Rideau-Jock Ward (Ward 21) is a city ward located in Ottawa, Ontario. Situated in the rural south end of the city, the ward includes rural areas west of the Rideau River and the communities of Manotick, Richmond, North Gower, Munster, Kars, Fallowfield, Ashton and Burritts Rapids as well as the former Goulbourn Township south and west of Stittsville.

Rideau-Jock
Location within Ottawa
Location within Ottawa
Coordinates: 45°06′N 75°47′W / 45.100°N 75.783°W / 45.100; -75.783
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
CityOttawa
Government
 • CouncillorDavid Brown
Population
 (2022)[1]
 • Total30,864
Languages (2016)
 • English88.4%
 • French6.6%

History

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The ward was created following the area's amalgamation into Ottawa in 2001, and first contested in 2000. Prior to amalgamation, this area was represented on Regional council by Western Townships Ward. Until 2006, the ward was known as Rideau Ward, containing the former Rideau Township. In 2006, the ward increased in size to contain the rural parts of the former Goulbourn Township (excluding Stittsville, which became the new Stittsville Ward), due to population growth in Stittsville. At this time, the ward was re-named Rideau-Goulbourn Ward. In 2014, the new Blackstone subdivision was transferred from Rideau-Goulbourn Ward to Stittsville Ward.

Following the George Floyd protests in 2020, there were calls to re-name this ward due to Goulbourn's namesake, Henry Goulburn's attachment to slavery in the 19th century.[2][3] The ward name was ultimately changed, with "Goulbourn" being replaced by "Jock", for the Jock River which flows through the former Goulbourn Township.

Regional councillors

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Rideau Township formed as an amalgamation of Malborough and North Gower Township in 1974.

  1. Bill Tupper (1974-1978, Mayor of Rideau)
  2. Dave Bartlett (1978-1985, Mayor of Rideau)
  3. Glenn Brooks (1986-1991, Mayor of Rideau)
  4. James Stewart (1992-1994, Mayor of Rideau)
  5. Betty Hill (1995-2000, Western Townships Ward)

City councillors

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Since the amalgamation of Rideau Township into the City of Ottawa, its constituents have elected the following to the Ottawa City Council:

Ottawa City Councillors for Rideau-Goulbourn
No. Years Name
1 2001–2010 Glenn Brooks
2 2010–2022 Scott Moffatt
Ward re-named Rideau-Jock
3 2022–present David Brown

Election results

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City council
Candidate Votes %
Glenn Brooks 3444 65.10
James Stewart 1846 34.90
City council
Candidate Votes %
Glenn Brooks 2765 62.68
Paul Paton 1646 37.32%
City council
Candidate Votes %
Glenn Brooks 4678 44.41
Scott Moffatt 3205 30.43
Iain McCallum 1345 12.77
Jim Stewart 1305 12.39
City council
Candidate Votes %
Scott Moffatt 5048 52.64
Glenn Brooks 2539 26.48
Bruce Webster 1181 12.32
Iain McCallum 563 5.87
Bruce Chrustie 258 2.69
City council
Candidate Vote %
    Scott Moffatt 5,137 62.26
    Daniel Scharf 3,114 37.74
Ottawa mayor (Ward results)
Candidate Vote %
    Jim Watson 4,771 58.58
    Mike Maguire 3,191 39.18
    Rebecca Pyrah 45 0.55
    Darren W. Wood 36 0.44
    Anwar Syed 35 0.43
    Robert White 32 0.39
    Bernard Couchman 19 0.23
    Michael St. Arnaud 15 0.18
City council
Candidate Vote %
    Scott Moffatt 5,080 55.81
    David Brown 4,023 44.19
2022 Ottawa municipal election: Rideau—Jock Ward
Candidate Popular vote Expenditures
Votes % ±%
David Brown 6,901 66.64 +22.45
Leigh-Andrea Brunet 1,654 15.97
Kevin Setia 1,201 11.60
Patty Searl 349 3.37
Michael J. Nowak 251 2.42
Total valid votes 10,356 98.03
Total rejected, unmarked and declined votes 208 1.97
Turnout 10,564 48.09 +1.89
Eligible voters 21,966
Note: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.)
and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates.
Sources:[4]

References

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  1. ^ "Rural Rideau-Jock ward looking for new voice". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2022-09-02. Archived from the original on 2022-11-19.
  2. ^ "Black leaders back councillor's bid to change ward's name". CBC.
  3. ^ "Councillor plans to rename Rideau-Goulbourn ward because of namesake's slavery ties". Ottawa Citizen.
  4. ^ "2022 Election Results". Elections Ottawa. Retrieved October 25, 2022.
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