1963 Edmonton municipal election

The 1963 municipal election was held October 16, 1963 to elect a mayor and six aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and four trustees to sit on each of the public and separate school boards. The electorate also decided three plebiscite questions.

There were ten aldermen on city council, but four of the positions were already filled: Frederick John Mitchell, Ethel Wilson, Morris Weinlos, and Vincent Dantzer were all elected to two-year terms in 1962 and were still in office. George Prudham was also elected to a two-year term in 1961, but resigned.

There were seven trustees on the public school board, but three of the positions were already filled: James Falconer, Milton Lazerte, and Helen Sinclair were elected to two-year terms in 1962 and were still in office. The same was true on the separate board, where Edward Stack, Jean McDonald, and Bill Diachuk were continuing.

All elected officials were elected to one-year terms in this election, in preparation for the changeover to a new system, whereby elections would be held only every two years with all officials elected to two-year terms.

In addition to choosing members for City Council, citizens were asked to vote on three plebiscites. Two of the plebiscites were related, asking if the city should borrow money to purchase a four city block parcel of land in downtown Edmonton, and if the city should borrow money to build a sports and convention complex on that land. These two plebiscites were rejected. The site under consideration, on the north side of Jasper Avenue, is now occupied by the Citadel Theatre (opened 1976), Sun Life Place (1978), and Canada Place (1988). Citizens did agree to a sports/convention centre in a 1968 plebiscite, but later rejected the specific 1970 Omniplex project plebiscite. The eventual (1983) scaled down Edmonton Convention Centre was built a few metres south of the 1963 proposal site, on the cliff side of Jasper Avenue.

Voter turnout

There were 98052 ballots cast out of 173901 eligible voters, for a voter turnout of 56.4%.

Results

(bold indicates elected, italics indicate incumbent)

Mayor

Party Candidate Votes %
IndependentWilliam Hawrelak52,34053.80%
Civic Government AssociationStanley Milner44,95046.20%

Aldermen

Party Candidate Votes Elected
Civic Government AssociationMcKim Ross53,516Y
Civic Government AssociationJohn Leslie Bodie43,186Y
Civic Government AssociationGordon McClary41,248Y
United Voters AssociationIvor Dent41,044Y
United Voters AssociationJulia Kiniski36,861Y
Citizens CouncilEd Leger35,927Y
Civic Government AssociationMurray Hamilton35,725
Civic Government AssociationRobert Brower33,408
United Voters AssociationAllan Welsh30,611
Civic Government AssociationFred Kurylo28,654
United Voters AssociationNorbert Berkowitz26,246
United Voters AssociationKenneth McAuley26,153
United Voters AssociationR. J. Dunseith20,819
IndependentJohn Sehn14,369

Public School Trustees

Party Candidate Votes Elected
Better Education AssociationEarl Buxton33,699Y
Better Education AssociationWalter Gainer32,735Y
Quality Education CouncilEdith Rogers32,666Y
Civic Government AssociationVernon Johnson25,366Y
Civic Government AssociationP. William Jones24,538
Better Education AssociationHerbert Meltzer21,560
Better Education AssociationJohn Bracco21,334
Civic Government AssociationBruce Mathew19,179
Quality Education CouncilLee Fosmark11,741
Quality Education CouncilArnold Rapske11,015
Quality Education CouncilGeorge Edward Machon8,357

Separate (Catholic) School Trustees

Party Candidate Votes Elected
IndependentOrest Demco11,581Y
IndependentA. A. Gorman9,441Y
IndependentG. R. Boileau9,689Y
IndependentB. Feehan9,147Y
IndependentJohn Barbeau8,506
IndependentRoy Watson6,103
IndependentHarry Carrigan6,020
IndependentWilliam Betzler5,586

Plebiscites

  • Plebiscite items required a minimum two-thirds "Yes" majority to bring about action

Land Exchange

Are you in favour of the disposition, by exchange, of approximately 1.23 acres of land lying East of Bellamy Hill, approximately .43 acres of which is now designated as Parkland, for approximately 215 acres of land lying in the Southwest section of the City in an area West of Whitemud Creek? The purpose of the exchange is to enable the purchaser to construct a commercial building on the Bellamy Hill site. If the exchange is accepted, the land acquired by the City will be Parkland?[1]

  • Yes
63,344
  • No
26,421

Convention Complex Land Acquisition

Shall Council pass bylaw No. 2454 to borrow by debentures $4,000,000.00 with which to buy the land and buildings between Jasper Avenue and 102nd Avenue and between 97th Street and 99th Street so that a convention centre, an arena for sporting and cultural events and exhibitions, a theatre building, tourist centre and parking garage can be built there as part of the City Centre Development Plan?

  • Yes
33,470
  • No
25,300

Convention Complex

Shall Council pass bylaw No. 2455 to borrow by debentures $10,250,000.00 to construct a convention centre, an arena for sporting and cultural events and exhibitions, a theatre building, tourist centre and parking garage?

  • Yes
30,903
  • No
25,457

Notes

  1. Note that the Land Exchange plebiscite areas convert as: 1.25 acres (0.51 ha), 0.43 acres (0.17 ha) and 215 acres (87 ha).
gollark: Eh. I think it's better than the alternative.
gollark: When people decide to violate that by identifying you in the real world, that is problematic.
gollark: One of the good things about the internet is the ability to have pseudonyms and not be connected to your real-world identity, which allows (some amount of) safety and helps allow freedom of thought.
gollark: And this is probably some weird semantic argument and/or ethical thing more than something you can "logically prove" either way.
gollark: Looking up and compiling information on people for the purpose of identifying them without their consent is *stalkery behavior*, if not doxxing or some sort of criminal thing, even if that information is theoretically public and they *allegedly* haven't released/misused it.

References

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