{"id":18969,"date":"2011-02-15T13:33:29","date_gmt":"2011-02-15T18:33:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/?p=18969"},"modified":"2011-02-15T14:07:45","modified_gmt":"2011-02-15T19:07:45","slug":"20110214%e9%ba%a6%e8%80%83%e8%8e%b2%e7%94%9f%e6%97%a5%e5%bf%ab%e4%b9%90%ef%bc%81%e5%af%86%e5%b8%82%e5%b8%82%e9%95%bf90%e5%a4%a7%e5%af%bf%e7%95%99%e4%b8%8b%e4%bc%a0%e5%a5%87","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/?p=18969","title":{"rendered":"20110215\/\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u751f\u65e5\u5feb\u4e50\uff01\u5bc6\u5e02\u5e02\u957f90\u5927\u5bff\u7559\u4e0b\u4f20\u5947"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img id=\"image18974\" src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor1.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor1.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n\u25a0\u5f53\u5e74\u7684\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u7ad9\u5728\u201c\u6b22\u8fce\u5230\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14\u201d\u7684\u6807\u724c\u65c1\u3002\u661f\u62a5\u8d44\u6599\u56fe\u7247<\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image18975\" src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor2.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor2.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n\u25a0\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2 90\u5c81\u751f\u65e5\u5feb\u4e50\uff01\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u5e02\u957f\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u6628\u5929\u6b22\u5ea690\u5c81\u751f\u65e5\uff0c\u5979\u4e0d\u4ec5\u662f\u52a0\u62ff\u5927\u6700\u5e74\u957f\u7684\u5e02\u957f\uff0c1978\u5e74\u51fa\u4efb\u5e02\u957f\u8fc4\u4eca\u7684\u5979\uff0c\u540c\u65f6\u4e5f\u662f\u62c5\u4efb\u5e02\u957f\u65f6\u95f4\u6700\u957f\u7684\u3002\u8fd9\u662f\u5979\u53bb\u5e748\u6708\u4e0e\u603b\u7406\u54c8\u73c0\u5728\u4e00\u8d77\u3002\uff08\u52a0\u901a\u793e\uff09<\/p>\n<p>\u661f\u62a5\/\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2(Hazel McCallion)1951\u5e74\u505a\u65b0\u5a18\u5ac1\u5230\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14(Streetsville)\u65f6\uff0c\u8fd9\u4e2a\u4e61\u6751\u6b63\u5728\u8715\u53d8\u3002\u5f00\u53d1\u5546\u5df2\u7ecf\u51fa\u73b0\u5728\u519c\u5e84\uff0c\u4e0e\u519c\u573a\u4e3b\u7b7e\u8ba2\u571f\u5730\u534f\u8bae\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u5f53\u9ea6\u8003\u83b21978\u5e74\u5f53\u9009\u6210\u4e3a\u65b0\u57ce\u5e02\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0(Mississauga)\u7684\u5e02\u957f\u65f6\uff0c\u5f00\u53d1\u6b63\u671d\u57ce\u90ca\u7684\u65e0\u5e8f\u62d3\u5c55\u65b9\u5411\u53d1\u5c55\uff0c\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14\u548c\u5176\u4ed6\u5206\u6563\u7684\u6751\u5e84\u5df2\u7ecf\u5408\u5e76\uff0c\u662f\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u5f15\u5bfc\u8fd9\u4e9b\u6751\u5e84\u8f6c\u53d8\u6210\u4e00\u4e2a\u5927\u90fd\u5e02\uff0c\u5979\u4e0d\u662f\u57ce\u5e02\u89c4\u5212\u5e08\uff0c\u5374\u662f\u5929\u751f\u4e86\u89e3\u9009\u6c11\u671f\u671b\u5e76\u5bf9\u91d1\u94b1\u6301\u4fdd\u5b88\u6001\u5ea6\u7684\u5e73\u6c11\u4e3b\u4e49\u8005\u3002\u7ecf\u8fc7\u5345\u5e74\u7684\u6267\u653f\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u7559\u7ed9\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u7684\u6700\u5927\u5370\u8bb0\uff0c\u4e0d\u662f\u4f4e\u5bc6\u5ea6\u7684\u4f4f\u623f\uff0c\u4e0d\u662f\u52c9\u5f3a\u6253\u9020\u7684\u5e02\u4e2d\u5fc3\uff0c\u4e5f\u4e0d\u662f\u50a8\u5907\u57fa\u91d1\uff0c\u800c\u662f\u5979\u81ea\u5df1\u7684\u4f20\u5947\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u8fd9\u4f4d\u5907\u53d7\u7231\u6234\u7684\u5e02\u957f\u5468\u4e00\u5c06\u6ee190\u5c81\u3002\u5979\u5df2\u8868\u793a\uff0c\u672c\u5c4a\u4efb\u671f\u5c06\u662f\u5979\u7684\u6700\u540e\u4e00\u4efb\u4efb\u671f\u3002\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u7684\u804c\u4e1a\u751f\u6daf\u653f\u7ee9\u7d2f\u7d2f\uff0c\u4f46\u5979\u7684\u540d\u8a89\u8fd1\u6765\u5374\u53d7\u5230\u51b2\u51fb\uff0c\u6709\u5173\u5979\u5728\u6d89\u53ca\u513f\u5b50\u7684\u571f\u5730\u4ea4\u6613\u4e2d\u7684\u884c\u4e3a\u6b63\u53d7\u5230\u8c03\u67e5\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u5361\u666e\u987f\u5927\u5b66(Cape Breton University)\u6559\u6388\u5c24\u73ed\u5c3c\u514b(Tom Urbaniak)\u79f0\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u662f\u201c\u653f\u6cbb\u79d1\u5b66\u5bb6\u68a6\u60f3\u7684\u7814\u7a76\u8303\u4f8b\u201d\u3002\u591a\u5e74\u6765\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u5bf9\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u7684\u4fe1\u5ff5\u4e0e\u5979\u7684\u9009\u6c11\u4e00\u8d77\u6f14\u53d8\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u51fa\u5ac1\u524d\u7684\u95fa\u540d\u4e3aHazel Journeaux\uff0c\u5979\u4e8e1921\u5e74\u51fa\u751f\uff0c\u5f53\u65f6\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u7684\u524d\u8eab\u591a\u4f26\u591a\u9547(Toronto Township)\u521a\u521a\u5f00\u59cb\u53d1\u5c55\u6210\u4e3a\u591a\u5e02\u90ca\u533a\u3002\u5927\u8427\u6761(Great Depression)\u6c89\u91cd\u6253\u51fb\u5317\u7f8e\u7ecf\u6d4e\u65f6\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u8fd8\u662f\u4e2a\u5b69\u5b50\u3002\u4e0d\u8fc7\uff0c\u5979\u572812\u5c81\u65f6\uff0c\u5df2\u7ecf\u5f00\u59cb\u638c\u7ba1\u5bb6\u65cf\u6e14\u4e1a\u751f\u610f\u7684\u5de5\u85aa\u8d26\u76ee\u3002\u4ed6\u4eec\u5bb65\u4e2a\u5b69\u5b50\u4e2d\uff0c\u4e24\u4eba\u6210\u4e3a\u5e02\u957f\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u57281940\u5e74\u4ee3\u4ece\u9b41\u7701\u8fc1\u5c45\u591a\u4f26\u591a\uff0c\u7ba1\u7406\u5927\u578b\u5efa\u7b51\u516c\u53f8Kellogg Company\u7684\u591a\u4f26\u591a\u529e\u4e8b\u5904\u3002\u5de5\u4f5c\u4e4b\u4f59\uff0c\u5979\u82b1\u5927\u91cf\u65f6\u95f4\u5728\u5723\u516c\u4f1a\u9752\u5e74\u534f\u4f1a(Anglican