Catherine McKenney is trying not to think about making history - Action News
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OttawaCITY ELECTIONS 2022

Catherine McKenney is trying not to think about making history

With less than two weeks until election day, CBC Ottawa is profiling several of the candidates vying to be the city's next mayor. Today: two-term city councillor Catherine McKenney.

If elected, 61-year-old would be first trans non-binary mayor of major Canadian city

A politician holds a door to their office open, while being framed by various election signs and other election materials.
Ottawa mayoral candidate Catherine McKenney stands in the doorway of their Wellington Street West campaign office in late September. McKenney would be the first openly trans non-binary mayor of a large Canadian city if they win on Oct. 24. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

With less than two weeks until election day, CBC Ottawa is profiling several of the candidates vying to be the city's next mayor. Today: two-term city councillor Catherine McKenney.


It was a spur-of-the-moment decision, one that thanks to a dying phonebattery almost didn't happen.

This winter, Catherine McKenneybeamed into city council from part of the downtown that had been overtaken bydemonstratorslivid aboutCOVID-19mandates and the federal government.

The Somerset ward councillor wanted to make the raucous reality of theFreedom Convoy protestsand their impact on downtown residents crystalclear to the rest of council.

"People just needed to see it. It really was a last-minute decision. I actually got accosted by someone when I was on tape,"said McKenney, reflecting last month from the calmer confines of a Wellington West coffee shop neartheir campaign office.

It was a decision that also elevated McKenney's public profile beyond Ottawa as one of the faces of the resistance to the convoy, and one that may have helped vault them into the conversation as a contender to replace outgoing Mayor Jim Watson.

WATCH | Calling in from the convoy:

What is the plan?: Ottawa councillor joins meeting from downtown street crowded with protesters

3 years ago
Duration 2:20
Coun. Catherine McKenney joined Wednesdays city council meeting from a downtown street packed with trucks and other vehicles, asking to know how police intend to resolve the situation.

But at the time, McKenney's reasons were more basic.

"Ihadn't given it much thought. I just was desperate. I couldn't have another weekend of it."

When you speak to McKenney's friends andcolleagues, "desperate" isn't exactly a word that gets usedto describe the 61-year-old grandparent, ultramarathon runner, two-term councillor and Ottawa mayoral candidate.

Instead, they say things like "grounded," "collaborative" and "competent." They cite McKenney'sdeep understandingofmunicipalbureaucracy, a resultof several years spentin the deputy city manager's office.

And if some who spoke to CBC wonder whetherMcKenneymight need to tone down their passionate advocacy in the mayor's chair (McKenney uses they/them pronouns and is trans non-binary), they also laud their willingness tostand up for those beliefswhile remainingrealistic about what can be accomplished.

"They're very authentic. They are who they say they are," said Simone Thibault, who met McKenneythree decades agowhen the pair worked to get the names of murdered womenand girls inscribed onamonument at Minto Park.

"Catherine is smart and aware and tuned in," wrote Kitchisippi Coun. Jeff Leiper, one of McKenney's frequent collaborators on city issues, in an email.

"There aren't any elephants in the room when talking with Catherine. It's all on the table."

McKenney has campaigned on promises to freeze transit fares, end chronic homelessness and hold annual property tax hikes to three per cent. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

From small-town Quebec to the nation's capital

Born in Fort Coulonge, Que., into a family of loggers, McKenneycame to Ontario as a teenager. They movedfirst to Pembroke, Ont., for high school McKenney'sfather taught forestry there for Algonquin College before arriving in the nation's capital to studypolitical science at the University of Ottawa.

After graduating, McKenneygot a job reading news articles verbatim on cable television for people who were blind or partly blind.

By the late 1990s, they'd found their way intomunicipal politics,working for a pair of Ottawa city councillors: Alex Munter, currently the head of CHEO but then a councillor in suburban Kanata,and Diane Holmes, whom they'd later succeed as the representative for Somerset ward.

McKenney would work for Holmes in the morning and Munter in the afternoon. They'd ride the bus to city hall from Kanata, where for part of that time they lived at Lao Village, a housing co-op in the west-end suburb.

"I thought the world of both of them," recalled McKenney."It really gave me an insight into the competing needs of suburban and urban neighbourhoods but also the similarities."

McKenneyleft municipalpolitics in 2004 to serve as a legislative assistant for former federal NDP leader Ed Broadbent at that time the MP for Ottawa Centre and then his successor in the riding,Paul Dewar. But by2008, they wereback at city hall, working as a senior advisor tothen-deputy city manager Steve Kanellakos.

While McKenney feels they were "pretty good" at the non-partisan job,it wasn't always easy to keep their own vision for the city to themselves.

"I could see that some of the decisions that council was making at the time, cuts to transit, cuts to recreation services, weren't being made in the best interests of people," McKenney said.

It was during that time that McKenney began seriously considering their own council run. And when Holmes announced she was retiring ahead of the 2014 election, McKenney put theirname on the Somerset ward ballot and handily bested the11-candidatefield with more than 40 per cent of the vote.

