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Jeff Leiper

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Jeff Leiper
Ottawa City Councillor
Assumed office
December 1, 2014
Preceded byKatherine Hobbs
ConstituencyKitchissippi Ward
Personal details
Born1970 (age 54–55)
Ottawa
SpouseNatalie Hanson
Residence(s)Hintonburg, Ottawa
Alma materUniversity of Ottawa
Algonquin College

Jeffrey[1] Leiper (born 1970)[2][3] is the current Ottawa city councillor for Kitchissippi Ward. He was first elected in the 2014 Ottawa municipal election, defeating the incumbent Katherine Hobbs.

Early life and career

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Leiper was born and raised in Ottawa. He studied history and English at the University of Ottawa, and print journalism at Algonquin College. As a youth, Leiper was a member of the youth wing of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, though he is now a committed progressive.[4] Leiper first ran for office as a 24 year old in the 1994 municipal elections for a seat on Cumberland Township Council. At the time he was still attending the University of Ottawa. He ran on a platform of higher density developments, the completion of a north-south link between then Highway 17 (now Highway 174) and Highway 417 (which was never built), more parks and the completion of a library.[5] Running in Ward 2, covering the southern section of Orleans, he won just 3% of the vote.[6]

He has lived in Kitchissippi Ward since 1995 when he and his spouse Natalie moved into the Julian Apartments in the Wellington West area. Today, he lives in Hintonburg with Natalie and their son.

Leiper has a long background working with the Hintonburg Community Association, where he served as its president.[7] He has also worked with the volunteer-run community newspaper Newswest in the ward. For many years, he created and organized events such as the Cyclelogik Hintonburg 5k Run/Walk and Newswest Kids 1K, Dog Movie Night and the annual Hintonburg Street Hockey Tournament. His community work includes a significant background in planning, traffic, economic development, and other neighbourhood and citywide issues.

Professionally, Leiper began his career in the Information and Communications Technology sector as a journalist. He subsequently worked as an industry analyst for an international consulting firm, then as an executive in a federal regulatory agency. Prior to his election, he worked as an executive at an NGO with a mandate to promote the full participation by all Canadians including women, youth, and internationally educated professionals in the technology workforce.[citation needed]

Political career

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Leiper was first elected to Ottawa City Council in the 2014 Ottawa municipal election, where he defeated incumbent Katherine Hobbs to become city councillor for Kitchissippi Ward.[8]

Leiper was re-elected in the 2018 Ottawa municipal election with 85% of the vote, the second-largest margin of victory in the elections that year (after Stephen Blais). On February 13, 2019, he suffered a heart attack while shoveling snow.[9] Following his recovery, he announced he had quit smoking and partnered with Ottawa Public Health to encourage others to quit smoking as well.[10] In the aftermath of the convoy protests in Ottawa, Leiper called for a royal commission to investigate the shortcomings in the police response and the rise of political extremism in Canada.[11][12]

Leiper was re-elected for a third time in the 2022 Ottawa municipal election. During his third term, his top priorities included affordable housing and improvements to public transit.[13] In 2023, he voted against "Landsdowne 2.0" which would provide over $400 million dollars of municipal subsidies for the redevelopment of Lansdowne Park. The project was approved by a vote of 16 to 9.[14][15][16] In June 2024, Leiper proposed delaying the city's plan to remove free parking in Westboro and Wellington Village until O-Train service was available in both neighborhoods. However, the proposal was defeated at the city's transit committee.[17] Later that year, Leiper led opposition to OC Transpo plans to reduce O-Train frequency as a cost-saving measure.[18] His motion to reverse the O-Train service cuts was defeated narrowly by a vote of 13 to 12.[19] In December 2024, he was one of three councillors to vote against the 2025 city budget proposed by Mayor Mark Sutcliffe (the others were Laine Johnson and Sean Devine). He argued that aggressive cost-cutting measures would cost the city more money in the long-term.[20]