Young People&#8217;s Association)\u505a\u4e49\u5de5\u30021949\u5e74\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u6210\u4e3a\u8be5\u7ec4\u7ec7\u7684\u9996\u4e2a\u5973\u4e3b\u5e2d\u3002\u5728\u5723\u516c\u4f1a\u9752\u5e74\u534f\u4f1a\uff0c\u5979\u4e0d\u4ec5\u627e\u5230\u4e86\u7ec8\u8eab\u53d7\u76ca\u7684\u4ece\u653f\u8981\u9886\uff0c\u8fd8\u627e\u5230\u4e86\u4eba\u751f\u4f34\u4fa3\u5c71\u59c6\uff0e\u9ea6\u8003\u8fde(Sam McCallion)\u3002\u4e24\u4eba\u65b0\u5a5a\u540e\u8fc1\u5c45\u5230\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14\uff0c\u5f00\u59cb\u7ecf\u8425\u5e72\u6d17\u751f\u610f\uff0c\u540e\u6765\u53c8\u505a\u8fc7\u4ed8\u8d39\u5ba3\u4f20\u62a5\u7ae0\u751f\u610f\u3002\u4e0d\u4e45\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u5c31\u5f97\u5230\u516c\u4f17\u7684\u6ce8\u610f\uff0c\u59791964\u5e74\u6210\u4e3a\u89c4\u5212\u59d4\u5458\u4f1a\u7684\u516c\u6c11\u6210\u5458\uff0c1970\u5e74\u6210\u4e3a\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14\u5e02\u957f\uff0c\u6b64\u65f6\u5979\u517b\u80b2\u4e09\u4e2a\u5b69\u5b50\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u8f93\u6389\u4e00\u4ed7 \u8d62\u5f97\u62e5\u6234<\/p>\n<p>\u5f53\u5b89\u7701\u7701\u5e9c\u915d\u917f\u7ec4\u5efa\u6ce8\u5b9a\u4f1a\u541e\u5e76\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14\u7684\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u5e02\u65f6\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u66fe\u4e3a\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14\u529b\u4e89\u72ec\u7acb\u53d1\u5c55\u7684\u571f\u5730\u3002\u867d\u7136\u8fd9\u573a\u6218\u4e89\u96be\u514d\u5931\u8d25\uff0c\u4f46\u5979\u8d62\u5f97\u4e86\u9009\u6c11\u62e5\u6234\uff0c\u8fd9\u624d\u662f\u6700\u4e3a\u91cd\u8981\u7684\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u9ea6\u8003\u83b21974\u5e74\u5f53\u9009\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u8bae\u5458\uff0c\u5f53\u65f6\u8be5\u5e02\u5df2\u7ecf\u5f00\u59cb\u65e0\u89c4\u5212\u6269\u5f20\u3002\u5c24\u73ed\u5c3c\u514b\u6559\u6388\u8bf4\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u4ee5\u6539\u9769\u8005\u7684\u8eab\u5206\u51fa\u73b0\uff0c\u6307\u8d23\u5e02\u5e9c\u5f00\u53d1\u7684\u9a6c\u864e\u6001\u5ea6\uff0c\u5e76\u63a8\u52a8\u5b98\u65b9\u89c4\u5212\u3002\u5728\u65af\u5c14\u5229(Ron Searle)\u6267\u653f\u671f\u95f4\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u547c\u5401\u6536\u53d6\u5f00\u53d1\u8d39\u7528\u548c\u571f\u5730\u7a0e\u3002\u5979\u5ba3\u79f0\uff0c\u53d1\u5c55\u4e0d\u662f\u514d\u8d39\u7684\uff0c\u5c06\u662f\u5979\u7684\u6267\u653f\u53e3\u53f7\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u9ea6\u8003\u83b21978\u5e74\u7ade\u9009\u5e02\u957f\uff0c\u5e76\u4ee53,000\u7968\u7684\u4f18\u52bf\u51fb\u8d25\u65af\u5c14\u5229\u3002\u4e0d\u8fc7\uff0c\u5979\u5728\u4e0a\u53f0\u540e\u6b21\u5e74\u5c31\u9047\u5230\u6c89\u91cd\u8003\u9a8c\u3002\u4e00\u8f86\u8f7d\u6ee1\u6c2f\u6c14\u548c\u5176\u4ed6\u5371\u9669\u5316\u5b66\u54c1\u7684\u706b\u8f66\u8d27\u5361\u4e8e1979\u5e7411\u6708\u5728\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u8131\u8f68\uff0c\u4e19\u70f7\u7206\u70b8\uff0c\u6c2f\u6c14\u6cc4\u6f0f\u5230\u7a7a\u6c14\u4e2d\uff0c\u7ea622\u4e07\u4eba\u88ab\u8feb\u758f\u6563\u3002\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u5728\u4e8b\u4ef6\u4e2d\u4e3b\u6301\u5927\u5c40\uff0c\u76d1\u7ba1\u758f\u6563\uff0c\u5e76\u5728\u4e8b\u540e\u529b\u4e89\u66f4\u52a0\u4e25\u683c\u7684\u8fd0\u8f93\u6761\u4f8b\uff0c\u7ed9\u9009\u6c11\u7559\u4e0b\u6df1\u523b\u5370\u8c61\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u968f\u7740\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u7684\u652f\u6301\u7387\u4e0a\u5347\uff0c\u5979\u7684\u8bae\u4f1a\u57281981\u5e74\u505a\u51fa\u60ca\u4eba\u4e3e\u52a8\uff0c\u5c06\u901a\u5e38\u5206\u9636\u6bb5\u53d1\u552e\u7684\u5f00\u53d1\u571f\u5730\uff0c\u4e00\u6b21\u6027\u5168\u90e8\u53d1\u552e\uff0c\u4f46\u5f00\u53d1\u5546\u5fc5\u987b\u7f34\u7a0e\uff0c\u4ee5\u652f\u4ed8\u4fee\u5efa\u65b0\u57fa\u7840\u8bbe\u65bd\u7684\u8d39\u7528\uff0c\u5305\u62ec\u56fe\u4e66\u9986\u3001\u516c\u56ed\u3001\u9053\u8def\u548c\u793e\u533a\u4e2d\u5fc3\u3002\u5c24\u73ed\u5c3c\u514b\u6559\u6388\u8bf4\uff0c\u8fd9\u662f\u9769\u547d\u6027\u7684\u89c2\u5ff5\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u513f\u5b50\u571f\u5730\u4ea4\u6613\u4e00\u6848\u5f88\u5feb\u88c1\u51b3<\/p>\n<p>\u4e0d\u8fc7\uff0c\u5728\u53c2\u4e0e\u8ba8\u8bba\u571f\u5730\u53d1\u552e\u7684\u8fc7\u7a0b\u4e2d\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u72af\u4e86\u4e2a\u4e25\u91cd\u9519\u8bef\uff0c\u6709\u4e9b\u571f\u5730\u662f\u5979\u81ea\u5df1\u7684\u3002\u6cd5\u5b98\u57281982\u5e74\u88c1\u5b9a\uff0c\u5979\u5728\u5e02\u8bae\u4f1a\u8ba8\u8bba\u672a\u6765\u53d1\u552e\u7684\u571f\u5730\u4e2d\uff0c\u56e0\u6ca1\u6709\u7533\u62a5\u5229\u76ca\u51b2\u7a81\u800c\u51fa\u73b0\u201c\u4e25\u91cd\u5224\u65ad\u9519\u8bef\u201d\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u5c3d\u7ba1\u5982\u6b64\uff0c\u5728\u5f53\u5e74\u665a\u4e9b\u65f6\u5019\u7684\u5e02\u9009\u4e2d\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u4ecd\u4ee570%\u7684\u652f\u6301\u7387\u518d\u5ea6\u5f53\u9009\u5e02\u957f\u3002\u5e02\u6c11\u7528\u9009\u7968\u8868\u8fbe\u4e86\u6c11\u610f\u3002\u968f\u540e\u6570\u5e74\u4e2d\uff0c\u56fe\u4e66\u9986\u3001\u516c\u56ed\u548c\u9053\u8def\u7eb7\u7eb7\u5efa\u6210\uff0c\u5e02\u5e9c\u7684\u8d44\u91d1\u4e5f\u7a33\u7a33\u7559\u5728\u888b\u4e2d\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u7684\u5f00\u53d1\u7a0e\u653f\u7b56\u548c\u5e02\u5e9c\u7684\u96f6\u503a\u52a1\u4ee4\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u540d\u58f0\u5927\u9707\uff0c\u4f46\u5374\u65e0\u76ca\u4e8e\u5927\u90fd\u5e02\u7684\u5e02\u5bb9\u8bbe\u8ba1\u3002<\/p>\n<p>26\u5c81\u7684\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u5f53\u5e74\u524d\u5f80\u632a\u5a01\u9996\u90fd\u5965\u65af\u9646(Oslo)\u53c2\u52a0\u57fa\u7763\u6559\u9752\u5e74\u7b2c\u4e8c\u5c4a\u4f1a\u8bae(2nd