Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Community Where No One Wanted To Be Mayor Gets A Mayor, But Only Reluctantly

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Nov, 2018 05:54 PM
    WELLINGTON, P.E.I. — Nobody wanted to be mayor, but Wellington, P.E.I., got one anyway.
     
     
    There were no mayoral candidates in Monday's province-wide municipal elections, so the provincial government simply appointed the outgoing mayor, Alcide Bernard, to a four-year term.
     
     
    Bernard had not run for re-election — he decided he had done his time, and he "wanted to leave the opportunity for others this time."
     
     
    The job pays $1,600 a year.
     
     
    Wellington — with a population of 400 — is nestled in the heart of P.E.I.'s Acadian community, about a 20-minute drive from Summerside.
     
     
    The small community also had difficulty filling five council vacancies.
     
     
    Bernard said only one councillor re-offered, so that councillor went door to door until the five vacancies were filled.
     
     
    On Thursday, Communities Minister Richard Brown appointed Bernard as mayor through Dec. 6, 2022.
     
     
    "I want to express my sincere appreciation to Alcide Bernard for his past service as mayor of the Rural Municipality of Wellington and thank him for accepting this appointment," Brown said in a statement.
     
     
    Bernard said last month he had earlier served as a municipal councillor, and was approaching retirement age and wanted to take a break.
     
     
    He acknowledged being a mayor was a demanding job, and noted the village's aging population could also be a factor in the lack of a candidate.
     
     
    "Even though Wellington has maintained about the same population over the past 20 or so years, people are aging," he said last month.
     
     
    "It's a common phenomenon, and there's probably fewer people who are able to assume leadership roles."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    17-Year-Old Female Stabbed At Surrey’s Unwin Park

    17-Year-Old Female Stabbed At Surrey’s Unwin Park
      Surrey RCMP are investigating a stabbing that has landed a 17-year-old female in hospital, with non-life threatening injuries.

    17-Year-Old Female Stabbed At Surrey’s Unwin Park

    India Calls Off Talks With Pakistan After J&K Cops Killing, Says Pm Imran Khan's 'True Face' Expose

    India Calls Off Talks With Pakistan After J&K Cops Killing, Says Pm Imran Khan's 'True Face' Expose
    Blaming Pakistan for the killing of security personnel in Jammu and Kashmir and accusing it of glorifying terrorism, India on Friday called off talks between the two foreign ministers in New York in a move termed by Pakistan as "unfortunate" and "taken under internal pressure".

    India Calls Off Talks With Pakistan After J&K Cops Killing, Says Pm Imran Khan's 'True Face' Expose

    Shoppers Drug Mart Gets Medical Pot License From Health Canada

    TORONTO — Shoppers Drug Mart has received Health Canada's approval to be a licensed medical marijuana producer, opening the door for the pharmacy giant to dispense medical cannabis to patients.

    Shoppers Drug Mart Gets Medical Pot License From Health Canada

    Environment Canada Posts Rainfall Warnings For Parts Of B.C. South Coast

    Environment Canada Posts Rainfall Warnings For Parts Of B.C. South Coast
    VANCOUVER — Residents across British Columbia's south coast will need their umbrellas and gumboots until at least Saturday as rain and wind lash the region.

    Environment Canada Posts Rainfall Warnings For Parts Of B.C. South Coast

    Women In B.C. To Have Access To Breast Density Info When Screened For Cancer

    Women In B.C. To Have Access To Breast Density Info When Screened For Cancer
    VANCOUER, B.C. — Women in British Columbia will soon get breast density information after having a mammogram, which can lead to the screening test missing cancer.

    Women In B.C. To Have Access To Breast Density Info When Screened For Cancer

    B.C. Premier Apologizes For Removal Of 1950S Totem Pole At Canada-U.S. Border

    B.C. Premier Apologizes For Removal Of 1950S Totem Pole At Canada-U.S. Border
    SURREY, B.C. — Three First Nations in British Columbia gathered today to raise a restored replica totem pole at a Canada-U.S. border crossing — a decade after it was removed by the province without notice.

    B.C. Premier Apologizes For Removal Of 1950S Totem Pole At Canada-U.S. Border