Northern Ont. community votes to replace mayor, council
The northern Ontario town of Black River-Matheson has a new mayor and council after a byelection Monday mandated by the province.
Polls were open until 8 p.m. Monday and town officials said results should be known shortly thereafter as constituents are casting their ballots via telephone and the internet.
A total of 26 candidates were running in the byelection with only a couple of incumbents seeking re-election.
In total, seven candidates competed for the mayor’s seat.
They include Chris Riach, Dave Dyment, Linda Mercier, Albert Royer, John Mackenzie, Paul Fortin and Murray Horan.
With 728 votes, former town councillor Dyment will become the new mayor.
Black-River Matheson has six wards and there is a race in each one of them.
The only other person from the former council to return is Coun. Louise Gadoury.
- Bree Allen elected to Ward 1 with 81 votes
- Dan Charbonneau elected to Ward 2 with 87 votes
- Steve Campsall elected to Ward 3 with 333 votes, the most in any ward
- Scott McCutcheon elected to Ward 4 with 36 votes, two more than Dan DeMarchi, who resigned three months after he was acclaimed for his second term in 2022
- Gadoury elected to Ward 5 2with 77 votes
- Alain Bouchard elected to Ward 6 with 106 votes
The province dissolved the former council earlier this year when it refused to meet for more than 60 days.
Some of the issues that plagued the former council included a lockout of the town’s public works employees, court battles and a revolt by half of council.
In the 2022 municipal election, the mayor and all wards except for one were acclaimed.
Advance polls closed Sunday and voting resumed Monday morning at 10 a.m.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
LIVE NOW Consul general to New York answering questions over $9M luxury condo purchase
After weeks of pressure, Canada's consul general Tom Clark is testifying on Thursday before a House of Commons committee about the purchase of his new official residence in New York that generated a lot of political attention over the summer.
Tensions mount as clock ticks down on Air Canada contract talks
Tensions are mounting as a potential pilot strike or lockout at Canada's largest airline is only days away with no signs of a breakthrough in talks.
'All bets are off' when Parliament resumes, says NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says his team is focused on restoring Canadians' 'hope' but when it comes to the new minority dynamics in Parliament, 'all bets are off.'
Many Canadians believe the country’s two biggest political parties have moved towards fringes: survey
Some Canadians believe they've become 'political orphans' as all the major parties have become 'too extreme' in their views, according to a new survey by Angus Reid Institute.
Investigators say teen smuggled assault rifle into Georgia school in backpack before shooting
The student accused of killing four people in a Georgia high school shooting rode the school bus that morning with a semiautomatic assault rifle concealed in his backpack, investigators confirmed Thursday.
PM, senior security officials slated to return to foreign interference inquiry
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and members of his inner circle are slated to return to a federal inquiry into foreign interference in coming weeks.
Ontario woman misses flight to funeral due to airline ticket typo
An Ontario woman admits she was flustered and stressed trying to book an airline ticket when she found out a close relative had died last month.
The man who discovered Churchill's picture was stolen was treated like a suspect; now he's being honoured
When the 'Roaring Lion' portrait of Winston Churchill is returned to the Fairmont Château Laurier, a 68-year-old man once considered the prime suspect in the heist will have the honour of replacing it.
Sobeys parent company Empire reports $207.8M Q1 profit, sales up from year ago
Empire Co. Ltd. says it earned $207.8 million in its latest quarter, down from $261 million a year ago as its sales edged higher.