Loading AI tools
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Greater Sudbury City Council (French: Conseil municipal du Grand Sudbury) is the governing body of the City of Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
The council consists of the mayor plus a twelve-person council. The city is divided into twelve wards; each ward is represented by one councillor. The council meets at Tom Davies Square.
The city was created by amalgamating the former City of Sudbury with six suburban municipalities on January 1, 2001. Initially, the council structure consisted of six wards, each represented by two councillors. Ward boundaries in the new city were drawn by grouping former suburban municipalities with adjacent neighbourhoods in the former city. For the 2006 municipal election, council was reorganized into twelve single-member wards.
Past mayors of the city and the former suburban municipalities are listed at List of mayors of Sudbury, Ontario.
Council elected in the 2000 municipal election:
Councillor | Ward | Notes |
---|---|---|
Jim Gordon | Mayor | |
Eldon Gainer | Ward 1 | |
Gerry McIntaggart | Ward 1 | |
Ron Bradley | Ward 2 | |
Lionel Lalonde | Ward 2 | |
Ron Dupuis | Ward 3 | |
Louise Portelance | Ward 3 | |
Ted Callaghan | Ward 4 | |
Dave Kilgour | Ward 4 | |
Doug Craig | Ward 5 | |
Austin Davey | Ward 5 | |
David Courtemanche | Ward 6 | |
Mike Petryna | Ward 6 |
Council elected in the 2003 municipal election:
Councillor | Ward | Notes |
---|---|---|
David Courtemanche | Mayor | |
Eldon Gainer | Ward 1 | |
Terry Kett | Ward 1 | |
Claude Berthiaume | Ward 2 | |
Ron Bradley | Ward 2 | |
Ron Dupuis | Ward 3 | |
André Rivest | Ward 3 | |
Ted Callaghan | Ward 4 | |
Russ Thompson | Ward 4 | |
Frances Caldarelli | Ward 5 | |
Doug Craig | Ward 5 | |
Janet Gasparini | Ward 6 | |
Lynne Reynolds | Ward 6 |
Council elected in the 2006 municipal election:
Councillor | Ward | Notes |
---|---|---|
John Rodriguez | Mayor | |
Joe Cimino | Ward 1 | |
Jacques Barbeau | Ward 2 | |
Claude Berthiaume | Ward 3 | |
Evelyn Dutrisac | Ward 4 | |
Ron Dupuis | Ward 5 | |
André Rivest | Ward 6 | |
Russ Thompson | Ward 7 | |
Ted Callaghan | Ward 8 | |
Doug Craig | Ward 9 | |
Frances Caldarelli | Ward 10 | |
Janet Gasparini | Ward 11 | |
Joscelyne Landry-Altmann | Ward 12 |
Council elected in the 2010 municipal election.
Councillor | Ward | Notes |
---|---|---|
Marianne Matichuk | Mayor | |
Joe Cimino | Ward 1 | Elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario on June 12, 2014.[1] |
Gerry McIntaggart | Ward 1 | Appointed on July 8, 2014, as temporary interim councillor following Cimino's resignation.[2] |
Jacques Barbeau | Ward 2 | |
Claude Berthiaume | Ward 3 | |
Evelyn Dutrisac | Ward 4 | |
Ron Dupuis | Ward 5 | |
André Rivest | Ward 6 | |
Dave Kilgour | Ward 7 | |
Fabio Belli | Ward 8 | Died in office in April 2014.[3] |
Al Sizer | Ward 8 | Appointed on June 26, 2014, as temporary interim councillor following Belli's death.[4] |
Doug Craig | Ward 9 | |
Frances Caldarelli | Ward 10 | |
Terry Kett | Ward 11 | |
Joscelyne Landry-Altmann | Ward 12 |
As the vacancies in wards 1 and 8 occurred less than six months prior to the 2014 municipal election, by provincial law both were required to be filled by temporary appointment to the seat rather than in a conventional by-election. Sizer was appointed on June 26 to succeed Belli,[4] and McIntaggart was appointed on July 8 to succeed Cimino.[2] Unlike many cities in similar circumstances, Greater Sudbury City Council opted not to impose a requirement that the appointed councillors could not run for reelection in 2014; Sizer chose to run as a candidate and won reelection, while McIntaggart did not run.
Council elected in the 2014 municipal election.
Councillor | Ward | Notes |
---|---|---|
Brian Bigger | Mayor | |
Mark Signoretti | Ward 1 | |
Michael Vagnini | Ward 2 | |
Gerry Montpellier | Ward 3 | |
Evelyn Dutrisac | Ward 4 | |
Robert Kirwan | Ward 5 | |
René Lapierre | Ward 6 | |
Mike Jakubo | Ward 7 | Finance Committee Chair[5] |
Al Sizer | Ward 8 | Deputy Mayor[5] |
Deb McIntosh | Ward 9 | |
Fern Cormier | Ward 10 | |
Lynne Reynolds | Ward 11 | |
Joscelyne Landry-Altmann | Ward 12 | Deputy Mayor[5] |
Council elected in the 2018 municipal election.
Councillor | Ward | Notes |
---|---|---|
Brian Bigger | Mayor | |
Mark Signoretti | Ward 1 | |
Michael Vagnini | Ward 2 | |
Gerry Montpellier | Ward 3 | |
Geoff McCausland | Ward 4 | |
Robert Kirwan | Ward 5 | |
René Lapierre | Ward 6 | |
Mike Jakubo | Ward 7 | |
Al Sizer | Ward 8 | |
Deb McIntosh | Ward 9 | |
Fern Cormier | Ward 10 | |
Bill Leduc | Ward 11 | |
Joscelyne Landry-Altmann | Ward 12 |
Council elected in the 2022 municipal election.
Councillor | Ward | Notes |
---|---|---|
Paul Lefebvre | Mayor | |
Mark Signoretti | Ward 1 | |
(Michael Vagnini) | Ward 2 | Found deceased (due to medical event) on February 12, 2024, several days after being reported missing.[6] |
Eric Benoit | Runner-up to Vagnini in the 2022 municipal election; appointed to council on March 8, 2024, following Vagnini's death.[7] | |
(Gerry Montpellier) | Ward 3 | Died on February 21, 2024.[8] |
Michel Guy Brabant | Runner-up to Montpellier in the 2022 municipal election; appointed to council on March 8, 2024.[7] | |
Pauline Fortin | Ward 4 | |
Mike Parent | Ward 5 | |
René Lapierre | Ward 6 | |
Natalie Labbée | Ward 7 | |
Al Sizer | Ward 8 | |
Deb McIntosh | Ward 9 | |
Fern Cormier | Ward 10 | |
Bill Leduc | Ward 11 | |
Joscelyne Landry-Altmann | Ward 12 |
From amalgamation in 2001 until reorganization in 2005, the wards were as follows:
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.