Harriet Wolman is a former politician and administrator in Ontario, Canada. She served as chair of the York Borough Board of Education in the late 1970s, and later campaigned for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
Wolman is a legal conveyancer in private life. She was elected to the York Borough Board of Education for the city's second ward in 1974, and was named chairman of the board after being re-elected without opposition two years later.[1] Shortly after her appointment, she argued that the board should play a stronger role in fighting racism in Toronto.[2]
She later defended the purchase of a $250,000 country camp in 1978, arguing that the board had previously spent large sums of money to rent other facilities for outdoor studies.[3] Endorsed for re-election by the Globe and Mail newspaper in 1978, she was narrowly returned despite the controversy over the board's purchase.[4] She was not re-appointed as chairman.
Wolman campaigned for the York Board of Control in 1980, but was defeated.[5] A newspaper report from this electoral cycle lists her as forty-five years old.[6] She later served as special assistant to Progressive Conservative cabinet minister Larry Grossman.[7]
In 1981, Wolman was commissioned to conduct an inventory of Toronto-area youth training programs.[8] Her report, presented in April 1982, argued that people between 16 and 24 had been ignored by government and industry, and cautioned that poor prospects for 50,000 unskilled and unemployed people in Toronto could result in civil disobedience. The report was completed following interviews with over 500 young people.[9]
Wolman campaigned for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in 1981 and 1985 as a Progressive Conservative candidate, but lost both times to New Democratic Party incumbent Tony Grande. She was later appointed to the Canadian government's Convention Refugee Determination Division in Toronto.[10] She was also the chairman of the public affairs committee of the Ontario Long Term Residential Care Association, and managing director of a retirement home.[11]
In 2006, she criticized the Canadian Union of Public Employees's decision to sponsor a boycott of Israel.[12]
1985 Ontario provincial election : Oakwood edit | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |||
New Democratic Party | (x)Tony Grande | 10,407 | 41.63 | |||
Liberal | Joe Ricciuti | 9,631 | 38.52 | |||
Progressive Conservative | Harriet Wolman | 4,636 | 18.54 | |||
Communist | Mike Sterling | 327 | 1.31 | |||
Total valid votes | 25,001 | 100.00 | ||||
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots | 308 | |||||
Turnout | 25,309 | 68.62 | ||||
Electors on the lists | 36,884 |
1981 Ontario provincial election : Oakwood edit | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | +/- | Expenditures | |
New Democratic Party | (x)Tony Grande | 8,862 | 45.17 | $12,929 | ||
Progressive Conservative | Harriet Wolman | 5,961 | 30.39 | $24,885 | ||
Liberal | Jean M. Gammage | 4,171 | 21.26 | $14,485 | ||
Communist | Nan McDonald | 624 | 3.18 | $1,122 | ||
Total valid votes | 19,618 | 100.00 | ||||
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots | 315 | |||||
Turnout | 19,933 | 56.22 | ||||
Electors on the lists | 35,453 |