- Bob Douglas (politician)
Robert Oliver Douglas was born on
January 25 ,1932 to parents residing in Minnedosa. He is a farm leader and formerWinnipeg City Council lor.Douglas joined the
Manitoba Federation of Agriculture in 1956 as a youth director, and later became its executive secretary. He was a founding member of the Manitoba Farm Bureau in 1965, and served as its secretary manager for nineteen years until becoming general manager of the newly-created Keystone Agricultural Producers group in 1984. [ [http://www.mts.net/~agrifame/douglas.html "Robert O. (Bob) Douglas", Manitoba Agricultural Hall of Fame] , accessed 18 September 2007.] Douglas played a prominent role in establishing the Manitoba Agricultural Training Project in 1989. He was fired in 1993, after refusing to submit a letter of resignation. Douglas indicated that he was given no cause for the termination notice. He subsequently joined Manitoba Pool as a consultant. [Larry Kusch, "Long-serving farm leader fired", "Winnipeg Free Press", 19 August 1993.]His political career began in 1982, when was elected to the Winnipeg City Council in a
by-election for the Stevenson ward. He ran as an independent, and defeated a candidate of the centre-rightIndependent Citizens' Election Committee . He was re-elected in 1983, defeating New Democratic Party candidateJim Maloway by a wide margin. Returned by acclamation in 1986, he was again re-elected for the restructured ward of Grants Mills-Stevenson in 1989. He did not seek re-election in 1992. On council, Douglas served as chairman of the Planning and Community Services Committee. [Bob Douglas, "Plan Winnipeg needs to be followed", "Winnipeg Free Press", 11 December 1993.]Douglas ran for the Manitoba Liberal Party in the 1995 provincial election, and spoke in favour of single-desk marketing for hog producers during the campaign. [Glen MacKenzie, "Pork board looks for help to end hog-wash over future", "Winnipeg Free Press", 31 March 1995.] He posed a credible challenge to Progressive Conservative incumbent
Gerry McAlpine , but ultimately finished second. After the election, he suggested that Winnipeg should consider recapturing its diminishing tax base by expanding its borders outward. [Bruce Owen, "Property-tax crunch becomes chewy issue", "Winnipeg Free Press", 25 October 1995, A7.]In 1998, Douglas was appointed to an advisory council of the Agri-food Research and Development Initiative. [Paul Samyn, "Sowing seeds of industry", "Winnipeg Free Press", 2 February 1998, A1.] He was appointed to a six-year term on the Canadian Grain Commission for Manitoba in 2000. ["Douglas appointed", "Winnipeg Free Press", 29 June 2000, A7.] In 2004, he was nominated to the Manitoba Agricultural Hall of Fame. ["Agriculture hall of fame to induct 8", "Winnipeg Free Press", 23 July 2004, A5.]
External links
* [http://www.mts.net/~agrifame/douglas.html "Robert O. (Bob) Douglas", Manitoba Agricultural Hall of Fame]
Footnotes
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