Stéphane Émard-Chabot

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Stéphane Émard-Chabot is a former Ottawa city councillor and has been Assistant Dean of the University of Ottawa law school since 2001. A native of Sandy Hill he has a B.Comm and law degree from Ottawa and a degree from École Supérieure de Commerce de Paris. After obtaining his degree he became a professor at La Cité collégiale and also head of the Action Sandy Hill community group.

He was elected to city council in 1994 at age 28. Openly gay one of the first issues the city council faced was whether to recognize Gay Pride Day.[1] Mayor Jacquelin Holzman pushed through a compromise that recognized a generic "Pride Day," much to the displeasure of Émard-Chabot and other councillors. One of the most left wing city councillors he supported legalizing prostitution.[2] He also led the effort to scrap a municipal bylaw that forced stores to close at 6 p.m. He chose not to run for reelection in 2000, joining a private law firm and opening a boutique on Sussex Drive in Ottawa with his boyfriend. He closed the store 3 years after.

He was also appointed as Chair of the Board of Directors of the Ottawa Community Housing Corporation in 2000 after leaving politics, but was fired from this position, along with the rest of the Board, after a 2004 dispute with city council.[3]

In addition to his work at the University of Ottawa, he has been working with local media (CBC, Radio-Canada and the French-language paper LeDroit) as a municipal affairs columnist.

References

  1. "Councillor just happens to be francophone, male and gay." Randall Denley. The Ottawa Citizen. Jun 23, 1995. pg. B.1
  2. "Committee seeks answers to prostitution problems; Legalizing trade would save lives, coucillor claims." Bob Harvey. The Ottawa Citizen. Sep 10, 1995. pg. A.7
  3. "Housing board fired for letting conditions deteriorate: Ousted chairman breaks into tears." James Gordon. The Ottawa Citizen. Jul 15, 2004. pg. C.1.Fro
Preceded by
Nancy Mitchell
(St. George's Ward)
City councillors from Bruyère-Strathcona Ward
1994-2000
Succeeded by
Madeleine Meilleur (Rideau-Vanier)
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