New to Council this year was Helen Laroque in Ward 3. After John Schmal’s lengthy career on Council of five terms, the longstanding Alderman retired and left a void that saw 15 people initially register by September 2004. Four candidates would not make it to election day, though this still left Ward 3 as the most contested Ward, with a certain future mayor of Calgary, Naheed Nenshi, in the running. He would come in fourth, with 13.2 per cent of the vote, with Helen Larocque winning with 21.3 per cent. Another runner-up was Jim Stevenson, who would later go on to defeat Larocque in the 2007 election.
Larocque focused on quality of life-related issues, notably a sour gas well operated by Nexen near the Ward 3 neighbourhood of Martindale, which was up for lease renewal by the end of 2007. Larocque argued that the well was holding back valuable development land and that in 2005, Nexen had to begin the process of shutting down the well and begin to remediate it. A decision was made in August 2005 to reject the lease renewal of the well.
Even before becoming an Alderman, Larocque was heavily involved in the community. While born and raised in Ottawa, Larocque moved to Calgary in the ‘80s and started two businesses, while also working with the Martindale community association. After the election, candidates had to disclose how much money they had raised and spent in their campaigns, and Larocque was one of the most efficient campaigners in that election, having raised the third-least amount of money, and spent the third-least on the campaign itself. Only Bob Hawkesworth and Margot Aftergood raised less, and only Hawkesworth and Ric McIver spent less.
Larocque, whose first name was printed interchangeably as Helen or Helene in the Herald, did have a productive term on Council; she voted against a tax hike in 2005, and advocated to her colleagues for improved safety on the Deerfoot after a tragic crash.
2007:
After the previous term, which saw six women elected but only five serve their term, only three women were elected in 2007, with Helen Larocque and Madeleine King losing their wards to Jim Stevenson and John Mar, respectively. Margot Aftergood never served on Council and resigned shortly after swearing in, and was replaced in a 2005 byelection by Andre Chabot. Linda Fox-Mellway, Diane Colley-Urquhart and Druh Farrell would be the only ones to win their election, giving Council at least a seasoned presence of women. Fox-Mellway had been on Council since 1995, Farrell since 2001 and Colley-Urquhart since 2000, after Patti Grier’s abrupt departure from Council. Druh Farrell ran away with her re-election, winning just shy of 69 per cent of the vote, and both Colley-Urquhart and Fox-Mellway were acclaimed, meaning they ran without competition.
There were some upsides to the election, though. It saw nearly double the turnout of the previous election, which had the lowest turnout in Calgary’s history. The 2007 election did see a number of women run. Sandy Jenkins and Elizabeth Fielding ran for mayor, coming in third and seventh places, respectively. Jennifer Banks ran against long-time Alderman Dale Hodges and placed second in the ward, Evonne Whelan ran against Brian Pincott and came second, too. Women ran in just about every ward in the 2007 election, but the results were lacking for them.
2007 would be Linda Fox-Mellway’s last time on Council, as she would run one last time in 2010 but lose out to a current Councillor. Leading into her fifth term, Fox-Mellway was touted as being able to effectively get things done quietly, and was an important part of the City’s budgeting strategy as chair of the finance committee. She was also involved in developing a solution to a space-sharing agreement between the old downtown library and Bow Valley College.
This election would also be Madeleine King’s last. King, the two-term Ward 8 Alderman, had began the 2004-2007 term battling cancer, and combined with a lot of issues surrounding the rapid growth in the Beltline, had a tough term. Shifting her image away from an arts and society-based image, King started focusing on fiscal issues in the rapidly changing and dynamic Ward 8. King was pressed to address property taxes, crime and homelessness in the inner city, while also dealing with parking issues, and a controversy surrounding a halfway house that was forced to relocate into a wealthier part of the Ward, upsetting some residents.
2010:
The decade came to an end with the 2010 election, which saw three women win council seats: Druh Farrell and Diane Colley-Urquhart, who retained their seats, and newcomer Gael MacLeod, who took Ward 4 from Bob Hawkesworth as he ran for mayor. He would come in fifth place, taking 0.4 per cent of the vote despite having pulled out of the race to endorse the third placed candidate, Barb Higgins. Linda Fox-Mellway lost her seat on Council to current Ward 14 Councillor Peter Demong.