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Gatineau's mayoral race is in the homestretch. Here are the candidates' top priorities

The race to pick the next mayor of Gatineau, Que., is into its final week, with advance polls Sunday and election day set for June 9.

Advance voting on Sunday, with byelection day on June 9

People walk toward a building where an election is taking place. A sign in the foreground points toward the building.
Seven candidates are vying to become the next mayor of Gatineau, Que. Advance polling is taking place Sunday while election day is June 9. (Xavier Gauvin/Radio-Canada)

The race to pick the next mayor of Gatineau, Que., is into the homestretch, with advance polls Sunday and election day set for June 9.

A byelection was triggered after former mayorFrance Blisleannounced she was stepping down in February, citing a poor political climate and abuse from the public that included death threats.

Now seven candidatesare vying for the top spot, which they'll hold until the next general election in November 2025.

CBC asked candidates what Gatineau's biggest issue is and how they'd address it and for most of them, housing was the number one priority.

"We have seen an increase in the number of people in a homelessness situation, and we don't seeenough solutionsso far," said Maude Marquis-Bissonnette, a professor of municipal management and formercouncillor for Gatineau's Plateau ward.

Marquis-Bissonnette, who ran unsuccessfully against Blisle in 2021and is the head of political party Action Gatineau, said thelong-term solution is to provide more social housing.

In the short term,the city should do more forpeople on thestreets by keeping places where they stay cleanand providing showers and locked units for their belongings, she said.

"This is one priority that I want to work on as soon as I'm elected on June 9," she said.

"I want to see what are[the] solutions inthe field. I want to work with the community organizations that havealready been working a lot. They are doing a wonderful job."

Real estate broker Stphane Bisson, the formerpresident of the Gatineau Chamber of Commerce,also believes housing and homelessness aretop priorities.

Bisson said the city should carry out a full assessment of all the land it owns.

"How could we redevelop those lands?" he asked, citing the development of a housing "SWAT team"with input from urbanists as one key idea.

Residents should be allowed to add apartments totheir bungalows to create more units, he added.

A shot of four different people.
Clockwise from top left, Gatineau, Que., mayoral candidates Daniel Feeny, Maude Marquis-Bissonnette, Stphane Bisson and Olive Kamanyana all believe housing is the city's top priority. (Radio-Canada)

Daniel Feeny, the formerdirector of communications and intergovernmental relations for the city's mayoral office, said he has a 20-point plan to stimulate the market so that more social housing will be built.

Those initiativesinclude offering financial incentives for developers who build social housing, accelerating the delivery of permits, and imposing a tax on vacant housing to encourage it gets used.

"I'd like to deploy those measures in the next 16 months, by the end of this mandate," he said.

Olive Kamanyana, former councillor forCarrefour-de-l'Hpital, said she plans to invest more money inthe issue.

"I'm putting $20 million on the table to ensure that all those NGOs can make decisions on how many housing places they can put in placeand [what]services they can put in place," she said

Kamanyana also wants to ensure developers would getpermits and licenceswithin 45 days, or else have an explanation from city staff as to why the deadline was not met.

She also wants to make it easier for people to convert their houses into multi-unit spaces, which could both boost the number of rental units available and make home ownership more affordable.

A photo of three different men.
From left to right, Gatineau, Que., mayoral candidates Rmi Bergeron, Mathieu Saint-Jean and Yves Ducharme. (Radio-Canada)

Services and taxes key priorities for others

Former Gatineau mayor Yves Ducharme did mention housing as an issue saying the city needs to find ways to make it easier to get building permits and licences but his main priority is improving services and making tax rates more "affordable."

"Services in Gatineauover the last 19 years have been diminishing too much. Our roads are in a very bad shape. Weneed to reinvest," said Ducharme, who was mayor of Hull before the city amalgamated.

"We need to take care of our finances so that we are able to have a tax levelat a point where citizens are able to afford it."

Reducing taxes and getting the cityout of debt is where Mathieu Saint-Jean, a formerPeople's Party of Canada candidate for the riding of Gatineau, is setting his sights.

He said there are other ways to balance the books beside raising taxes.

"[The city]can raise money by producing energy," said Saint-Jean, citing a hydroelectric project in Portland, Ore.

"I want [to] get on this, to produce another kind of income for the city [in order] to not raise the taxes higher ... than they are."

Saint-Jean also said he isn't opposed to budget cuts if they're needed.

Secondary school teacherRmi Bergeronis also concerned about services, especially transit. He would like to fully evaluate the transit provider STO and see where changes could bemade.

Bergeron said he's against Gatineau'stramway projectand has a plan to help out the city's struggling transit system.

"I propose to replace the big buses [with] electric buses, mini-buses and taxi busesto increase the efficiency of the STO immediately," he said.

A woman speaks in front of several microphones.
The seven candidates are running to replace France Blisle, who stepped down earlier this year. (Jonathan Dupaul/Radio-Canada)

New poll suggests 2-wayrace

A poll commissioned by Radio-Canada that waspublished Wednesdayshows Marquis-Bissonnette and Ducharme are the favourites so far.

This Sigma Research survey was conducted from May 13 to 23 among 1,000 voters in Gatineau. It has a margin of error of 3.1 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

After distributing undecided voters proportionally, Marquis-Bissonnette led the way with 37 per cent support, with Ducharme at 23 per cent.

Kamanyanareceived 14 per cent support,according to the poll, while Bisson got11 per cent and Feenygot nine per cent.

Still, polling doesn't always reflect what happens on election night, said Thomas Collombat, a political science professor at the Universit du Qubec en Outaouais.

Marquis-Bissonnette was ahead in the mayoral polls in the last mayoral election, Collombat noted and still lost to Blisle.

"We don't know how many people are actually going to go vote," he said. "And in particular, we don't know if the constituencies that traditionally support Action Gatineau and ... Marquis-Bissonnette in particular namely, the younger voters are going to come out on June 9th."