World Conference of Christian Youth)\u65f6\uff0c\u66fe\u88ab\u6218\u540e\u7684\u6b27\u6d32\u5927\u57ce\u5e02\u8ff7\u4f4f\uff0c\u4f46\u7ecf\u8fc7\u5979\u957f\u8fbe30\u5e74\u5185\u7684\u6267\u653f\uff0c\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u6ca1\u6709\u7f57\u6d6e\u5bab\uff0c\u751a\u81f3\u6ca1\u6709\u4e00\u4e2a\u50cf\u6837\u7684\u57ce\u5e02\u5e7f\u573a\u3002\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u53ea\u6709\u7b2c\u4e00\u5e7f\u573a(Square One)\u3001\u5e02\u90ca\u548c\u7f8e\u4e3d\u7684\u6e56\u6ee8\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u4e5f\u5e0c\u671b\u5728\u5bc6\u5e02\u5e02\u4e2d\u5fc3\u7559\u4e0b\u81ea\u5df1\u7684\u5370\u8bb0\uff0c\u5979\u575a\u6301\u5728\u505c\u8f66\u573a\u4e4b\u95f4\u4fee\u5efa\u57ce\u5e02\u5730\u6807\u5efa\u7b51\u3002\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u57281980\u5e74\u4ee3\u672b\u548c1990\u5e74\u4ee3\u521d\u5efa\u6210\u5e02\u653f\u4e2d\u5fc3(Civic Centre)\u548cLiving Arts Centre\uff0c\u4f46\u8fd9\u4e24\u4e2a\u5efa\u7b51\u5374\u7d27\u90bb\u6807\u5fd7\u5bc6\u5e02\u771f\u6b63\u4e2d\u5fc3\u7684Square One\u8d2d\u7269\u4e2d\u5fc3\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u5728\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u770b\u7740\u81ea\u5df1\u7684\u5730\u6807\u5efa\u7b51\u5206\u522b\u4e8e1980\u5e74\u4ee3\u672b\u548c1990\u5e74\u4ee3\u521d\u5efa\u6210\u7684\u540c\u65f6\uff0c\u5979\u7684\u4e08\u592b\u5374\u4e8e1997\u5e74\u901d\u4e16\u3002\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u968f\u540e\u4ecd\u91cd\u8fd4\u5de5\u4f5c\u5c97\u4f4d\uff0c\u4e0d\u8fc7\uff0c\u5343\u79a7\u5e74\u4e4b\u540e\u7684\u65e5\u5b50\u5e76\u975e\u4e00\u5e06\u98ce\u987a\u3002\u6709\u5173\u6d89\u53ca\u5979\u513f\u5b50\u7684\u571f\u5730\u4ea4\u6613\u4e00\u6848\uff0c\u6cd5\u5b98\u5f88\u5feb\u5c06\u505a\u51fa\u88c1\u51b3\uff0c\u62a5\u544a\u6709\u671b\u5728\u6570\u661f\u671f\u5185\u53d1\u8868\u3002\u4e5f\u8bb8\u53d7\u5230\u6700\u8fd1\u5a92\u4f53\u8d1f\u9762\u62a5\u544a\u7684\u4f24\u5bb3\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u5728\u517690\u5c81\u751f\u65e5\u524d\uff0c\u5a49\u62d2\u4e86\u91c7\u8bbf\u8981\u6c42\u3002<\/p>\n<p>\u96f6\u7a0e\u7387\u589e\u957f\u7684\u65e5\u5b50\u65e9\u5df2\u8fc7\u53bb\uff1b\u5e02\u5e9c\u7684\u50a8\u5907\u8d44\u91d1\u4e5f\u6108\u7528\u6108\u5c11\uff1b\u57fa\u7840\u8bbe\u65bd\u5f00\u59cb\u8001\u5316\uff1b\u53ef\u7528\u4e8e\u5f00\u53d1\u7684\u571f\u5730\u5feb\u8981\u7528\u5b8c\uff0c\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u4e5f\u610f\u8bc6\u5230\u5bc6\u5e02\u9762\u5bf9\u8270\u96be\u65f6\u523b\uff0c\u6709\u4e9b\u4e8b\u60c5\u9700\u8981\u6539\u53d8\u3002\u5728\u597988\u5c81\u65f6\uff0c\u5979\u66fe\u5411\u661f\u62a5\u8868\u793a\uff0c\u5979\u6700\u5927\u7684\u9057\u61be\u662f\u5bc6\u5e02\u7f3a\u4e4f\u8fc7\u6e21\u8ba1\u5212\u3002\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\uff0c\u8fd9\u4f4d\u8654\u8bda\u7684\u57fa\u7763\u5f92\uff0c\u4e5f\u8bb8\u4f1a\u4e3a\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u7684\u7ee7\u4efb\u8005\u7948\u7977\u3002<\/p>\n<p><b>Hazel McCallion oversaw Mississauga\u2019s transformation from rural to urban<\/b><\/p>\n<p>Published On Sat Feb 12 2011<\/p>\n<p>Katie Daubs Staff Reporter<\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image18976\" width=500 src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor3.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor3.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n(Hazel McCallion gets a victory hug from her husband, Sam, after winning the Streetsville mayor&#8217;s job. TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO)<\/p>\n<p>When Hazel McCallion arrived in Streetsville as a young bride in 1951, the village was changing. Developers were showing up at farmhouses, settling land deals with a handshake.<\/p>\n<p>By the time she became mayor of the fledgling city of Mississauga in 1978, the course had already been set for suburban sprawl. Streetsville and other scattered villages had been melded, and it would be McCallion who would steer their transformation into a metropolis \u2014 not as an urban planner, but as a populist with a genius for anticipating what people wanted and a conservative eye on the wallet.<\/p>\n<p>After three decades at the helm, the greatest mark McCallion would leave on the city would not be low-density housing, a forced downtown core, or a reserve fund.<\/p>\n<p>It would be herself.<\/p>\n<p>On Monday, the beloved mayor turns 90. She has indicated this will be her last term. Her career has been marked with success, but of late her reputation has taken a beating. As her last years in office wind down, the mayor\u2019s actions in a land deal involving her son are being aired in an ongoing inquiry.<\/p>\n<p>Tom Urbaniak, a professor at Cape Breton University, calls McCallion a \u201cpolitical scientist\u2019s dream case study.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Through the years, her beliefs about the city have evolved with her voters. In some ways, it is hard to tell where Hazel McCallion ends and Mississauga begins.<\/p>\n<p>The city of Mississauga did not exist when Hazel Journeaux was born in 1921. The Lakeshore Highway, between Toronto and Hamilton, had been paved a few years earlier, and Toronto Township, the predecessor to Mississauga, was beginning to become a suburb \u2014 an alternative to Toronto\u2019s gritty city life.<\/p>\n<p>Journeaux grew up in Port Daniel, Que., a small Gasp\u00e9 town. Urbaniak, who wrote Her Worship: Hazel McCallion and the Development of Mississauga, returned with the mayor to her childhood home a few years ago and noted a striking similarity among members of the Journeaux clan: Most shared Hazel\u2019s \u201ctightly constructed lips.