Guy Boutilier

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Guy C. Boutilier
Guy Boutilier.jpg
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
In office
March 11, 1997 – November 22, 2004
Preceded by Adam Germain
Constituency Fort McMurray
In office
November 22, 2004 – 2012
Succeeded by Mike Allen
Constituency Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo
Alberta Minister of International, Intergovernmental, and Aboriginal Relations
In office
December 15, 2006 – March 12, 2008
Preceded by Pearl Calahasen (Aboriginal Affairs)
Gary Mar (International and Intergovernmental Relations)
Succeeded by Gene Zwozdesky (Aboriginal Affairs)
Ron Stevens (International and Intergovernmental Relations)
Alberta Minister of the Environment
In office
November 24, 2004 – December 15, 2006
Preceded by Lorne Taylor
Succeeded by Rob Renner
Alberta Minister of Municipal Affairs
In office
March 15, 2001 – November 24, 2004
Preceded by Walter Paszkowski
Succeeded by Rob Renner
Mayor of the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo
In office
April 1, 1995 – 1997
Preceded by New municipality
Succeeded by Doug Faulkner
Mayor of Fort McMurray
In office
October 22, 1992 – April 1, 1995
Preceded by E.C. (Betty) Collicott
Succeeded by Amalgamated Regional Charter
Fort McMurray Alderman
In office
October 20, 1986 – October 22, 1992
Personal details
Born 1958/1959 (age 65–66)[1]
Political party Progressive Conservative
(1997–2009)
Independent
(2009–2010)
Wildrose Alliance
(2010–present)
Spouse(s) Gail
Residence Fort McMurray
Alma mater St. Francis Xavier University
St. Mary's University
Harvard University

Guy Carleton Boutilier is a Canadian politician, who sat as a member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta from 1997 to 2012. He was elected as a Progressive Conservative, and served in several capacities in the Cabinet of Alberta under Premiers Ralph Klein and Ed Stelmach before being ejected from the PC caucus in July 2009; he joined the Wildrose Alliance Party after sitting as an independent for a year.

Before entering provincial politics during the 1997 Alberta election, he was involved in municipal politics, having served two terms on the city council of Fort McMurray before being elected mayor of that city in 1992. When Fort McMurray was amalgamated with the surrounding area to form the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo in 1995, Boutilier served as the new municipality's first mayor.

Early life

Boutilier earned a Bachelor of Business Administration from St. Francis Xavier University, a Bachelor of Education from St. Mary's University, and a Master of Public Administration from Harvard University.[2] He has worked as a financial analyst in the petroleum industry and as a business management instructor at Keyano College.[2] He has also lectured at the University of Alberta's school of business.[2]

Political career

Municipal politics

Boutilier was elected to the Fort McMurray city council on October 20, 1986, to a three-year term as alderman. He was re-elected October 16, 1989, and was elected the youngest mayor in the city's history October 22, 1992.[3] He served in this capacity until April 1, 1995, when Fort McMurray lost its status as a city and was rolled into the new Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo.[3] He was the first mayor of this new municipality, serving until 1997 when he resigned to enter provincial politics.[3]

Provincial politics

Boutilier was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the 1997 Alberta election, when he ran as the Progressive Conservative candidate in Fort McMurray.[4] The incumbent Liberal, Adam Germain, was not seeking re-election, and Boutilier won by defeating John Vyboh by more than a thousand votes.[4] As a backbencher, he moved several bills: the Mines and Minerals Amendment Act was a 1997 government bill designed to enable the implementation of a generic royalty regime for new development in the Alberta oilsands and streamline the process for land leases to oil and gas companies by moving administrative elements from legislation to regulation.[5][6] The bill passed with Liberal support, but New Democratic leader Pam Barrett opposed the bill out of concerns that it left the legislature out of debates in which it should play a role and provided overly-generous incentives to oil companies without requiring anything from them in return.[6][7] Also in 1997, Boutilier sponsored the Cost Declaration Accountability Act, a private member's bill that never reached second reading.[5]

In 1998, Boutilier sponsored two more bills.[8] The Railway Act was a government bill that modernized the rules governing the operation of railways in Alberta.[9] The Liberals expressed general support for the bill,[10] but ultimately opposed it on the basis of a clause that allowed cabinet to make regulations on "any matter that the Minister considers is not provided for or is insufficiently provided for" in the Act, which they considered to be dangerously broad.[11] The bill passed.[8] The same year, Boutilier sponsored the Government Accountability Amendment Act,[8] a private member's bill that would have required all government bills to include an associated financial cost to come before the legislature with an estimate of those costs for the ensuing three years.[10] The bill was hoisted for six months on second reading on a motion by Wayne Cao, which, since the legislature was not in session six months later, effectively killed the bill.[8][12]

