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Councillor Norm Kelly is a
trained Historian. He studied Canadian political history at the
University of Western Ontario (undergraduate) and Carleton and
Queen's universities (post-graduate).
Among his most
important accomplishments was his two year research for the
best-selling books by Pierre Berton in the field of Canadian
History: The National Dream and The Last
Spike. The National Dream won Canada's most prestigious
literary prize, The Governor General's Award, and was transferred to
television by the CBC in a very popular, award-winning documentary
series of the same name.
In researching these two
volumes, Mr. Kelly was the first historian to detail the
contribution of Chinese workers toward the construction of the
Canadian Pacific Railway (the CPR) in the province of British
Columbia. The importance of Chinese labour to the building of the
railroad that functioned as Canada's economic and political spine
for the first 100 years of Confederation was recently recognized by
the erection of a statue in their honour in Toronto by the Chinese
community of that city.
Shortly after completing his
research on the CPR in 1973, Mr. Kelly was appointed Chairman
of the History Department (Upper Canada College
(UCC)). Canada's internationally renowned private college.
During his stay at UCC, Mr. Kelly also served
three successive terms in political office as
an Alderman on the Municipal Council of the then
Borough of Scarborough (1974 - 1980).
In 1980, Mr.
Kelly resigned from Upper Canada College when he won a seat
as a Liberal in the Federal House of Commons under the
leadership of the Right Honourable Pierre Elliot
Trudeau.
As a Member of Parliament, Mr. Kelly was
twice appointed Parliamentary Secretary: first, to the
Ministry of Supply and Services and then to the President of the
Treasury Board. In this capacity, Mr. Kelly was given the
responsibility of guiding the Government's CF-18 Fighter contract
and reorganization of the Crown Corporations (Bill C-124) through
the House of Commons and its Committees.
Mr. Kelly also
served on a number of Standing Committees of the House of Commons,
among them: (1) Energy, Mines and Resources (through which he met
the leading businessmen in Canada in this field); (2) Industry Trade
and Commerce; and, (3) Public Accounts, which monitors, with the
Assistance of the Auditor General, the expenditures of the
Government of Canada.
Of particular note in Mr. Kelly's
parliamentary career was his appointment in 1983 to
the Special Committee on Visible Minorities in Canadian
Society. This Committee was charged with the responsibility
of doing the initial research on the status of visible minorities in
Canadian society. Mr. Kelly played a leading role in that Committee,
whose deliberations took it across Canada and into all of its
communities.
Mr. Kelly also played a prominent role in
preparing the committee's report, Equality
Now, containing eighty ground-breaking recommendations
aimed at protecting visible minority cultures in Canada while
integrating their members into the Canadian
mainstream.
After the defeat of the Liberal
Government in 1984, Mr. Kelly opted to go into business in
Scarborough in Real Estate as an agent and broker until 1994, when
he returned to public office at the regional level as a Metro
Councillor in the Government of Canada's largest city,
Metropolitan Toronto.
As a member of the
Metropolitan Council, Councillor Kelly was the Chairman of
the Intergovernmental Affairs Committee.
Since the
amalgamation of the city in 1997, Mr Kelly has served on the Toronto
Harbour Commission, the powerful Policy and Finance Committee,
Chaired the Nominations Committee and divided his regular standing
committee time between Community Services and the Economic
Development Committees.
Mr. Kelly is a firm believer
that we need to know what others are doing so we can learn from
their mistakes and emulate their successes. To this end, Mr. Kelly
has visited Asia several times, visiting over two dozen cities in
China, Korea & Taiwan.
Mr. Kelly has been
reelected four times since the amalgamation election of 1997.
In each of the elections; Mr. Kelly's popular vote percentage has
increased significantly. In the last election, Mr. Kelly captured
79.04% of the eligible votes.
As a member of the City
of Toronto Council, Councillor Kelly presently sits on the following
committees:
- Executive Committee
- Scarborough Community
Council
- Parks and Environment Committee,
Chair
- Toronto Transit Commission
- Toronto Centre for the Arts, Board of
Directors
- Kennedy Road BIA
- Canadian National Exhibition
Association, Municipal Section
- Toronto Community Housing Corporation,
Board of Directors
- Toronto Transit Infrastructure
Limited, Director and Co-Chair
Norm has 2 children from a previous
marriage and 2 step sons with his wife, Charlotte (Ting Pei
Pei).
Norm’s Hobbies ¦ Norm Loves People
¦ Norm Helping You Celebrate
¦ Norm’s Staff
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