and was known as New Edinburgh Ward in the 1887 and 1888 elections.[3] This recent incarnation of Rideau Ward was created in 1994 from Overbrook-Forbes Ward and part of By-Rideau Ward. It was initially named Ward 4 before being renamed Rideau in 1995.

Councillors

[edit]
Council Aldermen
1887 John Askwith John Henderson John C. Roger
1888
1889
1890 Thomas Tubman
1891 James D. Fraser John C. Roger
1892 George Forde Joseph Hawken
1893 John C. Roger
1894
1895 Basil H. Bell George Forde F. H. Martelock
1896 J. B. Donaldson
1897 James D. Fraser John C. Roger
1898 Breary Slinn
1899 Basil H. Bell
George Forde (from Mar. 1899)
1900
1901 John Askwith James A. Ellis John C. Grant
1902 Breary Slinn
1903 John C. Grant
1904 O. E. Culbert
1905 Breary Slinn
1906 J. H. Putnam William Short
1907 John C. Grant John Askwith
1908 Breary Slinn
1909
1910 Thomas E. McDonald
1911 Breary Slinn
1912 Frank E. Perney
1913 Tom Brethour William Cherry
1914 Harry Low
1915 Henry Ackland
1916 William Cherry
1917 Breary Slinn
1918 Douglas H. Macdonald
1919 Beary Slinn
1920 Arthur Ellis
1921 Rupert Broadfoot
1922
1923
1924 Dave Esdale Thomas H. Marcil
1925 Tom Brethour
1926
1927 Robert Ingram
1928 Tom Brethour George H. Dunbar
1929 Rod Plant
1930
1931
1932
1933 Charles E. Reid
1934 A. W. Spearman
1935 Shirley S. Slinn
1936
1937 Fred J. Goodhouse John Powers (until Oct. 1951)
1938
1939
1940 A. W. Spearman
1941–42
1943–44 Leslie G. Avery
1945–46
1947–48
1949–50
1951–52
Alex Roger (from Oct. 1951)
1953–54 Robert Groves
1955–56 Pat Doherty
1957–58 Jessen Wentzell
1959–60
1961–62 Ellen Webber
John Powers (from 1962)
1963–64 Des Bender
1965–66
1967–69
1970–72 Tom McDougall (until Sept 1972)
1973–74 Rhéal Robert
1975–76
1977–78
1978–80
Council By-Rideau Overbrook-Forbes
1980–82 Marc Laviolette (until Feb. 1991) Rhéal Robert
1982–85
1985–88 George Kelly
1988–91
Pierre Bourque (from Mar. 1991)
1991–94 Richard Cannings Jacques Legendre
Council City Councillor Regional Councillor
1994–97 Richard Cannings Jacques Legendre
1997–00
Council City Councillor
2001–03 Jacques Legendre
2003–06
2006–10
2010–14 Peter D. Clark
2014–18 Tobi Nussbaum (until Jan. 2019)
2018–22
Rawlson King (from Apr. 2019)

School trustees

[edit]

Election results

[edit]

1994 elections

[edit]
1994 RMOC elections: Regional council
Candidate Votes %
Jacques Legendre 3,317 34.49
Julie Taub 2,348 24.42
Joan Gullen 2,059 21.41
George Kelly 1,893 19.68
1994 Ottawa municipal election: Ward 4
Candidate Votes %
Richard Cannings 5,122 57.73
Michael Green 2,575 29.02
Brian Cunningham 1,175 13.24

1997 elections

[edit]
1997 RMOC elections: Regional council
Candidate Votes %
Jacques Legendre 4,870 85.62
Efren Marquez 818 14.38
1997 Ottawa municipal election: Rideau Ward
Candidate Votes %
Richard Cannings Acclaimed
City council
Candidate Votes %
Jacques Legendre 7,269 64.07
Richard Cannings 4,077 35.93
City council
Candidate Votes %
Jacques Legendre 6,070 79.17
James Parker 934 12.18
Michel Binda 663 8.65
City council
Candidate Votes %
Jacques Legendre 7,450 62.35
Maurice Lamirande 1,953 16.34
James Parker 1,248 10.44
Jules Bouvier 1,077 9.01
Muinis Ramadan 221 1.85
City council
Candidate Votes %
Peter D. Clark 2,722 25.84
Maurice Lamirande 1,835 17.42
Sheila Perry 1,709 16.22
Bruce Poulin 1,695 16.09
Richard Cannings 1,333 12.65
Corry Burke 438 4.16
Rawlson King 380 3.61
Pierre Maheu 224 2.13
Harley Collison 129 1.22
James Parker 69 0.66
City council
Candidate Vote %
    Tobi Nussbaum 4,846 47.19
    Peter D. Clark (X) 1,871 18.22
    Sheila Perry 1,423 13.86
    Penny Thompson 994 9.68
    Jevone Nicholas 846 8.24
    Cam Holmstrom 290 2.82
Ottawa mayor (Ward results)
Candidate Vote %
    Jim Watson 8,138 80.83
    Mike Maguire 1,215 12.07
    Rebecca Pyrah 165 1.64
    Michael St. Arnaud 138 1.37
    Anwar Syed 129 1.28
    Robert White 100 0.99
    Bernard Couchman 93 0.92
    Darren W. Wood 90 0.89
Council candidate Vote %
    Tobi Nussbaum 7,334 80.52
    Peter Heyck 1,774 19.48
Ottawa mayor (Ward results)
Candidate Vote %
    Jim Watson 5,120 55.99
    Clive Doucet 3,123 34.15
    Bruce McConville 430 4.70
    Joey Drouin 98 1.07
    Hamid Alakozai 72 0.79
    Craig MacAulay 55 0.60
    Ahmed Bouragba 53 0.58
    Bernard Couchman 49 0.54
    Moises Schachtler 39 0.43
    James T. Sheahan 39 0.43
    Michael Pastien 38 0.42
    Ryan Lythall 28 0.31