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion was a child when the Great Depression hit. At 12, she was already in charge of payroll for the family fishing business.<\/p>\n<p>They weren\u2019t \u201cdesperately poor,\u201d says Urbaniak. \u201cThe family was entrepreneurial and active in the community, but there was a prevailing sense of frugality, and I have no doubt that shaped her political personality,\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Of the five children, two became mayors. When Lockhart Journeaux died in a car accident on the way to a council meeting as mayor of Port Daniel, his little sister Hazel was still years away from becoming Streetsville\u2019s mayor.<\/p>\n<p>After high school in Quebec, she attended a secretarial school in Montreal and moved to Toronto in the \u201940s to run the office of Kellogg Company, a major construction firm.<\/p>\n<p>Outside of work, she was a joiner. She volunteered much of her time with the Anglican Young People\u2019s Association, where she kept subscriptions of a monthly newsletter up to date and was a club booster. A 1947 profile noted: \u201cIt is felt moreover that she will contribute more than the average leader.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In 1949, the young woman with the \u201csunny smile\u201d became the first \u201clady president\u201d of the organization. In being willing to take on responsibility and being pushy but likeable, Hazel found a formula that would serve her throughout the political career to come.<\/p>\n<p>She also found the man whose last name she would make famous. Sam McCallion, a few years younger, was the program research convenor for the Anglican youth organization, and like Hazel wrote for the newsletter.<\/p>\n<p>Sam adopted a breezy tone about how to plan get-togethers: \u201cNo party is complete without refreshments &#8230; you might serve ice cream with a rose,\u201d he wrote in 1951.<\/p>\n<p>The woman who had caught his eye wrote with authority: \u201cThe aim (of the AYPA) is to promote the religious, social and intellectual welfare of the members,\u201d she pointed out in a 1950 editorial. \u201cIs your branch a group of young people endeavouring to fulfill these requirements or would it be better classified as a social club?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Already, she had the stern tone mastered.<\/p>\n<p>When the newlyweds moved to Streetsville, they started a dry-cleaning business, and later, an advertorial paper.<\/p>\n<p>It didn\u2019t take long for Hazel McCallion to rise to public attention, even at a time when women weren\u2019t often seen in community leadership. By 1964, she was a citizen member of the planning board, and by 1970 she was mayor of Streetsville, winning on a platform of curbing development. She was simultaneously raising three children: Peter, Paul and Linda.<\/p>\n<p>When the province conceived the idea of Mississauga \u2014 a municipality destined to swallow Streetsville \u2014 she fought to expropriate land for Streetsville to grow into a city in its own right.<\/p>\n<p>It was a fight she could not win, but a popular cause. And that was all that mattered.<\/p>\n<p>When McCallion became a Mississauga councillor in 1974, the city was already beginning its famous pattern of sprawl. The \u201cbig three\u201d local developers \u2014 Bruce McLaughlin (city centre\/Hurontario), E.P. Taylor (Erin Mills), and Markborough Developments (Meadowvale) \u2014 had bought up a good portion of the available land in the centre, west side, and northwest corner of the city.<\/p>\n<p>McCallion came in as a reformer, criticizing the lax attitude toward development and pushing for an official plan, Urbaniak said.<\/p>\n<p>When Ron Searle became mayor, McCallion called for development charges and lot levies. She proclaimed the mantra that would become the core of her political mandate: Growth must pay for itself.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe may be building a city, but then again, we may end up with no people because they won\u2019t be able to afford to live here,\u201d she said in 1978.<\/p>\n<p>McCallion ran for mayor that year. She wanted to bring in more industrial and commercial development, build a second hospital and cap the population (then just 250,000) at 500,000 \u201cso we won\u2019t be crammed in like sardines.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>She beat Searle by 3,000 votes.<\/p>\n<p>A year later, she would face her first big test.<\/p>\n<p>In November 1979, a train carrying chlorine and other dangerous chemicals derailed in Mississauga. The propane exploded and chlorine gas seeped into the air. Some 220,000 people had to be evacuated. McCallion took charge, overseeing the evacuations, and later fighting for tougher transport rules.<\/p>\n<p>With her reputation as the people\u2019s champion thus entrenched, McCallion\u2019s council made a trade-off in 1981. Land that would normally be released for development in stages would be made available all at once, but developers would have to pay levies to cover the cost of new infrastructure such as libraries, parks, roads and community centres.<\/p>\n<p>City and regional staff warned that existing neighbourhoods needed to be built out and the sprawl resulting from this policy would create a car-dependent city, explained Urbaniak. But McCallion and her council voted to take the gamble. Suburbs built on former farm fields that didn\u2019t offend the established neighbourhoods followed.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIn some ways, Hazel actually drove a pretty tough bargain with the developers,\u201d said Neil Thomlinson, a politics professor at Ryerson University. \u201cThat was a revolutionary concept.