2014 Winnipeg Civic Election

An Open Democracy Manitoba Resource

2014 Winnipeg Election Archive

IMPORTANT: The information below is from the 2014 Winnipeg Election.

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David Sanders

Candidate in the 2014 City of Winnipeg Mayoral race.

There are 404 recent news articles that mention David Sanders.

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Questionnaire Response

Why did you decide to run in the 2014 Winnipeg Civic Election?

I have observed City Hall since 1965, when I was Metro and City Hall Reporter for the Winnipeg Tribune. Most of my subsequent career in the Provincial Government, serving twice as Deputy Minister of Urban Affairs, was devoted to helping make our City government work better. Two years ago I discovered that there was serious mismanagement and misconduct occurring at City Hall, especially among some of the senior administrators, and that the City Council was unable or unwilling to fix it. I began to appear at Council and its Committees regularly, asking questions, demanding answers, and offering practical solutions. By this summer it had become obvious that the present Council would not fix things. I looked around, and concluded that none of the other candidates for mayor would be willing or able to deal effectively with the situation now. Most had been nowhere near City Hall. Given my extensive experience, knowledge and administrative skills, I decided that I had better offer to take on the job myself, to overhaul City Hall and make it possible for us to manage our resources wisely once again, and make Winnipeg a safe, fair and fun place for all.

What experience will you bring to compliment your role as Mayor?

I have 45 years’ senior executive experience in Winnipeg, as a lawyer, public administrator, management consultant, property and business tax consultant, university teacher and administrator, marketing manager and journalist. I worked in many different departments of the Government of Manitoba for 18 years, but most of the time I dealt with City of Winnipeg legislation, financial affairs, and land use plans. I have also been a national government computer systems marketing manager for Unisys Canada Inc., and a lecturer and faculty administrator at the University of Manitoba. I have served as a professional management consultant with a specialty in human resources management, and for the past 20 years I have been engaged in seeking fair property and business tax assessments for most major commercial and institutional property owners in Winnipeg. I maintain my status as a practising lawyer in order to conduct selected pro bono cases, in the public interest. Throughout my life I have provided active leadership for university, professional, school, community, sports, and charitable organizations, so I fully appreciate the character and strengths of our community. And I will hit the ground running, because I have participated in most debates at City Hall for the past two years.

What are some issues that you would like to stand for in your role as Mayor, and why are these issues important to you?

As Mayor, I will lead a progressive majority of Council in taking action to achieve the following objectives: 1. End the mismanagement, misconduct and secrecy in decision-making at City Hall. 2. Restore public trust in our City government. 3. Reveal the full extent of the financial mess left behind by current and previous Councils, and establish a realistic plan to manage the City’s financial affairs wisely, going forward. 4. Restore and maintain basic City services and infrastructure. 5. Reconsider the justification and priorities for major projects, such as the Southwest Transitway, and proceed with revised plans for those projects which are most necessary and financially feasible. 6. Secure intergovernmental cooperation and collaboration with the federal, provincial, Capital Region municipal governments, and First Nations. 7. Curb the exorbitant costs of extending infrastructure to accommodate urban sprawl. 8. Empower citizens to play a much more meaningful role in City decision-making, always. These matters are important to me, because I love Winnipeg and I want it to be a safe, fair and fun place to be, not only for my extended family, but for all Winnipeggers, now and in the future. We can be a model green, affordable, compassionate and prosperous community.

What is one thing in particular that you appreciate about the City of Winnipeg?

Winnipeg is the “Heart of the Continent,” as CBC weatherman Ed Russenholt used to say every evening, a very long time ago, and we Winnipeggers have really big hearts. We are generous with our time, money and talents. We are generous on a City-wide scale, as with the United Way, the Winnipeg Foundation, Winnipeg Harvest, and countless other charitable and non-profit organizations and projects. We are generous within our neighbourhoods, volunteering, coaching, fundraising, and working together. And we are generous with each other, with our neighbours, friends and families. This same generosity of spirit extends to our willingness to support a full range of universally available public services in healthcare, education, transportation, recreation, libraries, and many other community functions, whether or not we use them ourselves. I feel we are family. I know that not all Winnipeggers are able to enjoy that feeling yet, but if it is possible to achieve that goal anywhere, I believe we can do it here.

