Whitehorse City Council  | |
|---|---|
| Leadership | |
Mayor  | |
| Structure | |
Seats  | 6 councillors and mayor | 
| Elections | |
Last election  | 2021 | 
Next election  | 2024 | 
| Meeting place | |
| Whitehorse City Hall  Whitehorse, Yukon  | |
| Website | |
| City Council website | |
The Whitehorse City Council is the governing body of the city of Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada. The council consists of a mayor plus six councillors elected at large. The current mayor of Whitehorse is Dan Curtis, since 2012.[1]
Governance of the city was temporarily transferred to a taxpayer advisory committee led by Joseph Oliver for part of 1973, after five of the city's six councillors resigned on July 9, 1973 in protest against a jurisdictional dispute with the Yukon Territorial Council, leaving the council without a quorum to conduct city business.[2] A by-election was held on September 20, 1973 to elect a new council.[3]
Council composition
2021-2024 City Council
| Name | Position | 
|---|---|
| Laura Cabott | Mayor | 
| Melissa Murray | Councillor | 
| Michelle Friesen | Councillor | 
| Dan Boyd | Councillor | 
| Jocelyn Curteanu | Councillor | 
| Ted Laking | Councillor | 
| Kirk Cameron | Councillor | 
2018-2021 City Council
| Name | Position | 
|---|---|
| Dan Curtis | Mayor | 
| Jan Stick | Councillor | 
| Jocelyn Curteanu | Councillor | 
| Steve Roddick | Councillor | 
| Samson Hartland | Councillor | 
| Laura Cabott | Councillor | 
| Dan Boyd | Councillor | 
References
- ↑ "Dan Curtis elected mayor of Whitehorse". CBC News, October 19, 2012.
 - ↑ "Five out of six Whitehorse aldermen resign over harassment, court battle with Yukon". The Globe and Mail, July 11, 1973.
 - ↑ Yukon History: 1973. Hougen Group of Companies.
 
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.