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>But by taking part in debate over the release of land, McCallion made a serious mistake. Some of that land was hers.<\/p>\n<p>In 1982, a judge found that she had committed a &#8220;substantial error in judgment&#8221; in failing to declare a conflict of interest during council debate over future land releases.<\/p>\n<p>Yet later that year, she was re-elected with 71 per cent of the vote. The people had spoken.<\/p>\n<p>In the years that followed, the libraries, parks and roads kept going in, and the city\u2019s money stayed in the bank.<\/p>\n<p>The development levies and her city\u2019s debt-free status would make her famous, but not for great urban design.<\/p>\n<p>When 26-year-old Hazel Journeaux went to Oslo for the 2nd World Conference of Christian Youth, she was charmed by the great cities she saw in postwar Europe.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cTo be in Paris was a dream come true,\u201d she wrote in the Young Anglican monthly. \u201cStanding on the Place de la Concorde we gazed to the right and beheld the Louvre Palace.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Thirty years later, Mississauga had no Louvre, or even a commanding town square. It had Square One, suburbs, and a nice waterfront.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt grew how the developers wanted it to grow,\u201d said Larry Taylor, a former councillor who clashed with McCallion long before her latest tormenter, Carolyn Parrish, was on the scene. \u201cThere\u2019s still no downtown and still no sense of city there.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Taylor, now a real estate broker, remains frustrated about the city that never was. As a councillor in the \u201970s and \u201980s, he tried to get council on board to redevelop Burnhamthorpe Rd. into something more urbane.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI wanted something like University Ave., with some water features, a grand boulevard, to know you had entered into the city centre,\u201d he said. \u201cOut of all that, I got the fountain at the library.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion, says Urbaniak, was no Fiorello LaGuardia \u2014 New York\u2019s visionary urban reformer. While she had no specific vision for the city, she wanted to leave her imprint on its downtown, and insisted on building landmarks among the parking lots.<\/p>\n<p>The Civic Centre and Living Arts Centre were the product of international competitions in the late \u201980s and early \u201990s, built next to the shopping mall that marks the de facto centre of Mississauga.<\/p>\n<p>When the Living Arts Centre was completed, the Star\u2019s Christopher Hume was impressed, but criticized its failure to mesh with the aggressively postmodern Civic Centre, which he called one of the most \u201cremarkable buildings\u201d in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c(Architect) Zeidler ignored the obvious cues and lapsed into the architectural arbitrariness so typical of Mississauga,\u201d Hume wrote.<\/p>\n<p>Along with arbitrary architecture, McCallion\u2019s Mississauga has not been a great friend to the heritage preservation community.<\/p>\n<p>In 2004, a 160-year-old farmhouse that was not on the city\u2019s list of heritage property was demolished by a developer. Urbaniak writes in his book that between 1994 and 2005, Mississauga did not pursue any designations under the Ontario Heritage Act unless the owner of the property agreed.<\/p>\n<p>But McCallion could be a heritage activist when it counted.<\/p>\n<p>Before the Avro Arrow hanger was torn down in 2004, she tried to get Ottawa to save it. As with the battle for Streetsville, the effort failed. But McCallion was perceived as being on the right side.<\/p>\n<p>And that\u2019s how a mayor gets herself re-elected with 90 per cent of the vote.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cShe has a remarkable ability to feel the public pulse, get a sense of emerging movements and pre-empt them. That pre-emption, so shrewdly, has perhaps unwittingly stifled, to some extent, civic engagement,\u201d Urbaniak says.<\/p>\n<p>Matthew Wilkinson, a historian with Heritage Mississauga, says the perception that Mississauga developed haphazardly isn\u2019t fair.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThere is a lot more structure and thought (behind it) than people understand,\u201d he said. \u201cGranted, some of it didn\u2019t work. It doesn\u2019t mean the thought wasn\u2019t there.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>As McCallion saw her landmarks go up in the late \u201980s and \u201990s, her husband \u2014 the gentleman of Streetsville \u2014 was failing. Sam McCallion, who had suffered from Alzheimer\u2019s for years, died in 1997.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe loved Uncle Sam,\u201d said Enid Bechervaise, McCallion\u2019s 69-year-old niece. \u201cHe was a real sweetheart.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion returned to work and kept herself busy. But the post-millennium era has been difficult.<\/p>\n<p>In 2004, her developer son Peter wanted a landmark of his own, a hotel complex near city hall. His mother came along for meetings with a potential operator and did a good deal more to grease the wheels, according to evidence presented in the current inquiry. But she said she was not there to influence anything other than the public good.<\/p>\n<p>Justice Douglas Cunningham will decide that. His inquiry report is expected within weeks.