2019 by-election

[edit]

There was a by-election on April 15, 2019 to replace Nussbaum, who was appointed as the CEO for the National Capital Commission.

Candidates
[4]
  • Kasia Adamiec - Worked at the federal and municipal level of politics, founding member of the Ottawa Police Youth Advisory Committee[5] Endorsed by Former Conservative MP Ted Opitz.[5]
  • Idris Ben-Tahir
  • Marc Dorgeville - Financial counsellor[6] and former climate science researcher.
  • Bruce A. Faulkner
  • Johan Hamels - Green Party of Canada International liaison[7]
  • Peter Heyck - Ran in this ward in 2018
  • Miklos Horvath
  • Peter Jan Karwacki
  • Rawlson King - President of the Overbrook community association.[8] Endorsed by city councillors Catherine McKenney and Shawn Menard, NDP MPP Joel Harden, OCDSB School Trustees Lyra Evans and Chris Ellis, and former city councillor Clive Doucet.[9]
  • Jerry Kovacs
  • Jamie Kwong - former Quartier Vanier Merchants Association executive director.[10] Endorsed by former Liberal MP Bryon Wilfert and former city councillor Bob Monette[11]
  • Maurice Lamirande - Former school trustee for Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est.[12]
  • Patrick Mayangi
  • Oriana Ngabirano - Reputation manager and public relations specialist[13]
  • Chris Penton
  • Sheila Perry - Teacher, president of the Federation of Community Associations of Ottawa and President of the Ottawa Council of Women. Past President of the Overbrook Community Association.[14] Endorsed by city councillor Jeff Leiper and former city councillor Marianne Wilkinson.[15]
  • Penny Thompson - President of the Manor Park Community Association.[16] Endorsed by former Liberal MPP Madeleine Meilleur and former city councillor Peter D. Clark.[17]
Results[18]
Council candidate Vote %
    Rawlson King 1,529 18.36
    Jamie Kwong 1,406 16.88
    Penny Thompson 851 10.22
    Marc Dorgeville 794 9.53
    Sheila Perry 742 8.91
    Maurice Lamirande 708 8.50
    Johan Hamels 665 7.98
    Kasia Adamiec 507 6.09
    Chris Penton 441 5.29
    Oriana Ngabirano 247 2.97
    Patrick Mayangi 135 1.62
    Miklos Horvath 89 1.07
    Peter Heyck 58 0.70
    Peter Jan Karwacki 48 0.58
    Jerry Kovacs 46 0.55
    Idris Ben-Tahir 35 0.42
    Bruce A. Faulkner 29 0.35
Council candidate Vote %
Rawlson King 8,481 80.14
Clayton Fitzsimmons 859 8.12
Peter Jan Karwacki 716 6.77
Peter Zanette 527 4.98

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2016 Census Ward Data". open.ottawa.ca.
  2. ^ Ottawa: An Illustrated History, by John H. Taylor
  3. ^ "Municipal elections". Ottawa Daily Citizen. January 3, 1888. p. 6. Retrieved June 27, 2022.
  4. ^ "Information for Voters - 2019 Rideau-Rockcliffe By-Election | City of Ottawa". ottawa.ca. Archived from the original on 2019-02-01.
  5. ^ a b https://votekasia.ca/
  6. ^ "Trio of candidates already put names forward in Rideau-Rockcliffe by-election".
  7. ^ "Hamels appointed as Green Party of Canada's International Liaison".
  8. ^ "Councillor Rawlson King". Councillor Rawlson King.
  9. ^ https://www.rawlsonking.ca/endorsements
  10. ^ "Former Vanier BIA director among candidates for Rideau-Rockcliffe byelection".
  11. ^ http://jamiekwong.ca/
  12. ^ "Free DMARC Monitoring Service Tool | Protect Email Domain". 8 April 2021.
  13. ^ https://www.voteoriana.ca/oriana/
  14. ^ "sheilaperry.ca". sheilaperry.ca.
  15. ^ "sheilaperry.ca". sheilaperry.ca.
  16. ^ https://www.votepennyt.ca/experience [dead link]
  17. ^ https://www.votepennyt.ca/endorsements [dead link]
  18. ^ "2019 Rideau-Rockcliffe By-Election Results | City of Ottawa".
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