"Most people run for mayor, but they know nothing about the [inner workings of the] city," said Holmes, who's now helping withMcKenney'selection campaign.

"And it's unusual to have someone who understands the bureaucratic point of view and how that operates and is knowledgeable about the public."

WATCH | Their 2014 victory party:

RAW | Somerset's Catherine McKenney, Diane Holmes

10 years ago
Duration 2:37
Somerset ward's new and former councillors talk about the importance of community experience.

Fighting for the library and LRT

Over the next four years, McKenney worked to expand streetside patiosand advocated for better cycling connections in the downtown.They fought unsuccessfully to build Ottawa's new central library in the city's traditional core, rather than at LeBreton Flats.

They were re-elected in 2018 this time in a veritable landslide, raking in roughly three-quarters of the votes.

It would be a busy second term.

When the launch of Ottawa's LRT network descended into a cavalcade of shutdowns and derailments, McKenney whose ward the light rail line cuts through became the first councillor to propose a public inquiry to get to the bottom ofeverything.

An inquiry, called by the province and not council,wrapped up this summer, with a full report slated to be delivered to Ontario's transportation minister by the end of November.

Then this January, the trucker convoy protesting mandates related to COVID-19 flooded intothe nation's capital,parking their big rigs and trailers on the streets of McKenney'sconstituents andblasting their horns day and night.

McKenney (second from right, no mask) participates in a 'community safety walk' with Centretown residents during this winter's convoy protests that took over downtown Ottawa. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

That first weekend, McKenneysaid, the situation was so tense that they didn't leave their home.

"I was genuinely afraid. And then I thoughtI had to do something," said McKenney, who just weeks earlier had declared their mayoral bid. "So I started to go down [to the protests]. I was always careful."

McKenneyarranged communalwalks through the downtown with residents who felt unsafe. They dealt with countless emailsand phone calls from people complaining about noise, exhaust fumes and racistbehaviour.

For Thibault, who'd retired just afew months earlier as head of theCentretownCommunity Health Centre,McKenneymade a huge difference during the occupation byjust being present and visible.

"They were always there," said Thibault. "They had our back. They understood what we were going through. They were with us on the street, paying attention and trying to make things better."

Three politicians sit at a table. The middle one is speaking on a microphone.
McKenney at a debate on environmental issues on Sept. 28, with other mayoral candidates Mark Sutcliffe, left, and Bob Chiarelli, right. (Patrick Louiseize/CBC)

Coming out twice

Of course, in the minds of many people, McKenney's two terms around the council table and now,their bid for mayor is as notable for what they accomplished as for who they are.

When McKenneywas elected eight years ago, they became the first non-male openlyLGBTcouncillor in Ottawa's history. Then early in their second term, they tweeted that they also identified as transnon-binary.

McKenney says they'veidentified that way for yearsand it was only in 2019 amidst a "realuptick in transphobiaeverywhere" that they decided it was important to state so publicly.

"It went a bit viral! It surprised me.I guess it was kind of my second coming out, without me realizing it," they said.

"Itdoesn't feel comfortable identifying as 'she' or 'he.' So 'they'and 'them' feels comfortable. But also I know there are a lot [of people] who struggle with it every day, who may feel uncomfortable coming out at work. And when you have a public platform the way I do, I think you have to use it sometimes for public good."

More than three decades earlier, McKenneylived throughtheir first coming out as a young gay person in their 20s. McKenney was atuniversity, and while they weren't intimately connected withthe local LGBT scene, they did have a few friends they could bond with.

"It was exciting! I mean, it was frightening at the time, too. I experienced a lot of homophobia," McKenneysaid.

"I always say, you know, the first time I marched in Pride, there might have been 200 of us and nobodywas out cheering."

Today, McKenney lives with their wife of 17 years, also named Catharine,and their menagerie of pets: two dogs, two cats, and one rat. (The larger animals are all rescues, McKenney notes. The rat, not so much.)

Even during a hectic mayoral campaign, they try to wind down together with some television at the end of the day; McKenney says their latest obsession has beenDopesick, the acclaimed miniseries about the U.S.opioid crisis.

People wave flags, hold rainbow-coloured signs and smile in the middle of an outdoor celebration.
Catherine McKenney, right, poses with their wife of 17 years, Catharine Vandelinde, and one of their dogs at the 2022 Pride festivities in Ottawa. (Dakota Burgin)

If McKenneydoes win on Oct. 24, they'll becomeOttawa's second consecutive openly LGBT mayor Watson came out as gay in 2019 after 40 years of keeping his sexual orientation private and the first openly transnon-binary mayor of a major Canadian city.

McKenney says they're trying to stay focusedon their platform, which includes promises like freezing transit fares, ending chronic homelessness, holding annual property tax hikes to three per cent, and working to makethe Greenbelta national park.

Making history in that way doesn't preoccupy their thoughts thoughit can't help but break throughfrom time to time.

"Every so often, I think, wow, if I'm fortunate enough to be elected, I think it'll be a good thing! It'd be pretty cool!" said McKenney, a few minutes before dashing off to another interview.

"But yeah, I don't [dwell on] it.I only think about the campaign."

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