Do you have any other comments regarding your candidacy?

As candidate for Mayor of Winnipeg, I believe I have the most extensive experience and training in government and public finance; special knowledge of the City's history, communities, businesses and institutions; a lifelong passion for serving to improve the quality of life of all citizens; and demonstrated ability to seek truth, fairness and justice, without fear or favour. I have been an especially active participant and critic at City Hall for almost two years, and I am ready to deal with the many challenges and opportunities immediately following the election. I seek to champion a resilient green City, a youth-friendly and age-friendly City, a financially viable and responsible City, a respectful and inclusive City. Working together, we can be all that, and more. At the Advance Polls, and on October 22nd, I urge all citizens to get out and vote for the school trustees, the city councillors, and the Mayor, and ensure that Winnipeg gets the government it needs now.


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News that Mentions David Sanders

News articles are automatically gathered from Google News by searching for the full names of the candidates in the upcoming election. More details.

WasylyciaLeis Maintains Lead in Winnipeg's Mayoral Race

Friday, 03 October 2014

University professor Robert-Falcon Ouellette has nine percent, lawyer David Sanders has five percent, with city councillor Paula Havixbeck (four percent) and exotic dancer booking agent Michel Fillion (two percent) trailing to round out the bunch.

Judy WL leaving pack behind

Friday, 03 October 2014

McKay said the survey found 39 per cent of Steeves' support would go to Bowman, but the rest would would split among Robert-Falcon Ouellette, Wasylycia-Leis, David Sanders and Michel Fillion. "The stars would really have to align" for Bowman to ...

Judy WL leaving pack behind

Friday, 03 October 2014

McKay said the survey found 39 per cent of Steeves' support would go to Bowman, but the rest would would split among Robert-Falcon Ouellette, Wasylycia-Leis, David Sanders and Michel Fillion. "The stars would really have to align" for Bowman to ...

How not to run a campaign 101

Friday, 03 October 2014

It has been said before, but let it be said again: The specific numbers in any poll are less important than the trends. On that basis, the latest Free Press/CTV Winnipeg poll conducted by Probe Research on Winnipeg's 2014 mayoral race shows us the ...

New poll puts WasylyciaLeis way out in front

Friday, 03 October 2014

Support numbers for the remaining candidates are all in the single-digits. Robert-Falcon Ouellette has nine per cent, David Sanders has five per cent, Paula Havixbeck has four per cent, and Michel Fillion has 2 per cent. Probe interviewed a random ...

How not to run a campaign 101

Friday, 03 October 2014

It has been said before, but let it be said again: The specific numbers in any poll are less important than the trends. On that basis, the latest Free Press/CTV Winnipeg poll conducted by Probe Research on Winnipeg's 2014 mayoral race shows us the ...

Mayoral candidate David Sanders declares support for civic staff

Thursday, 02 October 2014

Calling himself the “most union-friendly candidate” in the mayor's race, David Sanders promised better relations with organized labour if he's elected. “I will not support the irresponsible ordering of undefined staff reductions, which leaves staff in ...

20 Questions with David Sanders

Thursday, 02 October 2014

David Sanders is the latest up in our batch of mayoral candidates who took the 20 Questions pledge and there's some eye-opening stuff here. Sanders is clearly a well-read chap who has given us some insightful responses to our rather unorthodox line of ...

Riverbank restaurants, bike paths among promises on mayoral campaign trail

Thursday, 02 October 2014

David Sanders promised the 9,000 people who work for the city of Winnipeg that if he is elected mayor, he will bargain in good faith. Sanders said the city's way of managing vacancies is actually a hiring freeze, and it's contributed to some of the ...

Sanders would improve relations between city, unions

Thursday, 02 October 2014

Mayoral candidate David Sanders wants to improve relations between the City of ‎Winnipeg and its unions. The lawyer and former provincial bureaucrat‎ said today if he's elected mayor on Oct. 22, he would bring in budgets free of unpaid furloughs ...

Puppets take centre stage in Winnipeg's mayoral race

Wednesday, 01 October 2014

It's not often you see puppets on the campaign trail. But holding a marionette, Winnipeg mayoral candidate David Sanders jumped into the debate about political influence from the backers of various campaigns, saying Wednesday, "It's time to end the ...

