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November 8, 2002
Two small-business owners
win Iqaluit council seats
Elisapee Sheutiapik
and Doug Lem dominate nine-person election
Elisapee Sheutiapik
gets a much-anticipated phone call: her campaign manager tells her she won the
most votes in the city's byelection.
(PHOTO KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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DENISE
RIDEOUT
Coffee-shop owner Elisapee
Sheutiapik and restaurant-owner Doug Lem are Iqaluits newest city councillors.
The two came out on top
in the citys byelection, held on Nov. 4 to fill two council seats that
have been vacant for months.
Sheutiapik and Lem beat
out seven other candidates vying for the two spots.
Sheutiapik, who owns the
Grind and Brew cafe, came out on top with 432 votes.
Lem, who runs Chicken and
Ribs, Nunavut Catering and Northern Lights cafe, followed behind with 356 votes.
The other candidates, a
mix of longtime residents, newcomers to Iqaluit, professionals, government employees
and former council members, didnt fare nearly as well.
The official results were:
Marje Lalonde 148 votes
Gideonie
Joamie 132 votes
Nancy Gillis
106 votes
Robert
Billard 85 votes
Brad Hall
61 votes
Alden Williams
53 votes
Tom
Bragard 40 votes
With his win in the Nov.
4 byelection, Doug Lem will sit for a second time on Iqaluit city council.
(PHOTO DENISE RIDEOUT)
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The voter turnout was 31
per cent. Of the 2,440 Iqaluit residents who were eligible to cast a ballot,
only 754 did so.
Some residents and candidates
commented there was little election fever in the capital city.
While candidates had a
little more than a month to campaign, posters and billboards slowly started
popping up just two weeks before the byelection.
Two days before voting
day, candidate Brad Hall took his campaign high in the sky. Hall, who works
at Ninety North Construction Ltd., climbed in a crane that lifted him above
the Four Corners. He waved to a group of pedestrians who gawked up at him.
Despite this and other
campaigning efforts the nine candidates, some Iqaluit residents were
still in the dark about the byelection.
Candidate Sheutiapik and
her official agent, Hannah Uniuqsaraq, spent most of their campaign time telling
residents the simple facts. "The hardest part was informing people that
there was actually an election going on and who was running," Uniuqsaraq
said.
But their campaigning paid
off. Sheutiapik took more votes than any other candidate.
Shortly after 9 p.m. on
Nov. 4, Uniuqsaraq, who had been staked out at the polling station, called Sheutiapik
with the good news.
Sheutiapik, her husband
Brian Twerdin, Iqaluit MLA Ed Picco, and several Grind and Brew employees set
up a make-shift campaign headquarters at her cafe.
When Uniuqsaraq phoned
with the election results, Sheutiapik let out a giggle, turned to the group
and announced, "She said I got the most votes."
The news sparked a round
of applause and a lot of cheering. Sheutiapik then called her seven-year-old
son Iola, who said it was "cool" that his mother had won.
Soon after, Uniuqsaraq
ran into the cafe, the official results in her hand. "It was so nerve-wracking,"
she said of the wait at the polling station.
Sheutiapik, who ran on
a platform of improving life in the community and focusing more on Iqaluits
youth, was ecstatic about the win and a little relieved. "My stomach
is not doing flip-flops anymore," she said with a smile.
Candidate Doug Lems
celebration was a quieter one. He spent the entire day working and was heading
to bed when he received the news of his win.
"I was really busy
all day. Work kept me busy and kept my mind off the election," he said.
This will be Lems
second time around as a city councillor for Iqaluit. He sat on council from
1997 to 2000.
Some residents questioned
Lem, who now runs three food businesses in town, whether he really had time
to devote to city council. He responded "I always say if you want to get
something done, give it to a busy person."
In his election campaign,
Lem said he wants to tackle many of Iqaluits social problems, including
homelessness.
Hes keen to get
started.
"I know theres
going to be the forced growth issues to deal with, like garbage and paving.
But I still want to put the social issues on the table," he said.
With their win, Sheutiapik
and Lem will fill two council seats that have been conspicuously empty for months.
One seat has been vacant
since December 2001, after councillor Mathew Spence left Iqaluit to live in
Yellowknife. The second seat was left empty in August when councillor Simon
Nattaq resigned.
Lem and Sheutiapik will
be officially sworn in at the next council meeting, scheduled for Nov. 12.
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