Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13
We would have needed to do this in 90s before amalgamation, when the City could have focused on old Ottawa, today's central core. With competing interest from sprawling suburbs and vast rural areas, injecting money in the urban core is a tough sell today.
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Quebec City also went through a merger as you know. It was in 2002, so L'Allier's mayoralty actually was both pre- and post-merger.
He was there for the first 3 years post-merger, and stayed the course.
But after he left, a lot of city-lovers were worried when the colourful former suburban (Ste-Foy) mayor Andrée Boucher was elected to lead the new city. The concern was that she'd undo all of the good stuff L'Allier had put in place. She was known for being a no-frills, bare-bones, suburban-oriented "the city should stick to paving roads and picking up garbage" type of politician.
AFAIK she did not undo L'Allier's legacy, but she was also not there for very long. She died before she had even completed half of her term.
Since then they've had Labeaume.
And yes the majority of Quebec City denizens live in the suburbs. The former city had 175,000 people whereas the new city has around 580,000.
But even the suburbanites (at least most of them) appreciate the
chic-ness and lustre that comes with sprucing up the city - and they have a strong emotional rapport with the older parts of town even if they don't live there.