David Sanders accuses opponents of being puppets for political parties

Wednesday, 01 October 2014

If his run for mayor is unsuccessful, David Sanders could be set for a career as a prop comic. After standing in front of city hall with a “for sale” sign last week to protest Gord Steeves' plan to sell civic assets, Sanders pulled out a female ...

Do mayoral candidates need an infrastructure reality check?

Wednesday, 01 October 2014

The dean of the Asper School of Business says none of Winnipeg's mayoral candidates are proposing realistic solutions to the city's growing infrastructure deficit. 'There has to be a trust in government that, in fact, the money [raised] is going to go ...

David Sanders warns of $100 million shortfall

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

David Sanders said his mayoral opponents have unrealistic tax proposals, but he refused to make any specific financial commitments during an announcement at his campaign office on Tuesday. Sanders, who has spent as much time at city hall as some ...

Sanders says voters should be told hard truth about city's financial woes

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

David Sanders says an honest mayoral candidate would tell voters the truth about the city's woeful financial situation, not mislead them with promises they can't deliver. Sanders said the candidates voters elect to form the next city council will face ...

Mayoral candidate David Sanders says property tax freeze "undoable"

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Mayoral candidate David Sanders poked holes at some of his rivals' tax proposals but he wouldn't say specifically how much he would raise property taxes. He said a tax freeze is "undoable." Sanders said the city could face a $79 million budget deficit ...

Mayoral candidates debate infrastructure at CAA/AMM gathering

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

CAA/AMM mayoral candidates debate Mayoral hopefuls (left to right) Robert-Falcon Ouellette, David Sanders, Gord Steeves and Judy Wasylycia-Leis debated infrastructure issues at a debate sponsered by CAA Manitoba and Association of Manitoba ...

Winnipeg mayoral candidates debate crumbling infrastructure

Monday, 29 September 2014

Judy Wasylycia-Leis, David Sanders, Paula Havixbeck, and Michel Fillion all proposed a tax increase to pay for fixing roads. Gord Steeves wants to save money by scrapping the second phase of rapid transit. Robert-Falcon Ouellette suggested a land value ...

Let's consider city sales tax

Monday, 29 September 2014

Nearly all the mayoral candidates -- Brian Bowman, Judy Wasylycia-Leis, Robert-Falcon Ouellette and David Sanders -- have acknowledged property taxes will go up. They say this more as evidence of their straight-talking honesty than as a real solution ...

Let's consider city sales tax

Monday, 29 September 2014

Nearly all the mayoral candidates -- Brian Bowman, Judy Wasylycia-Leis, Robert-Falcon Ouellette and David Sanders -- have acknowledged property taxes will go up. They say this more as evidence of their straight-talking honesty than as a real solution ...

Let's consider city sales tax

Monday, 29 September 2014

Nearly all the mayoral candidates -- Brian Bowman, Judy Wasylycia-Leis, Robert-Falcon Ouellette and David Sanders -- have acknowledged property taxes will go up. They say this more as evidence of their straight-talking honesty than as a real solution ...

Gord Steeves unfazed by aboriginal community's snub at mayoral forum

Sunday, 28 September 2014

From left to right, Paula Havixbeck, Judy Wasylycia-Leis, Brian Bowman, David Sanders, and Robert-Falcon Ouellette all attended the forum. (Jillian Taylor/CBC). ​"If that's their feeling, I suppose I respect their opinion,” said Steeves. “I don't ...

Cash crisis

Sunday, 28 September 2014

Wasylycia-Leis, who now gets to boast about her frankness in the last election, has again promised a modest tax hike, as have privacy lawyer Brian Bowman, city hall critic David Sanders and university administrator Robert-Falcon Ouellette. Former St ...

Aboriginal community snubs Gord Steeves at mayoral forum

Saturday, 27 September 2014

The other candidates in the running to be mayor, Paula Havixbeck, Judy Wasylycia-Leis, Brian Bowman, David Sanders, and Robert-Falcon Ouellette attended. Aboriginal issues were the focus of discussion, with the issue of missing and murdered women ...

No candidate possesses key to open government

Saturday, 27 September 2014

Former senior bureaucrat David Sanders has taken a different approach. He seems much more interested in the accountability of administrators than elected officials. The majority of his pledges and statements has focused on limiting the authority of ...


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