Westmount Mayor Peter Trent stepping down after quarter century - Action News
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Montreal

Westmount Mayor Peter Trent stepping down after quarter century

Westmounts longtime mayor, Peter Trent, announced Monday he is stepping down after 25 years as mayor or during the merger years "mayor in exile."

First elected to council in 1983, Trent says demerger victory, sports complex among key achievements

Peter Trent said he will be available to advise whoever is elected interim mayor during a transition period. (Radio-Canada)

Westmount's longtime mayor, Peter Trent, saysgetting the city its independence back after it was forced to merge into theMontreal "megacity"is the achievement for which he'll be most remembered.

Trent, 71, announced Monday he would step down after 25 years as mayor "or mayor in exile, during the mergers," he said.

Between 1999 and 2004, Trent was fighting to prevent the mergerand then, once it happened,to getWestmountits municipal status back.

Also high on hislist of achievements is the construction of theWestmount RecreationCentre the first underground arena in the world, which was completed in 2013.

Trent said he trusts his instincts, and he thinksthis is the right time to pass the role of mayor onto someone younger.

"I didn't want to get stale, and I'm really quite happy with what I've done," Trent said.

Municipal politics 'contaminated terrain'

In his years as mayor, Trent has earned the nickname "Mr. Clean," for standing up to corruption.

He said it's difficult to say if Montreal is less corrupt now than it was years ago, since"corruption has always almost been endemic in the city of Montreal."

He said it's important that politicians never let their guard down.

One of his most memorable feuds was withformer Laval mayor Gilles Vaillancourt, once known as the "King of Laval."

In 2010, Vaillancourt was being investigated by provincial police following serious allegations of improprieties.

Vaillancourt's integrity was under serious scrutiny, so Trent demanded he step down from the executive of the Union des Municipalits du Qubec(UMQ), on which they both served.

When Vaillancourt refused, Trent stepped down himself, saying the members of the UMQ's executive committee should always be models ofexemplary behaviour.

Gilles King of Laval Vaillancourt resigned as mayor in November 2012 amid corruption allegations. He had been Laval's mayor for 23 years. ((Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press))

When Vaillancourt was arrested in 2013 and charged with fraud, breach of trust and conspiracy to commit fraud, Trent called Quebec's municipal arena "contaminated terrain."

In December2016,Vaillancourtwas sentenced to six years in prison.

Trent says it's hard to weed out corruption completely, blaming a "lack of chutzpah in the structures in the city of Montreal" that allows it to grow.

Hewants to see more politiciansspeaking out against corruption so people don't lose faith in the system.

"I hope a few people will look at me and think, you can retain your ethics and be an elected official," said Trent. "It is possible."

Unfinished business

Trent isn't planning on leaving the city and will be available to help in the transition to an interim mayor.

An election is coming up in November, and Trent said he wants there to be a transition period before a new mayor iselected.

He wouldn't comment on who he thinks shouldtake his place, but he said he is leaving with the knowledge that the city will be in good hands.

He said that hissuccessor will find out that while Westmount isn't a hotbed of political activism, its citizens can still be quite demanding.

"I liked working for the Westmount citizenry. They certainly are articulate and make their views known," Trent said.

Whoever takes over the mayor's jobcan expect some headaches over new real estate developments around the McGill University Health Centre.

Trent says some residents are concerned about "overbuilding," as high rises pop up.

The Westmount greenhouse, which opened in 1927, closed in 2015. (Kalina Laframboise/CBC)

Westmount's 1927 greenhouse also sits closed, awaiting extensive renovations.

"Unfortunately, there are no greenhouse builders around," Trent said.

What's next?

Trent said he expectsWestmountcity council will ask him to bow out in a week or two.

Trent has served five terms as mayor, starting in 1991. Prior to that he was acouncillor,starting in 1983.

Trent says he hasn't thought too much about what to do next but is toying with the idea of writing another book.

In 2012,McGill-Queen'sUniversity Press published his bookThe Merger Delusion:How Swallowing Its Suburbs Made an Even Bigger Mess of Montreal.

Trent said he might try his hand at fiction next.

With files from CBC's Jay Turnbull