
โI know people will find this kind of strange, but I knew I was going to win. Even though everybody else doubted me and thought I was crazy,โ recalled Waterloo mayor Brenda Halloran.
Halloran, now mayor for seven years, didnโt have any political experience when she entered the race for community leadership, but she did have the motivation.
She spent years petitioning city hall after discovering her Kitchener townhouse was built on a contaminated landfill site.
โThat experience profoundly changed me and made me realize that people need to be taken care of by the system, not fought by the system,โ she said.
In 2006, with the support of her family, Halloran ran for mayor and won.
Halloran has had some unique challenges to face since she took office as the mayor of a city with a vastly expanding student population.
โThe universities are almost like a Vatican in Rome, because the universities are a totally separate world thatโs in the centre of our city and weโre all around,โ she said. โThe excitement of having the students here, the vitality and the economic benefit is astonishing.โ
At the time she became mayor, Halloran found that there was not a large focus on establishing relationships between students and the city, which is something sheโs tried to remedy since.
However, she still finds that there is more to be done in ensuring students are engaged in their community.
โI think thereโs a lot more students who could be engaged,โ she said. โCome out and see the whole community for what it is and help us. Volunteer and be a part of it. Thereโs a need everywhere.โ
The development of the Northdale area has been a major focus for the city over the last several years. Immense development has been occurring in the student housing bloc, with old houses being torn down in favour of high-rise apartment buildings.
โThat area has been a difficult challenge for all of us because of the age of the buildings and โฆ just the infrastructure of the whole community,โ Halloran commented.
She added, โWe have a lot of student housing being built and the positive side is that itโs new, itโs clean, itโs safe.โ
However, with the advent of these newer buildings comes greater capacity housing units and the need for more people to fill them. According to Halloran, this is largely out of the cityโs control.
โWe do have some concerns that itโs been overbuilt,โ she said. โWe voiced those concerns to the developers who wanted to build student housing, saying you know, thereโs a lot on the market and the student population isnโt growing as fast as what youโre building.โ
A lot of the focus now will be on ensuring there are sufficient amenities to support incoming populations.
Other major developments during her tenure as mayor have come through the explosion of Waterlooโs technology sector.
โWaterloo is seen globally as one of the most prominent tech sectors in North America and we come by that with a lot of hard work and a lot of innovation and collaboration within the community,โ said Halloran.
โI travel as a mayor and Iโm able to sell us, to talk about Waterloo Region as a tech centre, as an academic centre, as a knowledge economy.โ
Organizations such as Communitech, The Accelerator Centre and Canadaโs Technology Triangle have helped foster tech development.
Although the job can be demanding โ Halloran hasnโt had a day off in about seven years โ she says as long as the voters support her and her physical health permits, sheโll continue to be mayor of Waterloo.
โSome days are just breathtaking, other days are really stressful. And I think, I didnโt know if I want to do this anymore, itโs not as much fun,โ Halloran considered.
โAnd then I wake up and itโs a beautiful day to start again. And I feel very privileged that I can do this position.โ








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