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWith all this schmozzle going on, I hope and pray she can keep up her strength,\u201d said Bechervaise, who still calls the mayor \u201cAunt Hazel.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps bruised by the negative turn of media coverage lately, McCallion declined to be interviewed on the eve of her 90th birthday.<\/p>\n<p>The zero-tax-increase years are long over. The reserve fund from the boom years is running dry. The infrastructure is aging, and there is little land left to develop. Mississauga\u2019s future will be one of provincially mandated intensification, certain to draw the kind of NIMBY opposition the city has largely avoided for years.<\/p>\n<p>McCallion has acknowledged the city is facing hard times and things need to change. When she turned 88, she told the Star her biggest regret has been lack of transit planning. \u201cYou can\u2019t build a public transit system based on single homes,\u201d she said. \u201cYou need the density.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Paul Bedford, Toronto\u2019s former chief planner, says Mississauga is rethinking its land use, and McCallion has been \u201cinstrumental\u201d recently in pushing for smart growth.<\/p>\n<p>In her 1951 farewell message as president of the Anglican Young People\u2019s Association, a 30-year-old Journeaux asked readers to keep the next executive in their prayers.<\/p>\n<p>Sixty years later, the \u201cgal\u201d from the yellowed pages of those newsletters is turning 90. This is her last term in office. The city she built will soon be for others to look after.<\/p>\n<p>McCallion, always a good Christian, will probably be praying for them.<\/p>\n<p>http:\/\/www.thestar.com\/news\/mississauga\/article\/937684<\/p>\n<p><b>McCallion shimmies into her 90s<\/b><\/p>\n<p>Published On Sun Feb 13 2011<\/p>\n<p>By Mary Ormsby, Feature Writer<\/p>\n<p>What do you get for the mayor who has everything?<\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image18977\" width=500 src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor4.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor4.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n(Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion is feted at a party to mark her 90th birthday at the Living Arts Centre on Sunday. CARLOS OSORIO\/TORONTO STAR)<\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image18978\" width=500 src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor5.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor5.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image18980\" width=500 src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor7.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor7.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image18981\" width=500 src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor8.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor8.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>How about something that Hazel McCallion, who turns 90 on Monday, can\u2019t buy at the mall or order online: Birthday wishes from more than 2,000 of her Mississauga constituents on Sunday.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis birthday was fantastic, all those people \u2014 my people,\u201d said a radiant McCallion after spending four hours chatting with guests, having her photo taken and belly dancing \u2014 yup, shimmying to an Egyptian beat \u2014 during the free community bash at Mississauga\u2019s Living Arts Centre.<\/p>\n<p>Canada\u2019s oldest mayor also received an array of tribute gifts \u2014 some she could take home, some made her smile warmly \u2014 that reflected how beloved she is in the city she\u2019s led since 1978. A tree, a lane, an amethyst-and-pearl pendant, an arts volunteer award, a youth physical education program and a Canada Post stamp were all named in her honour.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis is the most famous mayor in the whole wide world,\u201d bellowed singer Patti Jannetta as the crowd cheered.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe love her the most, don\u2019t we? We love you Hazel.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Dancers, singers, a magician, crafts and face-painting for kids were all part of the afternoon\u2019s free entertainment. Enough chocolate and vanilla cupcakes, soft drinks, water, coffee and tea for 2,500 were laid out on long tables for people to serve themselves. Balloons floated amid the glassy atrium of the arts centre, with partygoers milling around the main floor stage or overlooking the bustling fun from the first floor.<\/p>\n<p>Her cake? A huge vanilla-iced cupcake, adorned with tiny pink flowers and dressed with five candles \u2014 which McCallion snuffed with one easy breath.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe think she is very special,\u201d said Alketa Gjonaj, who with husband Altin brought daughter Arba, 8 months, and Raina, 3, to be photographed with McCallion.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe have lived here a year and a half and we think she has done a lot for Mississauga. And if we could be 90 years old and still be like her, that would be something special too.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion stood for hours, patient and cheerful, as photos were taken and she was hugged repeatedly. Dressed in a bright fuchsia blouse, black skirt, tights and high heels, she was an elegant hostess \u2014 and one white-haired man couldn\u2019t resist complimenting her.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou are like a 16-year-old girl,\u201d he marvelled.