Bryan Paterson

Bryan Paterson (born March 16, 1977) is a Canadian politician serving as the 96th and current Mayor of Kingston, Ontario.


Bryan Paterson
96th Mayor of Kingston, Ontario
Assumed office
December 1, 2014
Preceded byMark Gerretsen
Personal details
Born (1977-03-16) March 16, 1977
Newmarket, Ontario
Alma mater

Career

Paterson is an economics professor at the Royal Military College of Canada.[1][2]

Mayor

Paterson became mayor of Kingston after winning the election on October 27, 2014[2] with 38.15% of the vote.[3] The first meeting of City Council was on December 2, 2014.[2]

Paterson was re-elected in 2018.[4]

Personal life

Paterson attends Third Day Worship Centre, a church that is non-denominational and evangelical.[5]

gollark: So it could download a manifest file, see "hmm, this is version 1247.-006.3a and 1248.3033030.æææ is available, I must now update these files".
gollark: I would probably just go for automatically generated machine-readable changelogs of some form.
gollark: *Currently* I can't do half of those because there's no actual versioning mechanism, and no way to compile stuff because it is all run straight off pastebin.
gollark: Having version control would probably make some potatOS things I've wanted possible, such as verified boot where potatOS ensures that the currently installed stuff matches a checksum, compressed updates, and updates which work if I change a non-core file (the updater logic is very weird).
gollark: And I think cloud catcher.

References

  1. webmaster.rmc (2015-03-23). "Bryan Paterson". www.rmc-cmr.ca. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  2. Schliesmann, Paul (October 27, 2014). "Bryan Paterson prevails". Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  3. Sobel, Chloe (October 28, 2015). "Bryan Paterson elected Kingston's new mayor". The Journal. Queen's University. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  4. "Get to know your 2018 to 2022 council: Mayor Bryan Paterson". Kingstonist - Kingston News | Kingston, ON headlines. 2018-11-15. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
  5. Schliesmann, Paul (October 10, 2014). "Candidate's church videos removed from YouTube". Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
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