He was re-elected in the 2001 election with a substantially increased margin over Vyboh.[13] Following the 2001 election, Premier Ralph Klein named Boutilier to his cabinet as the Minister of Municipal Affairs.[14] In this capacity, Boutilier sponsored the Municipal Government Amendment Act in 2003.[15] The Act allowed municipalities to charge developers off-site road levies, a practice which had been common but which had recently been successfully challenged in court, and passed largely without controversy.[16][17][18] Boutilier kept the municipal affairs until after the 2004 election (in which he was again re-elected handily, this time in the newly formed Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo riding),[19] when Klein transferred him to the post of Minister of the Environment.[20] He held this post in 2005, when a Canadian National Railway train derailed, spilling oil into Wabamun Lake.[21] At the time, Boutilier described himself as "damn well pissed off" about the spill and about the allegation that CN had neglected to report that the spill contained carcinogenic chemical, and pledged "to bring to the full extent of the law anyone who has breached Alberta law."[22] CN was eventually charged under federal statutes.[23] He was also at the forefront of his government's opposition to the Kyoto Protocol, at one point slipping his Quebec counterpart Thomas Mulcair a note during a United Nations conference on the subject in Montreal, which Mulcair interpreted as a request that Quebec soften its support of Kyoto in exchange for investment in the Montreal Stock Exchange by Alberta industry.[24] Boutilier characterized the note as "discussions in terms of what we would want to be able to do in a positive environmental initiative" and denied that he was trying to influence Quebec's position.[24]

In the 2006 Progressive Conservative leadership election, Boutilier initially backed Lyle Oberg,[25] and switched his support to eventual winner Ed Stelmach after Oberg was eliminated on the first ballot.[26] When Stelmach succeeded Klein as premier, he named a smaller cabinet than Klein's.[27] This included a merger of the Aboriginal Affairs portfolio with Intergovernmental and International Relations, and Stelmach gave the expanded portfolio to Boutilier.[28] Boutilier was re-elected by another expanded margin in the 2008 election,[29] but was not named to Stelmach's new cabinet, making him the only returning member of the pre-election cabinet not to receive a portfolio.[30] His demotion was met with protest in his home riding, which contains much of the oilsands activity driving Alberta's economy at the time, and the local Progressive Conservative riding association sent a letter of protest to Stelmach.[31][32]

In July 2009, Stelmach ejected Boutilier from the Progressive Conservative caucus for publicly criticizing the government. Boutilier was upset with delays in the construction of a long-term care facility in his riding, and said that without the facility seniors were being kept in "holding cells" in the local hospital.[33] Stelmach's spokesman said that his ejection was due to his seeking "preferential treatment" for his riding; Boutilier denied that he had done so.[34] In June 2010, after nearly a year as an independent, he joined the Wildrose Alliance Party, saying that the move was "a natural flow", and in hindsight calling his expulsion from the PC Party "the best thing that ever happened to me in my political career".[35]

In the 2012 election, Boutilier ran for re-election as a Wildrose candidate in the new electoral district of Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo, but was defeated by Mike Allen.

Election results

2008 Alberta general election results (Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo) Turnout 21.6%
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
     Progressive Conservative Guy Boutilier 4,534 63.5%
     Liberal Ross Jacobs 1,751 24.5%
     NDP Mel Kraley 550 7.7%
Green Reg Normore 301 4.2%
2004 Alberta general election results (Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo) Turnout 26.4%
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
     Progressive Conservative Guy Boutilier 4,429 63.2%
     Liberal Russell Collicott 1,800 25.7%
     NDP Dave Malka 460 6.6%
Alberta Alliance Eugene Eklund 224 3.2%
     Independent Reg Normore 94 1.3%
2001 Alberta general election results (Fort McMurray) Turnout 38.0%
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
     Progressive Conservative Guy Boutilier 5,914 64.4%
     Liberal John Vyboh 1,759 19.2%
     NDP Lyn Gorman 1,498 16.3%
1997 Alberta general election results (Fort McMurray) Turnout 45.6%
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
     Progressive Conservative Guy Boutilier 5,420 55.8%
     Liberal John Vyboh 4,008 41.3%
     NDP Rodney McCallum 280 2.9%
Alberta general election, 2012: Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Conservative Mike Allen 3,611 49.06%
Wildrose Guy Boutilier 3,165 43.00%
New Democratic Denise Woollard 363 4.93%
Liberal Amy McBain 221 3.00%

References

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