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cOh, that feels good,\u201d said the mayor, giggling<\/p>\n<p>McCallion\u2019s community party followed a lavish $350-a-plate birthday gala with nearly 1,000 guests at Mississauga\u2019s Convention Centre Saturday night. That event raised funds for the city\u2019s new Sheridan College campus which will also be named after her.<\/p>\n<p>A weekend of cakes and candles was a sweet break for the woman who has been a central figure in an ongoing conflict-of-interest inquiry.<\/p>\n<p>In 2004, McCallion\u2019s developer son Peter wanted to build a hotel complex near Mississauga\u2019s city hall. His mother attended meetings with a potential owner, according to testimony presented at the inquiry. McCallion has said she was not there to influence anything other than the public good.<\/p>\n<p>But McCallion, whose attention Sunday was on celebration and not inquiries, has indicated this will be her final term as mayor.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt\u2019s such a pleasure to serve you. I\u2019m your servant and it\u2019s been just a delight all these many, many years.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>http:\/\/www.thestar.com\/news\/article\/938231&#8211;mccallion-shimmies-into-her-90s<\/p>\n<p><b>Hazel McCallion at 90: \u2018the poster child for seniors\u2019<\/b><\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image18979\" width=500 src=\"http:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/02\/mississauga_mayor6.jpg\" alt=\"mississauga_mayor6.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n(Hazel McCallion places a pin on volunteer Gladys Taylor at Trillium Health Centre, where Mississauga&#8217;s mayor spent part of her 90th birthday. McCallion took part in the Wear Your Heart event to kick off the hospital&#8217;s recognition of the International Year of Volunteers.<br \/>\nCARLOS OSORIO\/TORONTO STAR)<\/p>\n<p>San Grewal<br \/>\nUrban Affairs Reporter<\/p>\n<p>It was a perfect fit, Hazel McCallion \u2014 poster-girl for longevity and good health \u2014 spending her 90th birthday, on Valentine\u2019s Day, at a cardiac hospital.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cHer and I are from the same blood,\u201d said 85-year-old Trillium Health Centre volunteer Doris Blakely, who was on a surgery ward as the Mississauga mayor stopped by to pay her respects on a day filled with events for the inspiring leader.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou\u2019re aiming to be 100,\u201d McCallion said to the younger woman after they shared an embrace. \u201cI hope we both get there.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion was more concerned with recognizing the work of volunteers, as her birthday coincided with the hospital\u2019s Wear Your Heart event recognizing the International Year of Volunteers.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI\u2019m glad they can\u2019t get rid of you,\u201d McCallion said to Blakely. \u201cIsn\u2019t it great that you call this your second home? Think of all the tender love and care patients get because of people like you.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The tour of the ward came after a packed birthday celebration just after 10 a.m. in the hospital\u2019s lobby, filled with staff, patients, families and media that turned out to honour the mayor.<\/p>\n<p>McCallion had already made a stop earlier in the morning at Credit Valley Hospital, which she helped found 25 years ago.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe wanted to celebrate the person who was instrumental in creating this wonderful institution,\u201d said Credit Valley spokesperson Helen Reilly.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Barbara Clive was part of the group that presented the mayor with a giant birthday card.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI was chief of staff for 10 years. Whenever we needed funding, for anything, we went to Hazel. We would go down to her office at 7:15 in the morning and she would get on the phone with the premier, whoever, until we had what we needed.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Clive says she marvels at another aspect of McCallion, beyond her commitment to serving the people of Mississauga.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI\u2019m a geriatrician. She\u2019s phenomenal. At 90 her gait is perfect, her speech is totally sharp and she has the drive to still run this city. She\u2019s the poster child for seniors.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion said longevity runs among the women in her family. \u201cMy mother lived to 79, when people didn\u2019t live that long. My one sister lived to 95 and the other to 82. That\u2019s the one thing I\u2019ve thought about while turning 90. It is pretty amazing that I\u2019m in such good health. I don\u2019t take any medication, I still drive.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The physical marvel had a packed schedule on her special day, including lunch at City Hall thrown by staff, private functions with some of the dozens of groups desperate to show their support and finally, dinner with family.<\/p>\n<p>But she said making the hospitals her first priority on the special day was an easy decision.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cMy mother was a nurse. She graduated from Montreal General Hospital in 1901 and started working there right after until she got married. I think looking after people\u2019s health is one of the greatest jobs you can do.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion seems to have taken care of that on her own. As she walked out Trillium\u2019s main doors, people lined both sides of the walkway to wish her a happy birthday.<\/p>\n<p>She shook each hand before getting into the driver\u2019s seat of her silver hybrid Chevy Malibu, and with a wave of her hand, cruised away.