District Council has adjourned its first inaugural meeting of the 2022-2026 term and officially appointed the next District Chair.
The first order of business was swearing in the twenty-two elected District Councilors, who will now represent the voices of each partner municipality in Muskoka. Amy Back, District Clerk, administered their Oaths of Office to officially commence their term.
This term welcomes 12 returning familiar faces and 10 new members – all who now have seats reserved at the Council table for the next four years.
Welcome: 2022-2026 District Council
- Town of Bracebridge: Rick Maloney, Don Smith, Brenda Rhodes, Tatiana Sutherland
- Township of Georgian Bay: Peter Koetsier, Brian Bochek, Peter Cooper
- Town of Gravenhurst: Heidi Lorenz, Sandy Cairns, Erin Strength, Peter M. Johnston
- Town of Huntsville: Nancy Alcock, Scott Morrison, Dan Armour, Bob Stone
- Township of Lake of Bays: Terry Glover, Robert Lacroix, Mike Peppard
- Township of Muskoka Lakes: Peter Kelley, Guy Burry, Allen Edwards, Ruth Nishikawa
Jeff Lehman Appointed to the Office of the District Chair
The next item on the agenda was to appoint the next District Chair. This critical role and how this position is appointed is prescribed through the Municipal Act and the District’s Procedure By-law. The District Chair acts as the Chief Executive Officer and provides leadership to the affairs of Council – they are the spokesperson for our community and are responsible for maintaining strong relationships with organizations and levels of government, to keep Muskoka visible and a priority, especially on major issues of policy and direction.
Six candidates submitted applications to be considered by District Council and came together at a Meet the Candidates Debate event last week: Curry Clifford, Jeffry Lehman, Terry Pilger, Howard Rosenthal, Don Smith, and Tim Withey.
The twenty-two members of District Council cast their votes via a secret ballot with District Clerk Amy Back and District Solicitor Jamie Clow on hand to monitor and validate the process.
District Council appointed Jeff Lehman to the Office of the District Chair, for the 2022-2026 term.
Mr. John Klinck – who has served as District Chair for the last three consecutive terms and announced his retirement from 28 years of devoted public service, was in attendance to offer his congratulations and powerful words, as he passed the Chain of Office to incoming District Chair Lehman.
As Mayor of Barrie from 2010-2022, Jeff Lehman became a nationally recognized leader for the way he has brought together his community to respond to crises and to confront strategic challenges. An urban planner and economist by background, Jeff and his partner Carolina have four children and a deep love for Muskoka.
“I’m absolutely delighted and honoured to be chosen by District Council to serve as Chair. It’s an enormous task to follow the tremendous leadership of John Klinck and move the District forward, but I hope my experience can support our new Council as we tackle the challenges Muskoka faces and make a positive difference for our residents.”
District Chair Jeff Lehman will lead the next District Council meeting, scheduled on December 19, 2022. Council meetings are held every third Monday of each month and are available for online viewing via webcast at the District of Muskoka’s website at www.muskoka.on.ca.
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Ron Kiplinger says
Does this mean Muskoka will end up looking like Barrie? Now we have an outsider as Chair. What deals were struck? Is Lehman already compromised?
This is exactly why District Chair should be directly elected by the voters.,
jessie rankin says
Maybe Lehman will clean up the place? Haha. Not sure anyone can do the job even if they wanted to. Can some journalist investigate what deal was made to bring in someone from Barrie. Do we really want to look like Barrie? Lehman’s bio above says he’s an urban planner. If Barrie is an example of his urban planning, the Muskoka environment maybe in real trouble.
Sarah Marshall says
Should the tax payer not vote the person in, I don’t understand?
Bracebridge is a co-op, it is owned by the resident taxpayer, you may say some Federal money is involved, guess where that money also comes from.
Governents don’t make money, they collect it, from us.
It’s our town, owned and paid for by us, why are we not allowed to say how it is run?
Tanya Holiday says
The ‘old boys club’ put their preferred candidate in. All the back room deals are detrimental to the voters interests.
Need direct elections. Cut back on what the District does. Let’s have real democracy in Muskoka.