Electoral record

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2022 Ottawa Municipal Election: Kitchissippi Ward Vote %
    Jeff Leiper (X) 11,055 71.97
    Oonagh Fitzgerald 3,247 21.14
    Daniel Stringer 1,058 6.89
2018 Ottawa Municipal Election: Kitchissippi Ward Vote %
    Jeff Leiper (X) 12,068 85.28
    Daniel Stringer 2,083 14.72
2014 Ottawa Municipal Election: Kitchissippi Ward Vote %
    Jeff Leiper 7,557 55.36
    Katherine Hobbs (X) 4,197 30.75
    Michelle Reimer 1,530 11.21
    Ellen Lougheed 272 1.99
    Larry Wasslenn 95 0.70
1994 Ottawa-Carleton Regional Municipality Elections: Cumberland Township: Bilberry Ward Vote %
    Dave Lewis 1,514 73.49
    Vic Powell 476 23.11
    Jeff Leiper 70 3.40

References

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  1. ^ https://www.uottawa.ca/alumni/sites/www.uottawa.ca.alumni/files/acce_-_final_-_eng_-_alum16_423_rapportannueldiplomes_eng_accessible_final.pdf Archived 2022-01-02 at the Wayback Machine [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ "Kissing babies in Kitchissippi | CBC News".
  3. ^ @cmckenney (13 February 2019). "Wishing ⁦@JLeiper⁩ a speedy recovery. His statement about a health-related absence here" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  4. ^ "Ottawa Votes: What you need to know about the candidates in Kitchissippi".
  5. ^ Ottawa Citizen, November 8, 1994, pg C10
  6. ^ Ottawa Citizen, November 16, 1994, pg C4
  7. ^ "A new hat in the ring". 13 January 2014.
  8. ^ Duffy, Andrew (2014-11-21). "Departing councillor Katherine Hobbs: 'It's a job that becomes a lifestyle'". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2025-05-01.
  9. ^ Crawford, Blair (2019-02-13). "Coun. Jeff Leiper recovering from heart attack after shovelling snow". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2025-05-01.
  10. ^ Helmer, Aedan (2019-02-16). "Coun. Jeff Leiper turns heart attack health scare into anti-smoking message". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2025-05-01.
  11. ^ McKenney, Catherine; Leiper, Jeff (2022-03-14). "Ottawa occupation needs a Royal Commission". Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa. Retrieved 2025-05-02.
  12. ^ Quenneville, Guy (2022-03-29). "Ottawa police board requests convoy review despite concerns over timeline". CBC News. Retrieved 2025-05-02.
  13. ^ Senack, Charlie (2024-03-07). "Five priorities Jeff Leiper has for this term of council". Kitchissippi Times. Ottawa. Retrieved 2025-05-02.
  14. ^ Skura, Elyse (2023-11-09). "Lansdowne 2.0 gets city council's stamp of approval". CBC News. Ottawa. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
  15. ^ Raymond, Ted (2024-04-17). "Council approves crucial procedural step for Lansdowne 2.0 plan". CTV News. Ottawa. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
  16. ^ Glass, Marlo (2023-11-10). "How Ottawa's councillors voted on Lansdowne 2.0". Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
  17. ^ White-Crummey, Arthur (2024-06-27). "Push to delay paid parking in Westboro, Wellington West fails". CBC News. Retrieved 2025-05-02.
  18. ^ Skura, Elyse (2024-09-13). "OC Transpo defends LRT schedule cuts that councillors say aren't worth it". CBC News. Retrieved 2025-05-02.
  19. ^ White-Crummey, Arthur (2024-09-18). "Bid to reverse LRT frequency cut loses at council". CBC News. Retrieved 2025-05-02.
  20. ^ White-Crummey, Arthur (2024-12-11). "Council passes 2025 budget with 3.9% tax hike". CBC News. Ottawa. Retrieved 2025-05-02.
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