<\/p>\n<p>http:\/\/www.thestar.com\/news\/article\/938547&#8211;hazel-mccallion-she-s-the-poster-child-for-seniors<\/p>\n<p><b>Mississauga loves Hazel<\/b><\/p>\n<p>What do you get for the mayor who has everything?<\/p>\n<p>How about something that Hazel McCallion, who turns 90 today, can\u2019t buy at the mall or order online: Birthday wishes from more than 2,000 of her Mississauga constituents.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis birthday was fantastic, all those people &#8230; my people,\u201d said a radiant McCallion after spending four hours yesterday chatting with guests, having her photo taken and belly dancing to an Egyptian beat during the free community bash at the Living Arts Centre.<\/p>\n<p>Canada\u2019s oldest mayor also received an array of tribute gifts \u2014 some she could take home, some made her smile warmly \u2014 that reflected how beloved she is in the city she\u2019s led since 1978. A tree, a lane, an amethyst-and-pearl pendant, an arts volunteer award, a youth physical education program and a Canada Post stamp were all named in her honour.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis is the most famous mayor in the whole wide world,\u201d bellowed singer Patti Jannetta as the crowd cheered.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe love her the most, don\u2019t we? We love you Hazel.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Dancers, singers, a magician, crafts and face-painting for kids were all part of the afternoon\u2019s free entertainment. Enough chocolate and vanilla cupcakes, soft drinks, water, coffee and tea for 2,500 were laid out on long tables for people to serve themselves. Balloons floated amid the glassy atrium of the arts centre, with partygoers milling around the main floor stage or overlooking the bustling fun from the first floor.<\/p>\n<p>Her cake? A huge vanilla-iced cupcake, adorned with tiny pink flowers and dressed with five candles \u2014 which McCallion snuffed with one easy breath.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe think she is very special,\u201d said Alketa Gjonaj, who with husband Altin brought daughter Arba, 8 months, and Raina, 3, to be photographed with McCallion.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe have lived here a year and a half and we think she has done a lot for Mississauga. And if we could be 90 years old and still be like her, that would be something special, too.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>McCallion stood for hours, patient and cheerful, as photos were taken and she was hugged repeatedly. Dressed in a bright fuchsia blouse, black skirt, tights and high heels, she was an elegant hostess \u2014 and one white-haired man couldn\u2019t resist complimenting her.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou are like a 16-year-old girl,\u201d he marvelled.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cOh, that feels good,\u201d said the mayor, giggling<\/p>\n<p>McCallion\u2019s community party followed a lavish $350-a-plate birthday gala held the previous night that attracted nearly 1,000 guests to Mississauga\u2019s Convention Centre. That event raised funds for the city\u2019s new Sheridan College campus, which will also be named after McCallion.<\/p>\n<p>A weekend of cakes and candles was a sweet break for the woman who has been a central figure in an ongoing conflict-of-interest inquiry.<\/p>\n<p>In 2004, McCallion\u2019s developer son Peter wanted to build a hotel complex near City Hall. His mother attended meetings with a potential owner, according to testimony presented at the inquiry. McCallion has said she was not there to influence anything other than the public good.<\/p>\n<p>But McCallion, whose attention yesterday (Sunday) was on celebration and not inquiries, has indicated this will be her final term as mayor.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt\u2019s such a pleasure to serve you. I\u2019m your servant and it\u2019s been just a delight all these many, many years.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>http:\/\/www.mississauga.com\/news\/article\/954272&#8211;mississauga-loves-hazel<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u25a0\u5f53\u5e74\u7684\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u7ad9\u5728\u201c\u6b22\u8fce\u5230\u65af\u7279\u53f8\u7ef4\u5c14\u201d\u7684\u6807\u724c\u65c1\u3002\u661f\u62a5\u8d44\u6599\u56fe\u7247 \u25a0\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2 90\u5c81\u751f\u65e5\u5feb\u4e50\uff01\u5bc6\u897f\u6c99\u52a0\u5e02\u957f\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2\u6628\u5929\u6b22\u5ea690\u5c81\u751f\u65e5\uff0c\u5979\u4e0d\u4ec5\u662f\u52a0\u62ff\u5927\u6700\u5e74\u957f\u7684\u5e02\u957f\uff0c1978\u5e74\u51fa\u4efb\u5e02\u957f\u8fc4\u4eca\u7684\u5979\uff0c\u540c\u65f6\u4e5f\u662f\u62c5\u4efb\u5e02\u957f\u65f6\u95f4\u6700\u957f\u7684\u3002\u8fd9\u662f\u5979\u53bb\u5e748\u6708\u4e0e\u603b\u7406\u54c8\u73c0\u5728\u4e00\u8d77\u3002\uff08\u52a0\u901a\u793e\uff09 \u661f\u62a5\/\u9ea6\u8003\u83b2(Hazel McCallion)&#8230;<br \/><a class=\"read-more-button\" href=\"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/?p=18969\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[59,10],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18969"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=18969"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18969\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=18969"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=18969"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.jackjia.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=18969"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}